Short-term rentals (STRs) on platforms like Airbnb and VRBO can generate significantly more revenue than traditional long-term rentals — but they come with unique mortgage, regulatory, insurance, and tax challenges in Canada. This guide covers how to finance a short-term rental property, which lenders allow it, and the municipal rules you need to follow in every major Canadian city.
Short-Term Rental vs Long-Term Rental
| Factor | Short-Term Rental (Airbnb) | Long-Term Rental (Lease) |
|---|---|---|
| Revenue potential | 30–100% higher in tourist areas | Stable and predictable |
| Vacancy risk | Higher — seasonal, economic fluctuations | Lower — 12-month leases |
| Management effort | High — guest turnover, cleaning, messaging | Low — monthly rent collection |
| Furnishing required | Yes — fully furnished | Usually unfurnished |
| Mortgage qualification | Difficult — most lenders don’t count STR income | Standard — 50–80% of rent added to qualifying income |
| Wear and tear | Higher — more turnover, more cleaning | Lower |
| Municipal regulation | Heavy and increasing | Minimal |
| Insurance | Specialized STR policy required | Standard landlord policy |
| Tax complexity | Higher (HST/GST may apply) | Standard rental income |
Mortgage Rules for Airbnb Properties
Can You Get a Mortgage for an STR?
| Scenario | Mortgage Availability |
|---|---|
| Primary residence with occasional Airbnb (spare room) | Standard mortgage — no issues with most lenders |
| Primary residence with frequent Airbnb (whole home while travelling) | Standard mortgage — but check lender terms for commercial use |
| Second property used exclusively as STR | Residential mortgage (20% down) — but many lenders prohibit STR use in the mortgage contract |
| Property purchased specifically as STR investment | Residential or commercial mortgage — must find a lender that explicitly permits STR; alternative lenders or credit unions |
Lender Policies on Short-Term Rentals
| Lender Type | STR Policy | Income Qualification |
|---|---|---|
| Big 5 banks | Generally prohibit or silent on STR in mortgage terms | Do not count STR income; want long-term lease |
| Credit unions | Some permit STR with documentation | May count with 2-year history |
| Monoline lenders | Varies — some explicitly prohibit, others allow | Typically want long-term lease |
| B-lenders | More flexible; some have specific STR programs | May use STR income with documentation |
| Private lenders | No restrictions on property use | Income not typically considered (asset-based lending) |
Making STR Income Count for Qualification
| Requirement | Details |
|---|---|
| 2-year STR track record | Most lenders wanting to use STR income require 2+ years of documented earnings |
| T1 tax return | Shows rental income reported to CRA |
| Financial statements | Revenue and expense breakdown |
| Airbnb earnings reports | Platform-generated income summaries |
| Conservative estimate | Lenders typically use 50–65% of gross STR revenue (after vacancy/seasonal adjustments) |
| Signed lease alternative | Some investors secure a 1-year lease for mortgage qualification, then switch to STR after closing (check lender terms — this may breach the mortgage contract) |
Financing Strategies for STR Investors
| Strategy | How It Works | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|---|
| Traditional mortgage (20% down) | Buy with standard investment mortgage; operate as STR if lender permits | Best rates | Many lenders restrict STR; income may not qualify |
| HELOC from primary residence | Use equity in your home for the STR down payment | Flexible; no need to qualify on STR income | Variable rate; ties up home equity |
| Refinance primary residence | Pull cash from home equity; purchase STR outright or with smaller mortgage | Access to primary residence rates | Increases primary mortgage; appraisal needed |
| B-lender mortgage | Alternative lender with STR-friendly policies | Accepts STR income; faster approval | Higher rate (+0.5–2%); higher fees |
| Private lending (then refinance) | Buy with private money; operate STR; refinance to A-lender after 1–2 years | Fast closing; no income qualification | 8–15% rate short-term; fees |
| Joint venture | Partner with someone who has capital; you manage the STR | Less capital needed | Shared profits; complex agreements |
| Cash purchase | Buy outright, no mortgage | No lender restrictions | Requires full purchase price in capital |
Municipal Regulations by Major City
Overview
| City | STR Licensed? | Principal Residence Required? | Max Nights/Year | Licence Fee | Penalties |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Toronto | Yes | Yes (entire home) | No cap (if principal residence) | ~$52/year | Up to $100,000 |
| Vancouver | Yes | Yes (entire home) | No cap (if principal residence) | ~$124/year | Up to $1,000/day |
| Montreal | Yes | Varies by borough | Varies | $150–$300/year | $2,500–$25,000 |
| Ottawa | Yes | Yes (entire home) | No cap | ~$100/year | Up to $100,000 |
| Calgary | Yes | No (investment STR permitted) | No cap | ~$100/year | Up to $10,000 |
| Edmonton | Yes | No | No cap | ~$92/year | Varies |
| Halifax | Yes | Principal residence or registered | 120 nights/year (non-principal) | $150/year | Up to $10,000 |
| Victoria | Yes | Yes (entire home) | No cap | ~$150/year | Up to $50,000 |
| Winnipeg | Yes | No | No cap | $175/year | Varies |
Provincial STR Rules
| Province | Provincial Regulation |
|---|---|
| BC | Provincial authority to regulate STRs; municipal licensing required; platform accountability laws |
| Ontario | No province-wide STR law; governed by municipal bylaws |
| Quebec | CITQ registration required for all STR operators; mandatory tourism tax collection |
| Alberta | Municipal-level regulation only |
| Nova Scotia | Tourist Accommodations Registration Act applies |
| PEI | Tourism licensing required |
Key Principal Residence Rules
In Toronto, Vancouver, Ottawa, and Victoria, you can only operate a whole-home Airbnb if it is your principal residence. This means:
| What You Can Do | What You Cannot Do |
|---|---|
| Rent a spare room in your home year-round | Operate a dedicated investment STR in these cities (whole-home) |
| Rent your entire home while you are away | List a property you don’t live in as a whole-home STR |
| Operate an STR in your principal residence without night limits | Buy a second property for the sole purpose of Airbnb in these cities |
Exception: Some cities allow STR investment properties in specific zones or with special permits. Calgary and Edmonton are the most investor-friendly major cities for STR regulations.
Insurance for Short-Term Rentals
| Coverage | Details |
|---|---|
| Standard homeowner’s policy | Does NOT cover STR activity — claims will be denied |
| Landlord policy | Covers long-term rentals; NOT short-term |
| Short-term rental insurance | Specialized policies from providers like Duuo, Proper, or Front Row Insurance |
| AirCover (Airbnb’s Host Protection) | $1M host damage protection + $1M liability — but gaps exist (no coverage for property maintenance issues, mold, etc.) |
| Commercial general liability | Required by some municipalities for STR licences |
| Coverage Type | Annual Cost Range |
|---|---|
| STR-specific insurance (single property) | $1,500–$4,000/year |
| Commercial liability add-on | $500–$1,500/year |
| Umbrella policy ($2M+) | $300–$600/year |
Do not rely solely on AirCover. Get a dedicated STR insurance policy. A single uninsured claim can cost more than years of premiums.
STR Revenue Analysis
Revenue Comparison: STR vs Long-Term Rental
| Metric | Long-Term Rental | Short-Term Rental |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly rent | $2,200 | — |
| Nightly rate | — | $175 |
| Occupancy | 95% (11.4 months) | 65% (20 nights/month) |
| Gross annual revenue | $26,400 | $42,000 |
| Cleaning fees collected | — | $6,000 |
| Total gross revenue | $26,400 | $48,000 |
STR Expense Comparison
| Expense | Long-Term (Annual) | STR (Annual) |
|---|---|---|
| Mortgage | $21,216 | $21,216 |
| Property tax | $3,600 | $3,600 |
| Insurance | $1,560 | $3,000 (STR policy) |
| Utilities (owner pays for STR) | $0 | $4,800 |
| Furnishing (amortized) | $0 | $2,000 |
| Cleaning | $0 | $7,200 |
| Platform fees (Airbnb 3%) | $0 | $1,260 |
| Supplies (toiletries, linens, etc.) | $0 | $1,500 |
| Property management (if hired) | $0–$2,640 | $6,000–$12,000 (20–25% for STR) |
| Maintenance and repairs | $1,320 | $2,000 |
| Municipal licence | $0 | $150 |
| Total expenses (self-managed) | $27,696 | $46,726 |
| Net income | –$1,296 | $1,274 |
STR generates more revenue but also has significantly higher expenses. The net income difference is much smaller than the gross revenue difference. Self-management is critical for STR profitability — hiring a property manager (20–25% of revenue) often erases the STR premium.
Tax Obligations for Airbnb Hosts
| Obligation | Details |
|---|---|
| Report all income | Line 8141 (gross rental income) on T776 form |
| Deductible expenses | Mortgage interest, property tax, insurance, utilities, cleaning, furnishing depreciation, platform fees, supplies, maintenance, advertising |
| GST/HST registration | Mandatory if gross STR revenue exceeds $30,000/year |
| GST/HST collection | Must charge 5% GST (or 13% HST in Ontario) on nightly rate; remit to CRA quarterly or annually |
| Municipal accommodation tax | Some cities charge additional hotel/tourism taxes (4% in Toronto; 3% in Vancouver) — collected by Airbnb automatically in some cities |
| Quebec tourism levy | 3.5% lodging tax collected by platforms |
| Capital gains on sale | STR property subject to capital gains (not eligible for principal residence exemption unless it is your actual principal residence) |
| CRA business income risk | Frequent STR activity with significant personal services may be classified as business income (100% taxable) vs rental income |
Is STR Investing Still Worth It in 2026?
| Factor | Working in Your Favour | Working Against You |
|---|---|---|
| Revenue | Higher nightly rates; tourism recovery | Platform saturation in major cities |
| Regulation | Some cities remain STR-friendly (Calgary, Edmonton) | Principal residence rules in Toronto, Vancouver, Ottawa, Victoria |
| Financing | Alternative lenders with STR programs emerging | Most A-lenders still don’t count STR income |
| Expenses | Cleaning tech and automation reducing costs | Insurance, furnishing, and management costs higher than long-term |
| Tax | Full expense deductions available | GST/HST obligation above $30K; higher record-keeping burden |