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Transpacific Realty Advisors is a business in Vancouver providing property management solutions to clients. They provide the following BC-specific guidance for "What to do when a tenant dies." Below is a copy of their guidance, and here is a direct link to that guidance. The article was written from publicly available documents from the BC RTB (British Columbia Residential Tenancy Branch).
Additional guidance for the Province of British Columbia can be found at CLE BC (The Continuing Legal Education Society of British Columbia)
What to do when a tenant dies—guidance for BC landlords and property owners
Posted September 10, 2025
Few situations are as sensitive—and legally complicated—as managing a rental unit after a tenant has passed away, especially when there’s no known next of kin. We provide guidance on some of the key issues BC landlords and property managers face after a tenant passes away.
Recently, our company received a negative Google review regarding how we handled a very sensitive situation—the death of a tenant in the building.
Few situations are as sensitive—and legally complicated—as managing a rental unit after a tenant has passed away, especially when there’s no known next of kin. For landlords and property managers, this raises both human and procedural questions.
In this case, one of the tenants in the building was a friend of the deceased. They could not understand the process that landlords and their property managers are obligated to follow, and were frustrated that we would not allow them to “help” by cleaning up the suite. While their desire to assist came from a place of kindness, the law sets out a very different path that landlords are required to follow.
Here’s how the process works in British Columbia:
1. First steps
If a tenant dies in their suite:
If you suspect a tenant has passed away in their suite:
Call emergency services (911) immediately. Police or paramedics must confirm the death.
Once confirmed, the Coroner’s Office becomes involved, particularly if no next of kin is known. They are responsible for investigating the death and attempting to identify or notify relatives.
At this stage, the landlord should not remove or touch any personal belongings in the suite, but should ensure the unit is secured against unauthorized entry.
If a tenant dies in hospital:
There may be times where a tenant passes away in hospital. The BC Coroners Service takes charge of locating next of kin.
At this stage, the landlord should not remove or touch any personal belongings in the suite, but should ensure the unit is secured against unauthorized entry.
2. Who has the authority to deal with a deceased tenant’s belongings?
If no next of kin can be found:
If no next of kin can be found, the BC Coroners Service works with the Public Guardian and Trustee of BC. The Public Guardian and Trustee can act as the estate administrator in cases where no executor or heirs are known. They will eventually give instructions about how to handle the deceased tenant’s belongings.
For the landlord or property manager, this means waiting until legal authority is established before clearing or re-renting the unit.
If there is a legal executor or administrator of the estate:
If someone claims to be the executor, you should request formal documentation before granting access. This typically means:
A copy of the representation grant (or probate documents) issued by the BC Supreme Court, or
A notarized copy of the will naming them executor (if probate has not yet been completed).
Only once this proof is received should they be allowed access to the unit. At that point, the executor has the same authority as the tenant would have had.
3. Can family and friends access the deceased person’s unit?
This is often where confusion and frustration arise:
If a friend or family member asks for access but cannot show proof that they are the executor or administrator of the estate, you cannot grant them access. The law requires landlords to safeguard the unit until legal authority is established. Allowing them in would risk liability and could be seen as interfering with the estate.
As noted above, if someone claims to be the executor, you should request formal documentation before granting access.
4. How must landlords and property managers handle a deceased tenant’s belongings?
The rules around belongings are strict:
Landlords cannot simply dispose of items, even if no relatives are known.
Once possession of the unit is legally recovered, the landlord must follow the RTA rules on abandoned property:
Give notice of intent to dispose of goods.
Store items safely for a prescribed period (at least 30 days, if valuable).
Work with the Public Trustee if they’re administering the estate.
In practice, this often means securing the unit and waiting for the Coroner or Public Trustee to give direction.
5. What happens to the tenancy?
Under the Residential Tenancy Act (RTA):
A tenancy does not automatically end at death. Instead, the estate of the deceased tenant becomes the tenant.
This means rent continues to be owed by the estate until the tenancy is formally ended.
If there’s no known next of kin, the landlord may need to apply to the Residential Tenancy Branch for an Order of Possession, naming the “estate of the tenant” as the respondent. This provides the legal authority to reclaim the suite.
6. Financial considerations
Unpaid rent or damages become claims against the estate. If the Public Trustee takes control, landlords may file as a creditor.
Security deposits may be applied against unpaid rent or damages, but only after proper Residential Tenancy Branch procedures are followed.
If no estate exists (or if it has no assets), the landlord may have to absorb some costs— though insurance may cover cleaning and remediation in certain circumstances.
The human side of the process
The death of a tenant is never just a legal matter—it’s a human one. Property managers and landlords must walk a careful line between empathy for grieving friends and neighbours, and the legal obligations that govern how a tenancy and belongings are handled.
The process of dealing with the deceased person’s belongings and tenancy may feel slower than some expect, but skipping any of the steps listed above—even with the best of intentions —would put the landlord in breach of the law and risk significant penalties.
Friends and neighbours often want to help out of compassion, but a landlord and property manager’s responsibility is twofold:
To respect the tenant who has passed away, by ensuring their belongings and tenancy are handled legally and respectfully.
To protect owners and residents, by following the law and avoiding actions that could create liability or legal challenges.
When someone asks for access without proof of authority, the answer must be “no”—not out of coldness, but out of respect for the law and the deceased. When an executor provides the correct documentation, the answer becomes “yes,” and property managers should work with them to ensure the estate is handled properly.
By respecting both the law and the dignity of the deceased, landlords can navigate these difficult situations with fairness, compassion, and professionalism. It may not satisfy everyone in the moment, but it ensures the process is beyond reproach—protecting the tenant’s legacy, the landlord’s interests, and the integrity of the community.
Options for when a tenant does not have a Power of Attorney
When a tenant in British Columbia experiences severe cognitive decline or physical incapacity and does not have an Enduring Power of Attorney (EPOA) or an RA9 Representation Agreement in place, landlords often find themselves in a difficult legal and ethical bind. Under BC law, family members cannot simply sign forms or take over a tenancy on behalf of an adult who has lost capacity.
However, landlords, property managers, and cooperative boards have several strategic and legal avenues to handle the situation depending on whether the goal is to get the tenant help, engage their family, or formally end the tenancy.
1. Local Health and Wellness Interventions (Non-Legal Routes)
Before jumping to legal eviction, a landlord can leverage provincial support systems to protect both the tenant and the property.
Contact Interior Health (Adult Protection / Case Management): In BC, health authorities have a legal mandate to investigate cases of adult self-neglect (which includes an adult unable to manage daily living, rent, or safety due to cognitive decline). Landlords can contact Interior Health to report a vulnerable adult. A caseworker can be dispatched to assess the tenant, arrange daily home supports, or initiate a transition to a care facility.
Request a Wellness Check: If the tenant is actively in distress, wandering, or presenting a safety hazard (e.g., leaving a stove on), calling the local non-emergency RCMP line for a wellness check creates an official paper trail. Emergency services often trigger automatic crisis-team referrals to the local health authority.
2. Leverage Family via a "Section 7" Agreement
If the tenant has family (such as a distant child) who claims they "can't do anything legally because there is no Power of Attorney," the landlord can counter this script.
Section 7 Representation Agreement (Standard Powers): Under BC's Representation Agreement Act, the legal threshold to sign a Section 7 agreement is much lower than a Power of Attorney. Even if a tenant is experiencing cognitive decline, as long as they can express a choice and recognize their family member, they can legally sign one.
What it allows: This agreement grants the family member "standard powers," which explicitly include routine financial management (paying rent, managing utility bills) and personal care decisions (deciding where the adult lives). The family can handle this remotely using standard BC templates or a local mobile notary.
The "PGT" Lever: If the family is hesitant to act, the landlord can inform them that the building will have to notify the Public Guardian and Trustee (PGT). Often, the realization that the provincial government may take involuntary control of their parent’s estate and finances is the incentive a distant family member needs to suddenly step up and arrange a Section 7 agreement.
3. The Legal Reality: The BC Residential Tenancy Act (RTA)
If the tenant's decline causes severe disruptions or safety hazards that affect other residents, the landlord is legally obligated to act. Under the RTA, all occupants have a right to quiet enjoyment. If a landlord fails to address a severely disruptive tenant, other tenants can sue the landlord at the Residential Tenancy Branch (RTB).
Document Everything Logically: Keep an objective, detailed log of incident dates, times, specific behaviors, and safety concerns. Avoid hearsay; get written complaints from neighboring residents.
Serve Formal Warning Letters: Send written notices outlining the specific breaches of the tenancy agreement to the tenant (and copy the next of kin). Even if the tenant cannot fully comprehend it, this establishes the necessary legal baseline for the RTB.
One-Month Notice to End Tenancy for Cause: If interventions fail and the tenant significantly interferes with or unreasonably disturbs other occupants, the landlord can issue a One-Month Notice for Cause.
Frustration of Tenancy: In rare, severe cases where a medical professional determines a tenant truly can no longer live safely or independently, a landlord may argue at the RTB that the tenancy agreement has been "frustrated"—meaning through no fault of either party, the contract is legally impossible to fulfill.
Summary of Immediate Next Steps
If you are managing this situation right now, a recommended approach is to designate a representative to contact the Interior Health community health intake line to report a vulnerable adult, while simultaneously issuing a formal, written letter to the tenant's family outlining the building's safety concerns and their option to utilize a Section 7 Representation Agreement.
Are you dealing with an immediate safety risk or urgent disruption in the building, or are you looking for a long-term plan?