The BRRRR Strategy in Canada: Buy, Rehab, Rent, Refinance, Repeat
Updated
The BRRRR Strategy in Canada
BRRRR — Buy, Rehab, Rent, Refinance, Repeat — is an equity-recycling approach to building a real estate portfolio. Instead of leaving a down payment permanently locked in each property, BRRRR investors force appreciation through renovation, stabilize with tenants, then refinance to recover invested capital and redeploy it into the next purchase. The strategy works in Canada but has meaningful structural differences from the US version, primarily around refinancing mechanics and lender seasoning requirements.
The Five Steps
Step
Description
Canadian Notes
Buy
Purchase distressed or undervalued property at a discount to ARV
Target 70–75% of ARV minus renovation costs
Rehab
Renovate to increase value and rental appeal
Budget 15–20% contingency; permits matter
Rent
Place a qualified tenant to stabilize income
Creates the history lenders want for refinancing
Refinance
Borrow against new appraised value to pull out equity
Most lenders require 12-month seasoning in Canada
Repeat
Use recovered capital as down payment on next property
Ideally recover full original investment
BRRRR Deal Math Example
Item
Amount
Purchase price (distressed)
$280,000
Down payment (20%)
$56,000
Renovation cost
$55,000
Total capital deployed
$111,000
After-repair value (ARV)
$425,000
Refinance at 80% LTV
$340,000
Original mortgage balance
$224,000
Refinance proceeds
$116,000
Capital recovered
~$111,000 of $111,000 deployed ✅
In a full BRRRR, you recover all or most of your invested capital, continuing to own the property with a tenant servicing the new, higher mortgage. The property’s cash flow must support the refinanced mortgage payment.
BRRRR vs Traditional Buy-and-Hold
Factor
BRRRR
Traditional Buy-and-Hold
Capital required long-term
Recyclable — recover equity
Permanent — each property locks up down payment
Properties per $100K of capital
Multiple (if BRRRR works)
1–2 at most
Complexity
High — renovation + tenant + refinance
Medium — buy, place tenant, hold
Risk
Higher — renovation and appraisal uncertainty
Lower — simpler execution
Suitable for
Hands-on investors with renovation skills
Passive or busy investors
Return potential
Higher (leverage on forced appreciation)
Market appreciation + rental income
Refinancing Options in Canada
Method
LTV Limit
Rate
Seasoning Typical
Notes
First mortgage refinance
80%
Lowest (prime lender)
12 months (major banks)
Full refinance of original mortgage to higher balance
HELOC
65% standalone; 80% combined
Prime + spread
3–12 months
Readvanceable as equity grows; flexible draw
Second mortgage
Up to 85–90% combined
High (8–15%+)
Often flexible
Expensive; often used as short-term bridge
Private / alternative lender refinance
Up to 80–85%
High (7–12%)
3–6 months
More flexible timing; significantly higher cost
Lender Seasoning Periods
Lender Type
Typical Seasoning
Uses ARV After Seasoning?
Big 5 banks
12 months
Yes — will use current appraisal
Credit unions
6–12 months (varies)
Often yes
Monoline lenders
12 months (generally)
Yes
B lenders (Home Trust, etc.)
3–6 months
Yes, but at higher rates
Private / MIC lenders
Often 0–3 months
Yes, but very high rates
The seasoning requirement is the biggest operational difference from US BRRRR. American investors can refinance 90 days post-renovation with Fannie Mae; Canadian investors using prime lenders must wait 12 months or accept higher rates from alternative sources.
CRA Treatment of BRRRR
Item
CRA Treatment
Refinance proceeds received
Not income — it is borrowed money
Interest on refinanced mortgage
Deductible if proceeds used for income-earning investment
Interest on HELOC proceeds
Deductible if deployed into another rental property; not deductible if used personally
Renovation costs (capital)
Added to adjusted cost base (ACB) — reduces capital gain on eventual sale
Renovation costs (repairs/maintenance)
Deductible as current expenses in year incurred
CCA on rental property
Claimable on building only (not land); recaptured on sale — use sparingly
Key rule: CRA follows the money. If you pull $100,000 via HELOC from rental property A and put it into rental property B as a down payment, the interest on that $100,000 is deductible. If you use it for a vacation, it is not. Document every dollar.
Renovation Tips for Canadian BRRRR
Priority
Rationale
Mechanical systems first (HVAC, plumbing, electrical)
Reduces future capital expenditure and insurance issues
Kitchen and bathroom updates
Highest dollar-for-dollar impact on appraised value
Flooring and paint
High impact, relatively low cost
Curb appeal
First impression for appraiser and tenant
Additions/structural changes
Require permits; delay timeline; can affect LTV calculation
Luxury finishes
Low ROI on a rental; durability over aesthetics
Why BRRRR Works Differently in Canada Than the US
Factor
United States
Canada
Cash-out refinance
Simple product — one closing, new loan amount includes equity
No equivalent product; HELOC or re-advance on readvanceable mortgage
Seasoning period
FNMA allows 6–12 months; portfolio lenders often 90 days
Most prime lenders: 12 months
Purchase + rehab loan
Products like FNMA HomeStyle combine into one loan
No equivalent; renovation and purchase financed separately
Refinance LTV
Can go up to 85–97% on some programs
80% maximum for investment properties
Capital efficiency
Higher — shorter cycle, more products
Lower — longer cycle, fewer tools
Despite the differences, BRRRR works effectively in Canadian markets — it simply requires more patience between the refinance step and using alternative lenders when speed matters.
Bottom Line
The BRRRR strategy is viable in Canada but requires adaptation to Canadian market realities. The 12-month seasoning requirement at major bank lenders means capital is tied up longer than in the US, and there is no simple cash-out refinance product. BRRRR investors in Canada use HELOCs, readvanceable mortgages, and occasionally B lenders to pull equity after renovation. When executed well — accurate ARV estimation, controlled renovation costs, reliable tenants — BRRRR is one of the fastest ways to scale a Canadian real estate portfolio without continuously raising fresh capital.