Areas & Neighbourhoods
Renting in Langley BC: Neighbourhoods, Prices, and What to Know in 2026
A practical 2026 guide to renting in Langley BC: average rent by unit type, best neighbourhoods for renters, transit options, and how to win competitive rental applications.
Langley has quietly become one of the more attractive rental markets in Metro Vancouver. Rents are 15 to 20 percent below comparable Surrey or Burnaby units, the housing stock skews newer thanks to a decade of master-planned development, and the upcoming Surrey Langley SkyTrain extension is reshaping commuter options. This guide covers what renters need to know in 2026: typical prices by unit type, which neighbourhoods to focus on, transit and commute realities, and the practical steps to land a rental in a still-competitive market.
Average Rent in Langley BC (2026)
Pricing varies sharply by neighbourhood and building age, but the spring 2026 ranges below are typical for purpose-built and well-managed strata rentals in Langley:
- Studio: $1,500 to $1,800
- 1-bedroom apartment: $1,750 to $2,100
- 2-bedroom apartment: $2,300 to $2,800
- 2-bedroom townhome: $2,700 to $3,300
- 3-bedroom townhome: $3,200 to $3,900
- 3 or 4-bedroom detached rental: $3,800 to $4,800
Older walk-up apartments in Langley City sit at the low end of these ranges. Newer concrete or wood-frame buildings in Willoughby Heights and Yorkson sit at the upper end. Detached single-family rentals are scarce and tend to move within 7 to 10 days of listing.
For comparison, the same unit types in Surrey Newton or Burnaby Edmonds run roughly $300 to $500 higher per month for apartments and $400 to $700 higher for townhomes. That gap is the main reason Langley shows up on so many renter shortlists in 2026.
Best Neighbourhoods to Rent in Langley
Willoughby Heights has the most active rental market in the Township. The neighbourhood went through a building boom between 2018 and 2024, leaving a deep inventory of newer purpose-built apartment buildings, townhouse complexes, and single-family rentals around 80 Avenue and 208 Street. It is a particularly good fit for young professionals and families who want modern finishes, in-suite laundry, and easy Highway 1 access.
Walnut Grove sits in the northwest corner of the Township and offers a quieter, more established feel. Townhome rentals dominate here, with most units running $2,700 to $3,400. The neighbourhood is well served by 96 Avenue parks and the Walnut Grove Community Centre.
Murrayville is the family choice. Detached homes on larger lots, good elementary catchments around Langley Fundamental, and proximity to Langley Memorial Hospital make this an in-demand pocket for renters with kids. Inventory is thinner than Willoughby, so set up email alerts and be ready to apply quickly.
Langley City (Downtown Langley) has the lowest average rents in the area and the best bus connectivity to Surrey. The trade-off is older buildings, mostly built in the 1980s and 1990s, with smaller floor plans. The upcoming SkyTrain extension will run through this area, which has already started to lift land values and may pressure rents upward over the next 24 months.
Yorkson and Routley are newer planned communities just east of Willoughby with a higher concentration of townhome rentals. Good options for tenants who prioritize a yard and garage over walkability.
Transit and Commute Reality Check
The 555 Carvolth express bus from the Carvolth Park & Ride to Lougheed Town Centre SkyTrain runs every 10 to 15 minutes during peak and reaches Lougheed in about 35 minutes off-peak. From there it is roughly 25 minutes to downtown Vancouver, so plan on 60 to 75 minutes door to door during peak hours.
The 502 and 503 buses connect Langley to King George SkyTrain in Surrey, which is faster for tenants commuting to South of Fraser destinations.
The Surrey Langley SkyTrain extension is under construction with planned stations in Langley City and Willoughby. Service is expected later this decade. Tenants signing a 12-month lease in 2026 should not factor in SkyTrain access yet, but it is worth considering for longer renewals.
For drivers, Highway 1 access from Langley is generally smooth outside of weekday rush hours, with typical morning commute times of 45 to 60 minutes to downtown Vancouver and 25 to 35 minutes to Surrey Central.
Tips for Securing a Rental in Langley
The Langley rental market is less frenzied than Vancouver proper but still moves quickly for well-priced units. A few practical tips:
- Have your application package ready before viewing. Include proof of employment or income (last two pay stubs or a job offer letter), your last two tenancy references with current contact info, photo ID, and your Equifax credit score (a free pull is fine). Landlords here often choose the first qualified applicant rather than waiting for the perfect one.
- Use multiple search channels. Padmapper, Rentals.ca, Facebook Marketplace, and the local property managers (Aoki, Crossroads, Rancho) each have units the others miss. Set up daily email alerts on Padmapper and Rentals.ca.
- Be cautious of pet policies. Many newer purpose-built buildings allow pets, but townhomes managed by individual landlords or strata-restricted units often do not. Filter early to avoid wasted viewings.
- Confirm what is included. Hot water, heat, and parking are sometimes bundled and sometimes not. A $2,200 rent that excludes parking and heat can easily cost $200 to $300 more per month than a $2,300 rent that includes both.
- Read the strata bylaws if applicable. For strata-owned rentals, ask the landlord for the Form K (notice of tenant responsibilities) and the relevant strata rules. Restrictions on barbecues, balcony storage, short-term guests, and laundry hours are common surprises.
- Know your security deposit rights. A landlord can charge up to half a month's rent as a security deposit and an additional half for a pet damage deposit, but no more. See our BC security deposit guide for the full rules.
Final Word
Langley in 2026 offers real value for renters willing to trade some commute time for newer housing, lower rents, and more space. Willoughby Heights for inventory, Walnut Grove and Murrayville for family-friendly streets, and Langley City for budget and future SkyTrain potential. With a tight application package and an alert-driven search, most qualified renters can land a unit within two to four weeks.
General info only. This article summarises the Residential Tenancy Act but isn't legal advice. For specific situations, contact the Residential Tenancy Branch (1-800-665-8779).