Lease analysis

Your Landlord’s Lease Agreement Was Written to Rip You Off. Here’s How to Fight Back.

Target keyword: landlord tricks renters lease fees Canada
Audience: Renters who feel something is off but don’t know what to do about it


Nobody reads 15 pages of legal text in a rush. Your landlord knows that.

That’s the whole strategy. Hand you a dense document, tell you to sign by tomorrow or lose the unit, and count on you not questioning any of it. You skim it. You sign it. You move in.

Twelve months later, you find out what you actually agreed to — when $900 disappears from your security deposit for “professional cleaning,” “admin fees,” and “late payment penalties” you didn’t even know were in there.

Except you didn’t really agree to any of it. Because most of those charges were never legal in the first place.

Leases aren’t neutral. They’re rigged.

Your lease wasn’t drafted to be fair. It was drafted to protect the landlord and squeeze money out of you at every stage — monthly fees during the tenancy, penalties if you step out of line, and deposit deductions when you move out.

We’ve analyzed real leases from Edmonton. Professional property management companies. Letterhead, logos, “standard” templates. Between just two of them, we found 23 clauses that violate Alberta’s Residential Tenancies Act and over $4,000 in fees with no basis in law.

Late fees that pile up to $750 in a single month. Interest rates buried in a maintenance addendum that work out to 214% annually. Clauses that reclassify every disputed charge as “rent” so the landlord can threaten eviction over a $25 fee. Liability waivers that let the landlord off the hook even when their own negligence causes damage to your unit.

All of it dressed up in professional formatting, sitting in a fee schedule that looks official and non-negotiable.

It’s not. And that’s what we’re here to show you.

What the RentalProof Lease Analyzer does

You upload your lease. We check every clause against your province’s tenancy law. You get a report telling you exactly what’s wrong, why it’s wrong, and what you can do about it.

That’s it. No accounts to manage. No subscriptions. $10, one lease, one report.

Here’s what happens behind the scenes:

We read the whole thing. Not just the fee schedule — every clause, every addendum, every paragraph of fine print. The worst tricks aren’t in the obvious places. They’re buried in maintenance addendums, definition sections, and signature page schedules.

We check it against real law. 99 rules for Alberta. 92 for Ontario. 77 for BC. Every rule tied to a specific section of your province’s tenancy act. Every rule verified by reading the actual legislation — not blog summaries, not generic legal advice. The real statute text.

We tell you what’s wrong in plain English. Each finding shows you: the exact text from your lease, what it means, which section of the law it breaks, and what to do about it. No legal jargon. No “consult a professional” cop-outs. Concrete next steps.

Your report arrives by email in about 5 minutes, with a PDF you can save, print, or forward to your roommate.

Don’t just read the report. Use it to fix the lease before you sign.

This is the part most renters miss. They think a lease is take-it-or-leave-it. Sign as-is or lose the unit.

It’s not. You can — and should — ask the landlord to fix it.

Think about the landlord’s position. They have a vacant unit bleeding money every day it sits empty. They screened you, approved you, maybe turned away other applicants. They want you in that unit. That’s leverage, and you should use it before your name hits the page.

When you show up with specific findings — not “this feels unfair” but “Clause 9 conflicts with RTA section 22(2), and the late fee in Clause 14 has no authorizing regulation under section 70(1)(j)” — the conversation changes completely. You’re not a nervous tenant asking for a favour. You’re an informed renter pointing out problems the landlord needs to fix.

Here’s what to say:

“I’m ready to sign and I want to move forward quickly, but I’ve had the lease reviewed and a few clauses appear to conflict with the Residential Tenancies Act. Can we revise [Clause X] and [Clause Y] so the agreement is legally compliant?”

That’s polite. That’s professional. And most property managers will make the changes rather than lose a qualified tenant and restart the search.

What if they say no?

Then you just learned the most important thing about your future landlord.

Someone who refuses to remove clauses they know are illegal is telling you exactly how the next 12 months will go. If they won’t fix the lease before they have your money, they won’t be reasonable when you dispute a deposit deduction at move-out. If they get defensive when you cite a section of the RTA, imagine how they’ll react when you file with the tenancy tribunal.

A lease is a preview of the relationship. A landlord who respects the law before you move in will probably respect it after. One who digs in on illegal clauses before they even have your deposit is showing you who they are.

Walk away. There are other units. There aren’t other security deposits you can afford to lose.

What if you already signed?

Then the report becomes your insurance policy.

Illegal clauses are void whether you signed them or not. That’s not an opinion — it’s written into the law in all three provinces. Alberta RTA section 3(1). Ontario RTA section 3(1). BC RTA section 5. Your signature does not override the statute.

Every trick your landlord buried in the lease? Still void. The $25/day late fee? Unenforceable. The mandatory professional cleaning? Beyond what the law requires. The liability waiver? Contradicts the landlord’s statutory obligations.

Your report documents all of it. When the landlord tries to deduct $400 from your deposit at move-out, you’ve already got the finding that explains why they can’t — with the exact section of the law that backs you up.

You can’t un-sign a lease. But you can know exactly which parts of it don’t actually apply to you, and be ready when the landlord pretends they do.

The math

A paralegal charges $200+ to review a lease. A legal clinic has a multi-week waitlist. Asking ChatGPT gives you generic answers without province-specific citations — and gets the section numbers wrong more often than right.

We charge $10. Every clause checked. Every finding cited. Report in your inbox in 5 minutes. If something goes wrong on our end, your credit comes back instantly — no refund process, one click to retry.

The two leases we’ve analyzed had combined financial exposure over $4,000 in fees the landlords couldn’t legally collect. Both were “standard” templates from professional property managers. Both looked completely normal to the tenants who signed them.

$10 to find out if yours is one of them. Whether you use it to negotiate before signing or to protect yourself after — that’s the cheapest insurance a renter can buy.

→ Check your lease at analyzer.rentalproof.us