Your landlord owns the building, but during your lease, your apartment is your home — and they can’t simply walk in whenever they please. In Quebec, you have a right to privacy and to the peaceful enjoyment of your dwelling, which means a landlord can only enter for specific valid reasons, usually with proper advance notice and at reasonable hours. Knowing exactly when entry is allowed, and when it isn’t, is one of the most empowering things a tenant can understand.
In 2026, questions about access come up constantly — for repairs, inspections, or showing an apartment to future tenants. The rules strike a balance: the landlord can manage their property, but not at the cost of your privacy. At Frédéric Murray Immobilier, we want tenants to know where that line sits. Here’s how right of entry works.
Your right to privacy in your home
The starting point is simple: while you rent it, the apartment is your private space. Your right to peaceful enjoyment means you can live there without unwarranted intrusion, even from the owner.
This right means that, as a general rule:
- the landlord cannot enter at will, simply because they own the property;
- your privacy is protected throughout the lease;
- entry is the exception, allowed only for valid reasons and within the rules.
This framework is enforced by the Tribunal administratif du logement (TAL). It doesn’t mean your landlord can never come in — it means they must follow specific rules when they do, and you have the right to insist on those rules being respected.
When a landlord can enter
A landlord can enter your apartment only for legitimate, specific reasons — not curiosity or convenience. The law recognizes a limited set of valid purposes.
These generally include:
- carrying out repairs or work in the dwelling;
- verifying the condition of the apartment;
- showing the unit to a prospective tenant or buyer, in the right circumstances;
- responding to a genuine emergency.
Outside of these reasons, a landlord has no right to enter. And even for a valid reason, entry usually requires proper notice and must happen at reasonable hours — the purpose alone isn’t enough.

The notice rules
For non-urgent entry, advance notice is the key protection. A landlord generally can’t show up unannounced, even for a legitimate reason.
As a rule, for non-emergency access:
- the landlord must give advance notice, generally 24 hours;
- entry must occur during the hours permitted by law, typically daytime and early evening;
- the reason must be valid, such as repairs, inspection, or a showing.
Because the exact permitted hours are set by law and details can be updated, confirm the current rules with the TAL for your situation. The principle, however, is constant: reasonable notice and reasonable timing. A landlord who wants to enter tomorrow afternoon for repairs must tell you in advance, not appear at your door.
Showing your apartment to prospective tenants or buyers
One common scenario deserves its own attention: when a landlord wants to show your apartment to future tenants or potential buyers. This often happens after you’ve given notice that you’re leaving, or when the building is for sale.
In these cases:
- the landlord may show the unit with proper notice;
- showings must respect your right to peaceful enjoyment and reasonable hours;
- you can expect reasonable arrangements, rather than constant disruption;
- your belongings and privacy must still be respected.
You’re not required to keep your home available at all hours or to tolerate endless visits. Cooperating reasonably while insisting on proper notice and timing keeps things fair on both sides. If you’ve given notice and want to understand the broader picture of leaving, our guide on ending your lease early provides helpful context.

When a landlord can enter without notice
There’s one main exception to the notice rule: a genuine emergency. When there’s an urgent threat to the property or safety, a landlord may enter immediately.
This narrow exception applies to situations like:
- a burst pipe or active water damage;
- a fire or gas hazard;
- other genuine emergencies requiring immediate action.
Separately, you can always consent to entry without formal notice if it suits you — for instance, agreeing to let a repair happen the same day. But absent an emergency or your agreement, the standard notice rules apply. An emergency is a real, urgent situation, not a convenient label for skipping notice.
What to do if your landlord enters improperly
If a landlord enters without a valid reason, proper notice, or your consent, you have recourse. Improper entry is a violation of your rights, and you don’t have to simply accept it.
A sensible approach is to:
- communicate clearly, reminding the landlord of the rules in writing;
- document each incident, with dates, times, and details;
- keep copies of any written exchanges;
- apply to the TAL if the problem continues.
One important note: you generally cannot change the locks without the landlord’s consent, just as the landlord cannot change them without yours. The right path for persistent improper entry is documentation and, if needed, the TAL — not unilateral action. Understanding your full set of protections, as covered in our guide on tenant rights in Quebec, helps you respond confidently.

Mistakes to avoid
Most entry disputes come down to a few avoidable errors — on both sides. Steer clear of these:
- Assuming a landlord can enter freely, or that they can’t enter at all (both are wrong).
- Skipping notice, when proper advance notice is required.
- Refusing all reasonable access, such as blocking legitimate repairs or showings.
- Reacting unilaterally, like changing locks, instead of documenting and using the TAL.
Avoid these, and right of entry becomes a clear, manageable part of renting rather than a source of conflict. In 2026, the best tenant–landlord relationships are built on this same balance: the landlord respects your privacy and follows the rules, and you allow reasonable, properly arranged access when it’s genuinely needed.


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