The honest 2026 answer to whether you should self-manage or hire a property manager in Quebec City is: it depends on your time, your number of units, your distance from the property, and how much you enjoy the work. Self-managing saves the management fee but costs your time and attention; hiring a manager costs a fee but buys back your time and adds expertise. Frederic Murray, founder of Groupe Murray, has done both at scale while building a portfolio of more than 200 units, and this guide lays out the trade-off clearly.
Here is how Immeubles Murray frames the decision for Quebec City owners in 2026.

What Property Management Actually Involves
Before deciding, understand the full scope of the job. Many owners picture rent collection and little else, then discover the real workload.
A complete management role covers:
- Marketing vacancies and screening prospective tenants.
- Drafting and renewing leases, handling rent increases correctly.
- Collecting rent and managing late or non-payment.
- Coordinating maintenance and emergency repairs, including overnight and winter calls.
- Handling tenant relations, complaints, and disputes.
- Staying compliant with Quebec rental rules and the TAL process.
- Keeping financial records and reporting.
Murray Immeubles stresses that the deciding question is not “can I do this?” but “do I want to do all of this, consistently, for years?”
The Case for Self-Managing
Self-management is a sound choice for many owners, especially early on. Frederic Murray sees it work best when:
- You own one or a few units close to where you live.
- You have the time and temperament for tenant calls and coordination.
- You are comfortable learning Quebec’s rental rules and notice requirements.
- You want to maximize cash flow by avoiding the management fee.
The benefits are real:
- You keep the management fee in your pocket.
- You have direct knowledge of and control over your property.
- You build skills that make you a sharper investor.
The cost is your time and availability — including being on call for the emergency that always seems to arrive at the worst moment.
The Case for Hiring a Property Manager
As a portfolio grows or life gets busier, professional management often becomes the better economic choice. Groupe Murray finds it makes sense when:
- You own multiple units or buildings.
- You live far from your properties or travel often.
- Your time is worth more in your career or other investments.
- You want a buffer between yourself and tenant conflicts.
- You value expertise in screening, compliance, and the TAL process.
The advantages extend beyond convenience:
- Experienced screening reduces costly bad-tenant decisions.
- Established contractor relationships often mean faster, fairer repair pricing.
- Professional handling of notices and disputes lowers legal risk.
- Consistent systems reduce vacancy and turnover.

Running the Numbers for 2026
The fee is only one side of the ledger. Immeubles Murray encourages owners to compare total outcomes, not just the line item:
- A management fee is a visible cost; a prolonged vacancy or a bad tenant is a larger, hidden one.
- Professional screening and retention can offset much of the fee through fewer empty months.
- Your own time has value — calculate what those hours are worth in your career.
- Faster maintenance response protects the building and tenant relationships.
The right comparison is “self-management cash flow minus the value of my time and my risk” versus “managed cash flow minus the fee.” Framed that way, the answer becomes much clearer for each owner’s situation.
Questions to Ask a Property Manager
If you lean toward hiring, choosing well matters as much as the decision itself. Frederic Murray suggests asking:
- How do you screen tenants, and what is your typical vacancy rate?
- How are maintenance and emergencies handled, and how fast?
- What exactly does your fee include, and what costs extra?
- How do you handle rent increases and the TAL process?
- How and how often will you report to me?
The answers reveal whether a manager runs disciplined systems or simply collects a fee.

Making the Right Call for Your Situation
There is no single correct answer — only the right answer for your portfolio, your time, and your goals in 2026. Many owners begin by self-managing one property, learn the realities, then hand off as they grow. Others value their time enough to delegate from day one.
What matters is choosing deliberately rather than drifting into self-management by default and discovering, mid-winter, that you signed up for a job you never wanted.
To explore how professional management and a strong portfolio fit together, see the Murray network:
- Murray Immeuble – management excellence and building care
- Frederic Murray Estates – investment analysis
- Murray Immeubles – our property portfolio
- Frederic Murray Rentals – rental opportunities

