Canada gets a lot of things right. I wouldn’t say everything especially with the medical mess they’ve got going on but some things, sure. Still, a member recently brought up something I had no idea about, and I’m shocked I didn’t find it myself. Apparently, Canada has a growing sex-for-rent practice. Even though it’s illegal, it’s still happening and while some providers (rightfully) find it disgusting and exploitative, others look at it as just another adult consensual arrangement.
When I first heard about it, I immediately thought about it from a client’s point of view. At first glance, it seemed like nothing more than a simpler way of paying for time fewer steps, maybe even more in favor of the provider. But what I didn’t realize was how often women are being taken advantage of because of the situations they’re in, which, of course, only the worst kinds of people exploit.
The practice has been around for a while in Canada, but it didn’t get much mainstream attention until this year. With average rent sitting around $2,300 back in March, more and more landlords have been easing into this kind of “arrangement.” It started with younger renters mostly college students who can’t afford tuition and housing at the same time. They go searching for affordable places online, only to wind up in a coffee shop face-to-face with a landlord offering them a room… if they pay in sex.
Some landlords try to sugarcoat it with coded language, while others openly list “sex-for-rent.” Media outlets have even gone undercover to expose the sleazy tactics these landlords use. Under Canada’s Protection of Communities and Exploited Persons Act, what they’re doing isn’t just unethical it’s considered prostitution. The fact that students, both international and domestic, are being targeted makes it even uglier.
As I said earlier, providers see this differently. Some might say it’s just another form of arrangement. But the reality is, most don’t need it and aren’t looking for it. Very few (if any) legit providers are scrolling Facebook Marketplace or Craigslist to land a deal like this. Landlords may fantasize about making these kinds of arrangements with the women we see in the hobby, but that’s just not happening. What’s actually happening is far darker it’s aimed at women with no other options, in situations where “no” isn’t really possible.
And that’s the part that makes it so wrong. Even though you can say we live in that gray area of society, there's no real way to okay with this. I know we all have a line and this seems to go past it in the worst way.
Sex-for-rent may sound, on the surface, like just another arrangement in the broader world of consensual sex work but in practice, it’s something far more troubling. Unlike providers who choose their clients, set their rates, and control their boundaries, many of the women caught in these landlord “offers” have no real choice at all. That lack of agency along with independent work is what separates consensual work from exploitation. Canada may not have figured out how to stop it yet, but calling it what it is and recognizing who it truly harms is the first step in making sure it doesn’t get normalized as just another option.
When I first heard about it, I immediately thought about it from a client’s point of view. At first glance, it seemed like nothing more than a simpler way of paying for time fewer steps, maybe even more in favor of the provider. But what I didn’t realize was how often women are being taken advantage of because of the situations they’re in, which, of course, only the worst kinds of people exploit.The practice has been around for a while in Canada, but it didn’t get much mainstream attention until this year. With average rent sitting around $2,300 back in March, more and more landlords have been easing into this kind of “arrangement.” It started with younger renters mostly college students who can’t afford tuition and housing at the same time. They go searching for affordable places online, only to wind up in a coffee shop face-to-face with a landlord offering them a room… if they pay in sex.
Some landlords try to sugarcoat it with coded language, while others openly list “sex-for-rent.” Media outlets have even gone undercover to expose the sleazy tactics these landlords use. Under Canada’s Protection of Communities and Exploited Persons Act, what they’re doing isn’t just unethical it’s considered prostitution. The fact that students, both international and domestic, are being targeted makes it even uglier.
As I said earlier, providers see this differently. Some might say it’s just another form of arrangement. But the reality is, most don’t need it and aren’t looking for it. Very few (if any) legit providers are scrolling Facebook Marketplace or Craigslist to land a deal like this. Landlords may fantasize about making these kinds of arrangements with the women we see in the hobby, but that’s just not happening. What’s actually happening is far darker it’s aimed at women with no other options, in situations where “no” isn’t really possible.
And that’s the part that makes it so wrong. Even though you can say we live in that gray area of society, there's no real way to okay with this. I know we all have a line and this seems to go past it in the worst way.
Sex-for-rent may sound, on the surface, like just another arrangement in the broader world of consensual sex work but in practice, it’s something far more troubling. Unlike providers who choose their clients, set their rates, and control their boundaries, many of the women caught in these landlord “offers” have no real choice at all. That lack of agency along with independent work is what separates consensual work from exploitation. Canada may not have figured out how to stop it yet, but calling it what it is and recognizing who it truly harms is the first step in making sure it doesn’t get normalized as just another option.
