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Real Estate

Can the condo board raise my common expenses without my approval in Ontario?

TSL Written by the Treadstone Law team· Updated June 2026

Yes, in most cases the board of directors can increase common expenses without a vote of unit owners. Under the Condominium Act, 1998, the board has authority to set the budget and levy the fees required to fund it. If the operating budget goes up — due to rising insurance premiums, utility costs, staffing, or reserve fund requirements — fees follow without a unit-owner referendum.

However, if the board wants to make an addition to the common elements or a change in a service that increases the annual budget by more than ten percent, owners must be given notice and may requisition a meeting to vote on it. This threshold protects owners from drastic unannounced spending.

Boards must provide owners with audited financial statements and the annual budget. If you believe a fee increase is unreasonable or that the board is not managing finances properly, you have recourse through the Condominium Authority Tribunal, which handles many condo disputes in Ontario, or through the courts for more serious governance issues.

Key takeaways

  • Boards can raise fees to cover increased operating costs without a unit-owner vote.
  • A budget increase over ten percent for new services or additions requires owner notice and potential meeting.
  • Financial statements must be provided to owners annually.
  • The Condominium Authority Tribunal offers dispute resolution options.
This is general information, not legal advice. It doesn’t create a lawyer–client relationship, and the rules can change. For advice on your situation, a Treadstone real estate lawyer can help.
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