45 Wynford
Tenant Report
Invoice analysis of landlord's Above Guideline Increase application — 335 units affected
Claim breakdown
| Item | Amount | Life | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Garage Repairs | $5,062,797 | 12 yrs | Mixed |
| Roof Replacement | $224,465 | 25 yrs | Legit |
| Bathroom Risers | $47,279 | 15 yrs | Legit |
| Total | $5,334,541 | ||
The garage repair is 95% of the claim and contains all flagged items. Roof and risers appear legitimate — both were failing and needed replacement.
Scenario builder
Drag the sliders to model how challenging the garage useful life and deducting questionable items affects the AGI percentage tenants would pay. The useful life slider only affects the garage repair (95% of the claim) — the roof and riser useful lives are fixed at 25 and 15 years.
What drives the deduction amount? The deduction slider represents items the LTB could strike from the claim — painting, new lighting, irrigation, decorative walls, and landscaping upgrades. The exact amount depends on evidence. Ask the landlord for pre-construction photos and records. If they can't prove an item existed before or was failing, it comes out of the claim.
Note: The AGI is on top of the annual guideline increase (2.5% for 2024/2025). These percentages stack.
How these numbers are calculated: Each item is amortized separately (garage ÷ its useful life + roof ÷ 25 yrs + risers ÷ 15 yrs). The annual rent roll ($4,807,590) is derived from the LTB's stated 9.03% maximum and the known annual amortization of $434,030 — the only rent roll that produces the LTB's own figure. Individual unit rents are listed on the filed Rental Unit Information sheets (pages 11–13 of the application) and can be verified via the Tribunals Ontario Portal.
Garage repair line items
Key insights