How to Buy Your First Rental Property in Canada 2026
Updated
Buying a rental property in Canada requires significantly more capital and effort than most beginners expect. You’ll need at least 20% down ($100,000 on a $500,000 property), plus $30,000–75,000 for closing costs, initial repairs, and emergency reserves. Total returns of 8–15% are achievable when you factor in cash flow, appreciation, mortgage paydown, and tax benefits — but this is not passive income. The smartest first move for many new investors is house hacking: buying a duplex, living in one unit, and renting the other to cover most of your mortgage while qualifying for a much lower down payment.
Is Rental Property Right for You?
Minimum Requirements
Requirement
Details
Down payment
20% minimum ($100K on $500K property)
Emergency reserve
3-6 months of expenses ($5,000-$15,000)
Credit score
680+ (ideally 720+)
Income
Enough to qualify with stress test
Time commitment
5-15 hours/month (self-managed)
Risk tolerance
Comfortable with illiquid, concentrated investment
Returns Breakdown
Return Source
Typical Annual %
Cash flow (net rental income)
2-5% on invested capital
Appreciation
3-5% on property value
Mortgage paydown
2-4% on invested capital
Tax advantages
1-2% effective benefit
Total return
8-15%
Step 1: Get Your Finances Ready
How Much Can You Afford?
Property Price
20% Down
Mortgage
Monthly Payment*
$300,000
$60,000
$240,000
$1,400
$400,000
$80,000
$320,000
$1,870
$500,000
$100,000
$400,000
$2,340
$600,000
$120,000
$480,000
$2,810
$750,000
$150,000
$600,000
$3,510
Estimated at 5% rate, 25-year amortization
Total Cash Needed at Closing
Expense
Estimated Cost
Down payment (20%)
$100,000 (on $500K)
Closing costs (1.5-4%)
$7,500-$20,000
Land transfer tax
$6,000-$15,000 (varies by province)
Legal fees
$1,500-$2,500
Home inspection
$400-$600
Appraisal
$300-$500
Repairs/renovations
$0-$20,000+
Emergency reserve
$10,000-$15,000
Total
~$130,000-$175,000
Step 2: Choose Your Property Type
Property Type
Pros
Cons
Best For
Condo
Lower price, less maintenance
Condo fees, HOA rules, restrictions
Beginners, urban markets
Detached house
Full control, land value
Higher cost, more maintenance
Hands-on investors
Duplex/triplex
Multiple income streams, house hack
More management, higher entry cost
Owner-occupants
Townhouse
Mid-range price, growing demand
Some HOA fees, limited renovation
Suburban markets
Student rental
Higher per-room rent
High turnover, more management
Near universities
House Hacking: Live In One Unit
Feature
Details
Down payment
As low as 5% (owner-occupied duplex)
CMHC eligible
Yes, if you live in one unit
Tax treatment
Split expenses proportionally
Cash flow
Tenant covers most of your mortgage
Best property
Duplex or triplex with separate entrances
Example: Duplex at $600,000
Scenario
Details
Down payment (5%)
$30,000 + CMHC insurance
Monthly mortgage
~$3,600
Rent from second unit
$2,000/month
Your net cost
~$1,600/month
Comparable rent savings
$2,200/month
Step 3: Analyze the Numbers
Cash flow analysis is where most aspiring landlords get reality-checked. The 1% rule (monthly rent should equal 1% of purchase price) is nearly impossible in any major Canadian city — Toronto condos hit about 0.4%. That doesn’t mean rental property is a bad investment, but it means you need to think in terms of total return: appreciation, mortgage paydown by your tenant, and tax deductions combine with modest cash flow to generate strong long-term returns. Budget 40–60% of gross rent for expenses (mortgage, taxes, insurance, maintenance, vacancy) to get an honest picture.
Monthly Cash Flow Calculation
Item
Amount
Income
Gross rent
$2,500
Expenses
Mortgage (P+I)
$1,400
Property taxes
$350
Insurance
$100
Maintenance reserve (5%)
$125
Vacancy reserve (5%)
$125
Property management (0-10%)
$0-$250
Condo fees
$0-$400
Total Expenses
$2,100-$2,750
Monthly Cash Flow
-$250 to +$400
Key Metrics to Calculate
Metric
Formula
Target
Cap rate
NOI ÷ Property price
4%+
Cash-on-cash return
Annual cash flow ÷ Cash invested
5%+
1% rule
Monthly rent ÷ Purchase price
1%+ (hard in Canadian cities)
Gross rent multiplier
Price ÷ Annual rent
Under 15
DSCR
NOI ÷ Annual debt service
1.2+
The 1% Rule in Canada
City
Average Price
1% Target Rent
Actual Avg Rent
Meets Rule?
Toronto
$700,000 (condo)
$7,000
$2,800
No (0.4%)
Vancouver
$750,000 (condo)
$7,500
$2,700
No (0.36%)
Calgary
$280,000 (condo)
$2,800
$1,800
No (0.64%)
Edmonton
$200,000 (condo)
$2,000
$1,400
No (0.7%)
Winnipeg
$220,000 (condo)
$2,200
$1,300
No (0.6%)
Halifax
$410,000 (condo)
$4,100
$1,900
No (0.46%)
The 1% rule is nearly impossible in Canadian cities. Focus on total return (appreciation + mortgage paydown + cash flow) rather than just cash flow.
Step 4: Get Financing
Mortgage Options for Rental Properties
Option
Down Payment
Rate
Notes
Conventional (non-insured)
20%+
Prime + 0.25-0.75%
Most common for investors
CMHC-insured (house hack)
5-19.99%
Lower rate
Must live in one unit
Private lender
15-35%
7-12%
For unconventional situations
HELOC on primary home
Varies
Prime + 0.5-1.5%
Use existing equity
Vendor take-back
Negotiable
Negotiable
Seller provides financing
Qualifying with Rental Income
Lender Type
Rental Income Used
Stress Test
Big 5 banks
50-80% of rental income added
Yes (rate + 2% or 5.25%)
B lenders
Up to 100% of rental income
Modified
Credit unions
Varies
Some flexibility
Private
Asset-based, less income focused
No
Mortgage Stress Test Example ($500K Property)
Factor
Calculation
Property price
$500,000
Down payment (20%)
$100,000
Mortgage
$400,000
Stress test rate
~7.25%
Monthly payment at stress test
~$2,830
Expected rental income
$2,500
Rental offset (50%)
$1,250
Net obligation for GDS/TDS
$1,580
Income needed (est.)
~$75,000+
Step 5: Tax Implications
Rental property offers some of the best tax deductions available to Canadian investors. Mortgage interest (not principal), property taxes, insurance, maintenance, property management fees, and travel to the rental are all deductible against your rental income. Capital Cost Allowance (CCA) lets you depreciate the building at 4% per year, but use it carefully — it’s recaptured as income when you sell. When you eventually sell, the capital gain is taxable at the 50% inclusion rate (no principal residence exemption for rentals), so plan your exit strategy with an accountant.
Deductible Expenses
Expense
Deductible?
Notes
Mortgage interest
Yes
Interest only, not principal
Property taxes
Yes
Full amount
Insurance
Yes
Property insurance
Repairs and maintenance
Yes
Current-year repairs
Advertising (finding tenants)
Yes
Listing fees, ads
Property management fees
Yes
Full amount
Utilities (if paid by owner)
Yes
Full amount
Travel to rental property
Yes
Reasonable expenses
Legal and accounting
Yes
Related to rental
Condo fees
Yes
Full amount
Capital improvements
No
Added to cost base (CCA)
Capital Cost Allowance (CCA)
Detail
CCA
Rate
4% per year (Class 1 for buildings)
Applies to
Building value only (not land)
Benefit
Reduces taxable rental income
Catch
Recaptured as income when you sell
Recommendation
Use strategically — consult accountant
Capital Gains on Sale
Factor
Details
Inclusion rate
50% of gain (up to $250K) then 66.7%
Principal residence exemption
Not available for rental property
Adjusted cost base
Purchase price + capital improvements
Selling costs
Deductible (real estate commission, legal)
Example: Buy at $500K, sell at $700K
Item
Amount
Selling price
$700,000
Adjusted cost base
$520,000 (price + improvements)
Selling costs
$35,000 (5% commission + legal)
Capital gain
$145,000
Taxable (50%)
$72,500
Tax at 40% marginal rate
~$29,000
Step 6: Manage Your Property
Self-Manage vs. Property Manager
Factor
Self-Manage
Property Manager
Cost
$0
8-12% of rent
Time
5-15 hours/month
1-2 hours/month
Tenant screening
You handle
They handle
Maintenance calls
You coordinate
They coordinate
Eviction process
You manage
They manage
Best for
Nearby properties, hands-on investors
Remote properties, passive investors
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Mistake
Why It’s a Problem
Underestimating expenses
Real costs are 40-60% of gross rent
No vacancy reserve
Even 1 month vacant = 8% income loss
Emotional pricing
Buying based on feelings, not numbers
Skipping inspection
$500 inspection can save $50,000 in surprises
Over-leveraging
Using every dollar as down payment with no reserves
Ignoring tenant law
Provincial rules are strict — learn them
Bad tenant screening
One bad tenant can cost $10,000+ in damages and lost rent
Underestimating time
It is work, not passive income
The Bottom Line
Rental property investing in Canada can generate 8–15% total returns, but it demands six-figure capital, active management, and a willingness to deal with tenants, maintenance, and vacancies. House hacking a duplex with 5% down is the most accessible entry point. Run the numbers honestly, budget for vacancy and repairs, and don’t confuse gross rent with profit.