A 6-week vacancy on $1,800 rent is $2,700 of lost income — and more if you include fixed costs (taxes, insurance, mortgage interest) still running. Most landlords underestimate this cost because it's invisible on statements. Yet it's one of the most controllable expenses in rental management.
This article identifies the 4 main causes of prolonged Montreal vacancy and presents 9 concrete levers to go from a 6-week placement to 2-3 weeks, without sacrificing tenant quality.
The 4 main causes of prolonged vacancy
1. Mis-calibrated price
Cause #1 by far. A rent 5-10% above market can divide inquiries by 3. Many landlords set an 'ideal' price rather than a 'realistic' one — and end up dropping after 4 weeks of vacancy, having already lost a month's rent.
2. Weak listing and photos
Poor copy or low-quality photos drastically reduce click-through. On Marketplace or Kijiji, your listing competes with 50-200 others — you must stand out at the 1st photo.
3. Slow response to candidates
Good candidates see 5-10 units in parallel. A 24-48h response loses them. Landlords responding in under 2 hours triple their visit conversion.
4. Poorly organized viewing process
Scattered individual viewings, candidates left without follow-up, file requested late. Each friction adds 3-5 days.
Lever 1 — Calibrate price from the start
Before posting, run a rigorous comparative: 8-12 similar units (same type, same area, ±5 years build, ±1 bedroom) currently for rent. Compute the average, set your price in the low-medium zone for the first 7 days.
Lever 2 — Optimize listing and photos
- Title with unique hook (renovation, balcony, view, sought area)
- First photo = best photo (often living or kitchen)
- 10-15 photos covering all main rooms + exterior + neighbourhood
- Inclusions listed at the top of description
- Clear availability and lease length
- 'Verification + references' mention to filter upfront
Lever 3 — Distribute on the right platforms
In 2026 Montreal, optimal mix:
- Facebook Marketplace — now the #1 residential platform in Montreal
- Kijiji — still strong for 35+ profiles
- Centris — if working with a broker (heavily qualified)
- LesPAC — niche, useful North/South Shore
- Local Facebook neighbourhood groups — highly effective for targeted profiles
Lever 4 — Respond fast (really fast)
Configure notifications. Respond in 1-2 hours during active hours (8 a.m. - 10 p.m.). Fast response triples visit conversion. Standard reply template:
Lever 5 — Group viewings
Coordinate 3-5 viewings in one window (e.g. Saturday 10-12, 15-20 min slots). Pros: market effect (candidates see they're not alone), massive time savings, faster decision.
Lever 6 — Rigorous pre-qualification before viewing
Only show pre-qualified candidates. No viewing before: full name, declared income, current situation, verification consent. Halves visits for the same number of serious candidates.
Lever 7 — Request full file during or just after viewing
Serious candidates can provide their file on the spot or within 24 hours. Candidates pushing to 'next week' rarely are the right ones. Have the document list ready in advance.
Lever 8 — Decide quickly (24-48h after viewing)
Once files received and verifications done, decide in 24-48 h. Beyond 72 h, you lose your best candidate (signed elsewhere). Decision speed is an underrated success factor.
Lever 9 — Lease ready to sign
Once you've chosen, the TAL standard lease must be ready to sign within 48 hours — annexes included, clauses validated. Any extra delay is a window for the candidate to back out or find better.
Vacancy vs revenue comparison
| Monthly rent | Cost of 1 week vacancy | Cost of 4 weeks |
|---|---|---|
| $1,200 | $300 | $1,200 |
| $1,500 | $375 | $1,500 |
| $1,800 | $450 | $1,800 |
| $2,200 | $550 | $2,200 |
| $2,800 | $700 | $2,800 |
Reducing vacancy from 4 to 2 weeks on $1,800 rent = $900 saved. Across 5 placements in 5 years, that's $4,500 recovered — often with no investment, just better method.