While the weather in most of Canada is unusually cold for this time of year, it seems housing markets across the country are hot as ever.

According to PadMapper's latest Canadian National Rent Report, which examines rent prices across the 24 largest cities in the country, "half of the cities saw double digit, year-over-year growth rates and three-quarters of cities saw one bedroom rent on an incline."

Of the 24 cities analyzed, 18 experienced an upward trend in October while five saw downward trends and one stayed stagnant.

To no one's surprise, Toronto and Vancouver have the most priciest rents in the country, and one bedroom prices grew in both cities last month.

The median rent for a one bedroom increased by 2.2 per cent to $2,350 in Toronto, and by 1.4 per cent to $2,200 in Vancouver.

Rent for a one-bedroom in Kingston saw the largest growth rate in the country, with an increase of 5.1 per cent.

Here's the median cost of renting a one-bedroom apartment in 24 cities across Canada.

Toronto: $2,350 Vancouver: $2,200 Burnaby: $1,750 Montreal: $1,530 Victoria: $1,520 Ottawa: $1,400 Barrie: $1,390 Kelowna: $1,350 Kitchener: $1,310 Oshawa: $1,300 Hamilton: $1,270 St Catharines: $1,260 Kingston: $1,230 Calgary: $1,1300 London: $1,120 Halifax: $1,110 Abbotsford: $1,040 Winnipeg: $980 Edmonton: $950 Quebec: $930 Regina: $920 Saskatoon: $920 Windsor: $820 St John's: $780

Of the 24 cities, Windsor saw the biggest dip with a decline of 3.5 per cent in one bedroom rent costs.

Other cities that saw a fairly significant dip include Barrie (2.8 per cent) and St. John's (2.5 per cent).

In order to produce this data, the PadMapper Canadian Rent Report analyzed rental data from hundreds of thousands of active listings across the country.