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If you’ve ever heard a key turn at your apartment door when you weren’t expecting anyone, you know how jarring that feels. In Winnipeg, privacy matters in rentals, too, and a landlord can’t simply walk in because they own the building.
A landlord in Winnipeg can enter only in three lawful ways: With your consent, with proper notice of entry for a valid reason, or without notice during a real emergency entry situation. Those rules come from The Residential Tenancies Act (Manitoba) and are enforced through the Residential Tenancies Branch (RTB). If you need a new place to live, find apartments for rent in Winnipeg with Globe Property Management because we respect these rules.
The starting point is your right to privacy rights and quiet enjoyment. In Winnipeg rental housing, lawful entry falls into three buckets: Consent, notice, and emergency.
| Entry Type | Permission Needed? | Notice Needed? | Does Tenant Have To Be Home? | Can a Master Key Be Used? | Common Example |
| Consent | Yes | No | No | Yes, if you agree | You say it’s fine to come in today |
| Proper Legal Notice | No | Yes | No | Yes, after lawful notice | Repair, inspection, pest treatment, showing |
| Genuine Emergency | No | No | No | Yes | Fire, flood, burst pipe, gas smell |
Outside those three categories, ordinary entry isn’t allowed. At Globe Property Management, we explain this early because confusion around entry causes avoidable stress. If you want a broader overview of your rights as a renter in Canada, that foundation helps, but Manitoba law is what governs what happens here.
For non-emergency entry, reasonable notice should be clear, specific, and given ahead of time. In Manitoba, the practical standard is a written notice stating why the landlord is entering, when, and who will be entering if contractors or staff are involved.
Reasonable hours matter too. After proper notice, you don’t have to be home for the entry to be lawful, and a landlord or property manager can use a master key if no one answers. If the proposed time conflicts with work, childcare, or a medical appointment, ask in writing to reschedule, but you can’t block necessary maintenance, repairs, or lawful inspection visits indefinitely. For a stronger base of understanding tenant rights in Manitoba, it helps to see how notice fits into the bigger rental picture.

People often mix up “without permission” and “without notice.” A landlord can legally enter without your permission if they’ve already given proper notice for a valid reason, and they can enter without notice only when the situation is truly urgent.
Common lawful reasons for entry after notice include repairs, maintenance, annual suite inspections, smoke detector checks, pest control visits, appraisals, and showings to prospective tenants or prospective buyers. A true emergency is narrower: Fire, flooding, an active leak affecting another suite, a suspected gas leak, a serious electrical hazard, or another immediate safety threat.
| Scenario | Entry Allowed With Notice | Entry Allowed Without Notice Only If Urgent | Not Enough On Its Own |
| Annual Inspection | Yes | No | No |
| Pest Treatment | Yes | No | No |
| Leaking Pipe into Lower Suite | Yes | Yes | No |
| Smoke Alarm Testing | Yes | No | No |
| Realtor Showing | Yes | No | No |
| Buyer Appraisal | Yes | No | No |
| Suspected Abandoned Unit | Usually, after proper process | Sometimes, if urgent safety concern exists | No |
| Contractor Repair | Yes | If immediate damage is happening | No |
| Wellness Concern | Depends on urgency | Yes, if there’s a real, immediate risk | No |
Routine maintenance, checking cleanliness, changing a filter, discussing rent, or dropping by because the landlord was nearby aren’t emergencies. Yes, a landlord can enter if you aren’t home, but only after lawful notice or during an emergency.
If a landlord enters your suite without consent, proper notice, or a real emergency, document it immediately. Save texts, emails, voicemails, camera footage, and notices, and write down the date, time, witnesses, and anything moved or damaged.
Then send a calm, written message asking for an explanation and asking that future entries follow Manitoba rules. If it keeps happening, contact the Residential Tenancies Branch. The RTB can review unauthorized entry and whether an order to comply, compensation, or damages is appropriate. Reviewing the key points of lease agreements can help you spot language that sounds broad but still has legal limits.
For landlords, good entry practices protect trust as much as compliance. A vague text, a last-minute showing, or repeated surprise visits create risk fast, while a professional system creates a clear record and sets expectations.
At Globe Property Management, we believe entry should feel predictable, respectful, and well-documented.
At Globe Property Management, we send a written notice with the reason for entry, the date, and a practical time window. That applies to inspections, pest control, contractor visits, and showings after a tenancy is ending. If you’re planning a move, our article on notice to end fixed-term lease helps explain when showings usually become part of the process.
We aim for reasonable hours and try to work around real conflicts when we can. Repeated inspections without a clear reason aren’t good management, and they can become a legal issue if they interfere with quiet enjoyment.
We keep records of notices, contractor coordination, and the reason access was needed. If a master key is used after lawful notice because no one is home, or if the entry was emergency-based, that should be documented.
A simple landlord compliance checklist looks like this:
At Globe Property Management, we believe good management feels calm and predictable. That’s one reason many renters appreciate our detailed guide to renting an apartment before they move in.
If you’re a rental owner, entry disputes are one of those issues that seem small until they become expensive, stressful, and personal. A missed notice, a poorly timed showing, or an undocumented contractor visit can quickly turn into a complaint about privacy, harassment, or quiet enjoyment.
At Globe Property Management, we help owners handle the day-to-day details the right way. That includes compliant entry notices, respectful tenant communication, maintenance coordination, and clear records when repairs, inspections, or showings need to happen. If that sounds like the kind of support you want around your Winnipeg property, Globe Property Management is here to help you build a smoother, more confident rental process.

Yes, if the landlord gave proper notice for a lawful reason, they can enter even when you aren’t home. A master key can be used only when the notice is valid, or there’s an emergency.
Only if you consent or there’s a genuine emergency. For routine repairs, inspections, pest control, or showings, landlords should give proper advance notice.
If the repair is necessary and proper notice was given, you usually can’t block entry outright. You can ask in writing to reschedule if the proposed time is unreasonable.
Yes, but not whenever they feel like it. A master key can be used after lawful notice when no one answers, or during a real emergency.
Yes. If there’s a fire, active leak, burst pipe, gas smell, or another urgent threat to people or property, notice isn’t required first.
Document each incident, save messages or video, and ask in writing for future entry to follow legal notice rules. If the pattern continues, contact the Residential Tenancies Branch with your timeline and evidence.