Cap Rate Explained for Canadian Real Estate Investors (2026)
Updated
Cap Rate Explained for Canadian Real Estate
Cap rate is the most widely used metric for comparing the income yield of real estate investments. It strips out financing to give you a clean, comparable measure of what a property earns relative to its price. Understanding cap rate — and where your target market sits — is essential before underwriting any income property in Canada.
The Cap Rate Formula
$$\text{Cap Rate} = \frac{\text{Net Operating Income (NOI)}}{\text{Purchase Price}} \times 100$$
In high-appreciation markets, total return (cap rate + appreciation) may be 8–10% even with a 3% cap rate, if the property appreciates 5–7% annually. The danger is underwriting a low-cap-rate purchase that depends on appreciation that may not materialize.
Positive vs Negative Leverage
Scenario
Cap Rate
Mortgage Rate
Leverage Effect
Cash-on-Cash vs Cap Rate
Positive leverage
6%
4.5%
Amplifies returns
Cash-on-cash > cap rate
Neutral leverage
5%
5%
No amplification
Cash-on-cash ≈ cap rate
Negative leverage
3.5%
5.5%
Reduces returns
Cash-on-cash < cap rate
When your mortgage rate exceeds your cap rate, every dollar of borrowed money reduces your return on equity. This is the situation many Canadian investors found themselves in during 2022–2024 — buying at 3–4% cap rates with 5–6% mortgage rates creates structural negative cash flow.
Cap Rate Compression: What It Signals
Cap Rate Signal
Implication
Compressing (falling)
Properties getting more expensive; market may be overheated; income yield thinning
Expanding (rising)
Properties getting cheaper relative to income; better entry point for income investors
Stable
Balanced market; price and income growing roughly together
Extremely low (< 3%)
Market driven almost entirely by appreciation thesis; income investors crowded out
Bottom Line
Cap rate is the cleanest single metric for comparing rental properties across markets — it removes the noise of your specific financing and focuses on whether the property generates adequate income for its price. A 3% cap rate in Toronto is not inherently bad if you are buying for long-term appreciation in a constrained supply market. A 7% cap rate in a smaller market is not automatically superior if the city has weak demographics and limited appreciation potential. Use cap rate to compare within and across markets, and pair it with cash-on-cash return to understand the actual return on your invested capital given current financing costs.