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Team RentsyncJune 5, 2026 at 6:51 PM12 min read

If Your Rental Inquiry Volume Has Slowed, Start Here

Few things get a leasing team's attention faster than a noticeable slowdown in rental inquiries.

When it happens, the first reaction is often to look for a cause and a quick fix. Did our visibility change? Is something wrong with our listings? Do we need to spend more on marketing?

The challenge is that inquiry volume rarely tells the full story on its own.

Across Canada, many rental housing providers are operating in a market that looks very different today than it did at the start of 2026. Increased inventory and incentives have given renters more options and leverage in their decision-making process. At the same time, market conditions vary significantly from one region to the next, making it harder to determine whether a slowdown is being driven by broader market forces or something specific to your property.

Before reacting, it's worth taking a step back and examining what may be driving the change in inquiry volume.

 

Competition Has Increased, But Demand Isn’t Moving Uniformly

Over the past several months, renters in many regions across Canada have gained access to more available inventory, giving them greater flexibility in when, why, and how long they search. New purpose-built rental communities continue to enter the market, while condo rentals and investor-owned units remain active competitors in many urban areas.

As a result, renter attention is spread across more properties than it was previously.

At the same time, the demand picture itself has become increasingly market-specific. Some regions continue to show strong activity, while others are adjusting to increased supply, shifting renter behaviour, and changing local conditions.

That variation matters. A slowdown in inquiry volume may look like a demand problem at the property level, but the broader picture could be more complicated. Demand may be holding in one market, softening in another, or showing different patterns by unit type, neighbourhood, or price point.

What to Evaluate

Review your competitive landscape before assuming there is a problem with your property or listing:

Have new communities opened nearby?

New supply doesn't have to lease up successfully to affect your inquiry volume. Even recently launched communities can draw renter attention away from existing properties simply by giving prospects another option to consider.

If several new communities have entered your market over the past six to twelve months, compare the timing of those openings against your inquiry trends.

Are competitors offering incentives?

Incentives can influence inquiry behaviour long before they influence leasing decisions. Renters may be more likely to click, save, or contact a community advertising a free month of rent or other promotion, even if they ultimately choose a different property.

Review competitor websites, listings, and marketing materials regularly to understand what renters are seeing during their search process.

Has inventory increased within your submarket?

An increase in available inventory often means renters have more options without necessarily increasing the number of active renters in the market. When supply grows faster than demand, inquiry volume can become spread across a larger pool of properties.

Look beyond city-wide trends and focus on your specific neighbourhood or submarket whenever possible.

What are the positive or negative demand score changes in your market?

Demand scores can help determine whether inquiry volume changes are isolated to your property or reflective of broader market conditions. Month-over-month changes help identify recent shifts in renter activity, while year-over-year comparisons provide additional context by accounting for seasonality.

Review Rentsync's National Demand Report each month to find this data.



Renters Are Spending More Time Evaluating Their Options

In tighter market conditions, renters often felt pressure to act quickly. Waiting too long could mean losing a unit altogether.

With more inventory available in many regions today, renters have more options in their chosen neighbourhoods, or even in certain desirable areas where they were previously priced out.

Now, instead of reaching out to the first few properties that meet their criteria and rushing to lease, renters are taking their time comparing options before deciding which properties are worth contacting.

For leasing professionals, the outcome of this behaviour change can look like a drop in inquiry volume.

What to Evaluate

Are prospects asking more detailed questions before scheduling tours?

If prospects are requesting additional information before booking a tour, it may indicate they are spending more time evaluating options before committing to the next step. Leasing teams often notice this trend before it becomes visible in reporting data.

Gathering feedback from onsite staff can provide valuable context when interpreting inquiry volume changes.

Are prospects spending more time comparing nearby communities?

When renters have more options, they often spend longer evaluating competing properties before reaching out.

If prospects frequently reference nearby communities during conversations, ask about competing properties, or mention specific incentives they've seen elsewhere, it may suggest you're operating in a more competitive environment than you were previously.

Has the time between listing a unit and receiving the first inquiry increased? A longer time-to-first-inquiry can be an early indicator of changing market conditions. Compare current performance against previous leasing periods and similar unit types. If inquiries are arriving later than they historically have, it may suggest renters are spending more time researching before making contact.

 

National Headlines May Have Very Little to Do With Your Property

One of the biggest mistakes leasing professionals can make is relying too heavily on national housing narratives and applying them broadly to their communities.

The reality is that rental market conditions have become increasingly regional.

Rentsync's June 2026 Demand Report illustrates this clearly as Vancouver recorded a renter demand score of 7.0, Calgary reached 6.9, and Toronto sat at 3.9.

Those differences matter when you're trying to determine whether a decline in inquiries is being driven by market conditions or something closer to home.

This is why broad market narratives can sometimes create more confusion than clarity: “I’m seeing demand is up, but I’m not experiencing that in my portfolio. It must be an issue we need to fix.”

When evaluating performance, local market conditions often matter far more than national averages.

 

What to Evaluate

Benchmark against your local market first and review:
Local demand trends

Understanding whether renter demand is increasing, decreasing, or remaining relatively stable within your market provides important context for interpreting inquiry volume. Avoid relying solely on national headlines.

Local demand indicators are often much more relevant when evaluating property-level performance.

New supply deliveries

Track newly completed communities, lease-up projects, and major developments entering your market.

New supply can affect inquiry volume well before occupancy stabilizes, particularly if competing properties are actively marketing available inventory.

Competitive pricing Renters can compare pricing more easily than ever. Even small pricing differences can influence which communities receive inquiries first. Regularly review comparable properties to understand whether your pricing remains competitive relative to similar units in your market.
Vacancy conditions Higher vacancy rates typically give renters more negotiating power and more time to make decisions. If vacancy is increasing within your market, lower inquiry volume may be influenced by changing market dynamics rather than a specific issue with your property.

Before drawing conclusions, make sure you're comparing your performance against the market you actually operate in.

 

Could Visibility Be Part of the Problem?

When inquiry volume declines, it's natural to question the marketing channels generating those leads.

Is the listing displaying correctly? Has the visibility level changed? Is the right audience seeing the property?

Those questions are worth asking.

A decline in inquiries doesn't automatically mean there's a problem with the listing itself. At the same time, market conditions shouldn't be used as an explanation for every performance issue.

In many cases, both market conditions and property-specific factors can influence performance at the same time.

The goal is to separate market trends from property and/or listing-specific challenges.

What to Evaluate

Understanding where the change is occurring often provides valuable clues about what's causing it.
Have inquiries declined across all lead sources or only one?

If inquiry volume is declining across every source, the cause may be broader than a single marketing channel.

If only one source is experiencing a decline, it may indicate a visibility, audience, or listing-specific issue worth investigating. 

Are comparable communities experiencing similar trends?

One of the quickest ways to determine whether a problem is market-wide or property-specific is to compare notes with nearby communities.

If comparable properties are experiencing similar declines, broader market conditions may be playing a role. If they are not, it may be worth investigating your pricing, positioning, visibility, or listing quality more closely.

Has listing engagement changed alongside inquiries?

A decline in inquiries doesn't always mean a decline in interest. Review available engagement metrics where you can, such as listing views, saves, click-through activity, or time spent on page.

If engagement remains strong while inquiries decline, renters may still be interested but taking longer to move through the decision-making process.

Is the decline consistent across unit types, or isolated to a specific inventory? Different unit types often experience different demand patterns. If inquiry volume is falling across every unit type, the cause may be broader. If only certain floorplans, price points, or bedroom counts are affected, the issue may be tied to specific inventory rather than overall market demand.
Has there been an increase in competitive listings within your operating regions and cities?

More listings generally means more competition for visibility and renter attention. This doesn't automatically mean performance will decline, but it can make maintaining inquiry volume more challenging.

In some markets, increased competition can make it more difficult for individual listings to stand out or maintain the same level of exposure they previously received. If competitive inventory has grown significantly, it may be worth reviewing whether your current marketing and visibility strategy is still aligned with market conditions.

 

If the Trend Is Real, Focus on What You Can Control

Let's assume the analysis is done - you've reviewed local market conditions, looked at competitor activity, evaluated your listings, and compared performance across your lead sources.

Now what?

The next step depends on what your analysis tells you.

If the Market Is Driving the Change

If nearby communities are experiencing similar trends, new inventory has entered the market, and renters are taking longer to make decisions, your focus should shift toward conversion rather than volume.

In a more competitive environment, leasing success often comes down to how effectively interest is turned into action.

       

       Consider focusing efforts on improving: 

        Leasing team response times and follow-up consistency
        How easily and quickly tours can be scheduled
        Tour-to-lease conversion performance
        The overall prospect experience from first inquiry to application
        Clearly communicating your property's differentiators

 



If the Issue Appears More Localized

If comparable communities are performing well while your property inquiry volume is experiencing a significant decline, it may be worth taking a closer look at your marketing and leasing fundamentals.

       

       Consider reviewing and improving or adjusting: 

        Listing content details, feature coverage and photography quality
        Pricing and incentives relative to competitors
        Unit availability accuracy and listing visibility levels
        Whether your community's value proposition is being clearly communicated

 

The goal isn't to immediately overhaul your strategy, it's to identify where the breakdown is occurring before deciding how to respond.

In either scenario, the most effective decisions are usually based on evidence rather than assumptions.

Key Takeaway: Diagnose Before You React

When inquiry levels drop, it can be tempting to immediately offer incentives, increase advertising spend, or overhaul marketing strategies. We know sometimes those actions are necessary.

       

       In a more competitive and uneven market, the most effective leasing leaders ask:

        How much has supply and competition changed in our market?
        Have renter expectations and behaviours changed? If so, how?
        Is this happening across multiple communities, or only at one property?
        What are local demand indicators showing?

 

The answers will often tell you far more than inquiry volume alone.

 

Final Thoughts

If your rental inquiries have slowed, you're not alone.

Across the industry, many leasing professionals are trying to make sense of a market that feels very different than it did at the beginning of the year. Increased competition, shifting renter behaviour, and growing inventory have made leasing performance more difficult to interpret than it was just a few months ago.

But the most important takeaway is this:

A decline in inquiries is a signal, not a standalone diagnosis.

Alone, it doesn't tell you whether demand has changed, whether competition has increased, whether renters are taking longer to decide, or whether a property-specific issue needs attention.

That's why the most effective leasing professionals aren't simply tracking inquiry volume or jumping to conclusions when it changes - they're looking for context. They're comparing trends, evaluating conversion performance, gathering data on local market conditions, and asking better questions before making decisions.

In today's rental market, inquiry volume is only part of the story.

The real advantage comes from understanding what's driving the change and responding accordingly.

 


Unsure where to start gathering the market data needed to answer these questions?

Here’s where we can help.

Market Insights
Access current and historical rental market data, including demand scores, pricing trends, inventory levels, and competitive market intelligence to better understand what may be influencing inquiry volume in your region.

Custom Reports
Access custom market intelligence and renter insight reports tailored to your specific market, property, or business objectives. Combining multifamily data, visual reporting, and expert analysis, our reports help property teams understand market conditions, identify emerging trends, and make more informed leasing, marketing, and development decisions.

Digital Advertising
Rentsync's in-house digital marketing team develops and manages multifamily advertising campaigns across Google's search network, social media platforms, and other leading channels. Through ongoing optimization, performance reporting, and industry expertise, we help property teams improve visibility, attract qualified renters, and adapt to changing market conditions.

Rentals.ca Infinity Network
Expand your property's reach across Canada's largest rental listing network, helping your listings maintain visibility in increasingly competitive markets and giving you access to a broader audience of active renters.

 

Use the button below to book a call with our team to discuss which solutions may be most helpful for understanding your market and improving leasing performance.