Gestion Velora — Property Management Montreal (Condo, Rental, Airbnb)

Gestion Velora supports condo boards, residential landlords, and Airbnb hosts across Greater Montreal with transparent monthly reports, round-the-clock availability, and planned maintenance.

Three ways we help

Frequently asked questions

Straight answers on Montreal residential real estate: condo boards, long-term rentals, and short-term stays.

Who is Gestion Velora ideal for?

Gestion Velora supports condo boards, Airbnb hosts, and landlords in Montreal with transparent reporting, 24/7 support, and proactive maintenance. If you need disciplined execution and clear financial visibility, we are a strong fit.

What is condo management?

Condo management is the administration of common areas in a condominium building. It includes annual meetings, reserve fund management, budgets, coordination of major works, and communication with owners. A syndic or manager executes board decisions and ensures compliance with Quebec law.

How to choose a property manager in Montreal?

Choose a property manager based on report transparency, responsiveness, expertise in Quebec regulation (condo law, TAL), and verifiable references. Look for membership in the RGCQ (Regroupement des gestionnaires et copropriétaires du Québec), Quebec's reference body for condominium governance standards. For condo boards, long-term rentals, or Airbnb, demand documented processes, an available team, and a data-driven approach.

Rental management: self-manage or delegate?

Self-managing offers full control but requires time, legal knowledge (TAL, leases), and availability for emergencies. Delegating to a professional manager frees time and ensures compliance. Gestion Velora handles tenant screening, rent collection, maintenance, and tenant relations.

Airbnb in Montreal: permits and regulation?

In Montreal, short-term rental is regulated by the City and CITQ. Primary residence: permit required, allowed June 10–September 10. Non-primary: possible year-round in authorized zones with occupancy certificate. A CITQ certificate is mandatory and must appear on your listing.

What is the condo reserve fund?

The reserve fund finances planned major work (roof, elevators, façade). Quebec condo law requires its constitution and tracking. A reserve study defines contributions. A well-managed fund avoids surprise special assessments and ensures work is completed on schedule.

What are condo fees (common charges)?

Condo fees cover common area maintenance (hallways, lobbies, roof), landscaping, insurance, shared services (hot water, heating), and your share of the reserve fund. They are allocated by unit shares. An annual budget details each line item.