In Ontario, staircase injuries commonly show up in settings with frequent arrivals and heavy use:
- Apartment and condo entry stairs: worn treads, loose handrails, uneven steps, or lighting that doesn’t make hazards obvious.
- Multi-tenant stairwells: delayed repairs after tenant complaints, cluttered landings, or broken components that remain “temporarily out of service.”
- Retail and office buildings near commutes: short staffing and faster turnover can mean hazards aren’t inspected as often as they should be.
- New construction and renovations: during tenant move-ins or remodeling, stairs may be temporarily modified, covered, or left partially repaired.
Why this matters: in premises injury cases, Ontario courts look closely at notice (what the property knew or should have known) and whether the property acted reasonably. The location and condition details you document early can become the difference between a fair settlement and a denial.


