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Airbnb Mortgage Rules in Canada: Short-Term Rental Financing (2026)

Updated

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

FactorShort-Term Rental (Airbnb)Long-Term Rental (Lease)
Revenue potential30–100% higher in tourist areasStable and predictable
Vacancy riskHigher — seasonal, economic fluctuationsLower — 12-month leases
Management effortHigh — guest turnover, cleaning, messagingLow — monthly rent collection
Furnishing requiredYes — fully furnishedUsually unfurnished
Mortgage qualificationDifficult — most lenders don’t count STR incomeStandard — 50–80% of rent added to qualifying income
Wear and tearHigher — more turnover, more cleaningLower
Municipal regulationHeavy and increasingMinimal
InsuranceSpecialized STR policy requiredStandard landlord policy
Tax complexityHigher (HST/GST may apply)Standard rental income

Mortgage Rules for Airbnb Properties

Can You Get a Mortgage for an STR?

ScenarioMortgage 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 STRResidential mortgage (20% down) — but many lenders prohibit STR use in the mortgage contract
Property purchased specifically as STR investmentResidential or commercial mortgage — must find a lender that explicitly permits STR; alternative lenders or credit unions

Lender Policies on Short-Term Rentals

Lender TypeSTR PolicyIncome Qualification
Big 5 banksGenerally prohibit or silent on STR in mortgage termsDo not count STR income; want long-term lease
Credit unionsSome permit STR with documentationMay count with 2-year history
Monoline lendersVaries — some explicitly prohibit, others allowTypically want long-term lease
B-lendersMore flexible; some have specific STR programsMay use STR income with documentation
Private lendersNo restrictions on property useIncome not typically considered (asset-based lending)

Making STR Income Count for Qualification

RequirementDetails
2-year STR track recordMost lenders wanting to use STR income require 2+ years of documented earnings
T1 tax returnShows rental income reported to CRA
Financial statementsRevenue and expense breakdown
Airbnb earnings reportsPlatform-generated income summaries
Conservative estimateLenders typically use 50–65% of gross STR revenue (after vacancy/seasonal adjustments)
Signed lease alternativeSome 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

StrategyHow It WorksProsCons
Traditional mortgage (20% down)Buy with standard investment mortgage; operate as STR if lender permitsBest ratesMany lenders restrict STR; income may not qualify
HELOC from primary residenceUse equity in your home for the STR down paymentFlexible; no need to qualify on STR incomeVariable rate; ties up home equity
Refinance primary residencePull cash from home equity; purchase STR outright or with smaller mortgageAccess to primary residence ratesIncreases primary mortgage; appraisal needed
B-lender mortgageAlternative lender with STR-friendly policiesAccepts STR income; faster approvalHigher rate (+0.5–2%); higher fees
Private lending (then refinance)Buy with private money; operate STR; refinance to A-lender after 1–2 yearsFast closing; no income qualification8–15% rate short-term; fees
Joint venturePartner with someone who has capital; you manage the STRLess capital neededShared profits; complex agreements
Cash purchaseBuy outright, no mortgageNo lender restrictionsRequires full purchase price in capital

Municipal Regulations by Major City

Overview

CitySTR Licensed?Principal Residence Required?Max Nights/YearLicence FeePenalties
TorontoYesYes (entire home)No cap (if principal residence)~$52/yearUp to $100,000
VancouverYesYes (entire home)No cap (if principal residence)~$124/yearUp to $1,000/day
MontrealYesVaries by boroughVaries$150–$300/year$2,500–$25,000
OttawaYesYes (entire home)No cap~$100/yearUp to $100,000
CalgaryYesNo (investment STR permitted)No cap~$100/yearUp to $10,000
EdmontonYesNoNo cap~$92/yearVaries
HalifaxYesPrincipal residence or registered120 nights/year (non-principal)$150/yearUp to $10,000
VictoriaYesYes (entire home)No cap~$150/yearUp to $50,000
WinnipegYesNoNo cap$175/yearVaries

Provincial STR Rules

ProvinceProvincial Regulation
BCProvincial authority to regulate STRs; municipal licensing required; platform accountability laws
OntarioNo province-wide STR law; governed by municipal bylaws
QuebecCITQ registration required for all STR operators; mandatory tourism tax collection
AlbertaMunicipal-level regulation only
Nova ScotiaTourist Accommodations Registration Act applies
PEITourism 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 DoWhat You Cannot Do
Rent a spare room in your home year-roundOperate a dedicated investment STR in these cities (whole-home)
Rent your entire home while you are awayList a property you don’t live in as a whole-home STR
Operate an STR in your principal residence without night limitsBuy 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

CoverageDetails
Standard homeowner’s policyDoes NOT cover STR activity — claims will be denied
Landlord policyCovers long-term rentals; NOT short-term
Short-term rental insuranceSpecialized 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 liabilityRequired by some municipalities for STR licences
Coverage TypeAnnual 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

MetricLong-Term RentalShort-Term Rental
Monthly rent$2,200
Nightly rate$175
Occupancy95% (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

ExpenseLong-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

ObligationDetails
Report all incomeLine 8141 (gross rental income) on T776 form
Deductible expensesMortgage interest, property tax, insurance, utilities, cleaning, furnishing depreciation, platform fees, supplies, maintenance, advertising
GST/HST registrationMandatory if gross STR revenue exceeds $30,000/year
GST/HST collectionMust charge 5% GST (or 13% HST in Ontario) on nightly rate; remit to CRA quarterly or annually
Municipal accommodation taxSome cities charge additional hotel/tourism taxes (4% in Toronto; 3% in Vancouver) — collected by Airbnb automatically in some cities
Quebec tourism levy3.5% lodging tax collected by platforms
Capital gains on saleSTR property subject to capital gains (not eligible for principal residence exemption unless it is your actual principal residence)
CRA business income riskFrequent 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?

FactorWorking in Your FavourWorking Against You
RevenueHigher nightly rates; tourism recoveryPlatform saturation in major cities
RegulationSome cities remain STR-friendly (Calgary, Edmonton)Principal residence rules in Toronto, Vancouver, Ottawa, Victoria
FinancingAlternative lenders with STR programs emergingMost A-lenders still don’t count STR income
ExpensesCleaning tech and automation reducing costsInsurance, furnishing, and management costs higher than long-term
TaxFull expense deductions availableGST/HST obligation above $30K; higher record-keeping burden
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