Form Recommendations
Stop Googling 'which LTB form do I need.' Just tell us what's happening.

We’ll figure out which forms
The Ontario LTB alone has over 70 different forms. Each one covers something specific. Some can only be filed after others. Some need supporting documents attached. Miss one and your case stalls.
We sort through all of that for you.
Tell us your situation
In your own words. Doesn’t have to be fancy:
“My tenant stopped paying rent three months ago and won’t return my calls.”
“I’ve asked my landlord to fix the broken heater four times and nothing’s happened.”
“I need to move back into my rental unit.”
We’ll figure out which forms match your situation, what order to file them in, and what each one accomplishes.
Not just a list
For each recommended form, you’ll see:
- Why it applies to you — not just the form name, but what it does for your specific situation
- Where it fits in the sequence — some forms have to come before others
- What happens after you file it — so you know what you’re kicking off
- Filing fees — no surprises
Real example
You tell us: “My tenant owes me four months of rent and I want them out.”
We recommend:
N4 (Notice to End Tenancy) — First step. Gives your tenant 14 days to pay up or move out.
Certificate of Service — Proves you actually delivered the N4 properly. You’ll need this if they don’t pay.
L1 (Application to Evict) — If the N4 deadline passes and they still haven’t paid, this asks the LTB for a hearing and eviction order.
And we explain why the L9 (which just collects money without eviction) might be an alternative if you’d rather keep the tenant and get paid.
Kept up to date
Forms change. Filing requirements change. We monitor official sources and update our recommendations accordingly.
Skip the research
You’ve got better things to do than decode government websites.