Mold in Rental Property: A Small Landlord’s Guide (Ontario + Quebec)
🏅 IICRC Certified ⚖️ RBQ-Licensed in Quebec 📅 Since 2005
The text lands on a Tuesday night: “There’s black mold in the bedroom closet and it’s making us sick.” If you own one or two rental units, that message is the start of a clock you didn’t know was running. Handle it well and it’s a repair. Handle it badly, or slowly, and it can become a Landlord and Tenant Board file with your name on it, rent abatement, and a hearing you walk out of having lost. This guide walks you through what you actually owe your tenant under Ontario and Quebec law, and how to respond before a complaint becomes a case.
Book Your Free Virtual InspectionMost small landlords aren’t slumlords. They’re a retiree renting out the basement suite, a family that kept the old house when they upsized, someone who bought a duplex for the income. You do your own minor repairs, you keep decent tenants, and you’d fix a real problem in a heartbeat. The trouble with mold is that it doesn’t feel like a real problem until it already is one, and the law doesn’t grade you on good intentions. It grades you on whether the unit is fit to live in and whether you acted in a reasonable time once you knew. This page is about staying on the right side of both.
A tenant just reported mold. What now?
The single worst thing you can do is nothing, or paint over it and hope. The best first move costs you nothing: a free virtual mold inspection. Send us a few photos and a certified inspector will tell you what you’re dealing with, and how urgent it is, usually the same day, so your written response to the tenant is based on facts and not a guess.
Book Your Free Virtual Inspection NowAre you responsible for mold in your rental unit?
In almost every case, yes. Both Ontario and Quebec put the duty to keep a rental fit to live in squarely on the landlord, and neither one discounts that duty by how many units you own. A one-bedroom basement apartment owned by a pensioner carries the same obligation as a 300-unit tower owned by a REIT. Mold that affects the unit’s fitness for habitation is the landlord’s problem to fix, and “the tenant should have opened a window more” is rarely the winning argument you think it is.
There’s a narrow exception: if the tenant genuinely caused the moisture through misuse (say, they disconnected a bathroom fan and never told you), responsibility can shift. But that’s the exception, and you have to prove it. The default the tribunals start from is that a habitable unit is on you.

Ontario: Residential Tenancies Act, s.20
The landlord must keep the rental “in a good state of repair and fit for habitation” and compliant with health, safety and housing standards, whether or not the tenant knew about the problem before moving in. Extensive or toxic mold undercuts habitability, so it falls under this section. Municipal property standards bylaws in Ottawa and beyond stack on top, and a property standards officer can order the work directly.
Quebec: Civil Code, arts. 1854 and 1910
The landlord must deliver the dwelling in good condition and maintain it in a habitable state for the whole lease. Widespread mold, backed by expert evidence, is a recognized example of a dwelling unfit for habitation under the Code. The Tribunal administratif du logement (TAL) hears these cases routinely, and remediation in Quebec has to be done by an RBQ-licensed contractor to hold up.
If you rent out a condo unit, one more wrinkle: mold in the building’s common elements is usually the condo corporation’s responsibility, but mold inside your unit (the drywall, the in-suite HVAC) is yours as the owner-investor. That split trips up a lot of single-unit condo landlords. If you’re not sure which side of the wall the problem is on, that’s exactly what an inspection settles.
What happens if you ignore a tenant’s mold complaint?
This is the part worth reading twice, because it’s where small landlords get hurt. You don’t get penalized for having mold. Mold happens, even in well-kept buildings. You get penalized for how you responded once the tenant told you, and the tribunals keep good records of who did what and when.

In Ontario, if the tenant files and the Board decides you breached your s.20 duty, it can order the work done, award a rent abatement for the whole period the unit was in disrepair, order you to compensate damaged belongings, and in bad cases end the tenancy on the tenant’s terms. Abatements in documented mold cases commonly run anywhere from a modest percentage to a large share of the rent, month after month, until it’s fixed. Quebec’s TAL has the same toolkit: rent reduction, damages, forced repairs, and lease termination.
Tenants also have self-help routes that cost you either way. A tenant can apply to the Board, and in some situations pursue “repair and deduct,” where court-sanctioned repair costs come off the rent. And there’s a clock working against you: in Ontario the Board can look back one year from the application date, so a problem you let simmer for months builds the tenant’s case, it doesn’t age out of it.
The through-line is simple. When a landlord shows up to a hearing with dated photos, an inspection report, and receipts proving they acted fast, they usually keep the abatement small or avoid it. When they show up with “I told them to keep it ventilated,” they lose. The documentation is the difference.

Did you know?
Mold can take hold within 24 to 48 hours of a leak or flood. That’s why “I’ll deal with it next month” is the response that turns a $500 fix into a several-thousand-dollar remediation, and a manageable complaint into a hearing. The clock starts the day the water shows up, not the day you get around to it. More figures on our mold statistics page.
How fast do you have to respond?
Neither the RTA nor the Civil Code gives you a hard number of days, both use “a reasonable time,” and reasonable scales with severity. A cosmetic speck in a bathroom corner isn’t the same as black mold spreading behind a child’s bedroom wall. But as a working rule, tribunals and property standards officers expect you to acknowledge the complaint and get eyes on it within about 24 to 48 hours, then move to actually fixing it without stalling. Here’s what “acting reasonably” looks like in the first few days.

Reply in writing, fast
Acknowledge the complaint the same day by text or email, and say when you’ll inspect. A dated written reply is your first piece of evidence.
Get it looked at
Inspect within a day or two. A free virtual inspection gets a certified opinion on the record before you’ve even scheduled a visit.
Fix the source
Find and stop the moisture, the leak, the grading, the failed fan. Cleaning without this just resets the clock, and the tribunal can tell.
Keep the paper
Photos, reports, invoices, and every message. If it ever reaches a hearing, the landlord with the file wins.
Tenant filed a complaint, or threatening to? We can respond this week.
When a tenant has put a mold complaint in writing or raised an LTB or TAL application, timing is everything. We prioritize a free virtual inspection within five business days, and our reports are built to be hearing-ready documentation you can put in front of the Board. RBQ-licensed for Quebec rentals, IICRC-certified, serving Ontario and Quebec, 24/7 at 1-877-566-6653.
Book Your Free Virtual InspectionWhat to do the day a tenant reports mold
If you only take one thing from this page, take this sequence. It keeps the unit habitable, keeps your tenant relationship intact, and builds the exact record you’d want if things ever went sideways. Work it top to bottom.
Acknowledge it in writing
Reply the same day, thank them for flagging it, and give a concrete next step and date. Silence reads as neglect later.
Don’t just paint over it
The classic small-landlord mistake. A coat of paint or a bleach wipe hides the surface while the colony keeps growing behind the drywall, and a tribunal treats a cover-up worse than the original mold.
Get a real inspection
A mold inspection tells you how far it goes and what’s feeding it. Start with a free virtual one so there’s a certified opinion on file within hours.
Test if it’s disputed
If the tenant claims it’s toxic or you two disagree on severity, air quality testing with lab analysis settles it with numbers instead of opinions.
Remediate under containment
Proper mold removal contains the area, fixes the moisture source, and removes what can’t be salvaged, then verifies with a re-test. Keep every invoice.
Document for the hearing you hope you never have
Save the dated photos, the inspection report, the receipts, and the message thread in one place. This is the file that keeps an abatement small, or off the table entirely.

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Frequently asked questions: landlords and mold
A tenant mold complaint is a stressful moment, but it’s a manageable one when you move fast and keep records. Mold Busters has helped Ontario and Quebec landlords, from single-suite owners to small portfolios, turn a complaint into a documented, resolved repair since 2005, with certified inspectors, government-accredited lab partners, and reports built to hold up if it ever reaches a hearing. Start with a free virtual inspection and you’ll know exactly where you stand before you reply to your tenant.
Two things worth passing along: if you want your tenant to understand the process from their side, send them our mold in an apartment guide, it explains their rights and the same steps in plain language. And if you’ve grown into managing several units and want a standing arrangement rather than one-off calls, our property managers service is built for that. If the mold is at your day job rather than your rental, see our guide on mold in the workplace.
Tenant reported mold? Let’s get ahead of it.
Send a few details and a certified inspector will tell you how serious it is and what your next move should be, with documentation you can stand behind. Free virtual inspection, no obligation, anywhere across our Ontario and Quebec service areas.
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