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Buying a Condo vs a House in Canada — Complete Comparison

Updated

Choosing between a condo and a house is one of the biggest decisions Canadian buyers face. The right answer depends on your budget, lifestyle, maintenance tolerance, and investment goals. This guide compares every factor so you can decide with confidence.

Cost comparison — condo vs house

Upfront costs

CostCondo (Toronto, avg.)Detached House (Toronto, avg.)
Purchase price$650,000$1,250,000
Minimum down payment$45,000 (5% on first $500K + 10% on remainder)$100,000 (5% on first $500K + 10% on remainder)
Land transfer tax (ON)$10,475$22,475
Toronto municipal LTT$10,475$22,475
Legal fees$1,500–$2,500$1,500–$2,500
Home inspection$400–$600$500–$800
Status certificate review$100–$500N/A
Approximate total cash needed$68,000–$70,000$147,000–$150,000

Monthly costs

ExpenseCondoDetached House
Mortgage payment ($650K vs $1.25M, 5.5%, 25 yr)$3,382/mo$6,504/mo
Property tax$250–$400/mo$600–$1,000/mo
Condo fees$400–$700/mo$0
Home insurance$30–$60/mo (unit only)$150–$300/mo
Utilities$80–$150/mo (often partial)$250–$500/mo
Maintenance reserveIncluded in condo fees$300–$600/mo (self-funded)
Total monthly cost$4,142–$4,692$7,804–$8,904

Key takeaway: Even when condo fees are included, total monthly costs for a condo are typically 40–55% lower than a comparable house in the same area because the purchase price is much lower.

The hidden cost of condo fees

Condo fees get a bad reputation, but they cover expenses that homeowners pay separately:

What Condo Fees CoverWhat House Owners Pay Separately
Building insuranceHome insurance ($1,800–$3,600/yr)
Common area maintenanceLandscaping ($1,500–$3,000/yr)
Snow removalSnow removal ($500–$2,000/yr)
Reserve fundRoof, furnace, etc. savings ($3,600–$7,200/yr)
Water/sewerWater/sewer bills ($600–$1,200/yr)
Garbage removalMunicipal taxes cover this
Amenities (gym, pool, parking)Gym membership, pool costs
Total: $400–$700/moTotal: $600–$1,400/mo when self-funded

When you account for all maintenance, houses often cost more per month than the equivalent condo — the difference is that house costs are irregular and easy to defer.

Appreciation and investment comparison

Historical appreciation (Toronto, 2015–2024)

MetricCondoDetached House
2015 average price$380,000$760,000
2024 average price$510,000$1,250,000
Total appreciation~34%~64%
Annual appreciation~3.3%~5.7%
Dollar gain$130,000$490,000

Appreciation differences by market

CityCondo Appreciation (10 yr avg)House Appreciation (10 yr avg)
Toronto3–4%5–6%
Vancouver4–5%6–8%
Calgary1–2%2–3%
Montreal3–4%4–5%
Ottawa3–4%4–5%
Halifax2–3%5–7%

Why houses appreciate faster

  1. Land value — land is the appreciating asset; buildings depreciate. Houses sit on larger lots
  2. Supply constraints — limited buildable land in established neighborhoods
  3. Scarcity premium — no new detached houses in downtown cores
  4. Condo supply pipeline — developers constantly build new condos, diluting prices of existing units
  5. Aging building discount — older condos compete against new ones with modern finishes

When condos ARE better investments

  • Prime urban locations with transit access and limited future supply
  • Purpose-built rental areas where rental demand outpaces supply
  • New-build pre-construction purchased at a genuine discount (not inflated developer pricing)
  • Cash-flow focused investing where rental yield matters more than appreciation

Lifestyle comparison

FactorCondoHouse
Maintenance responsibilityBuilding exterior handled by condo corp; you maintain interior onlyEverything is your responsibility
Outdoor spaceBalcony (if any), shared rooftop/courtyardPrivate yard, garden, garage
PrivacyShared walls, floors, and ceilingsFull privacy (usually)
NoiseNeighbor noise depending on construction qualityGenerally quieter
CommuteOften urban, shorter commuteSuburban or rural locations may mean longer commute
Parking0–1 spaces (some charge extra)Driveway/garage included
Pet restrictionsCommon — size limits, breed restrictions, no dogs in some buildingsNo restrictions (municipal bylaws only)
Renovation freedomLimited — condo board approval required for most changesFull control
Move-in readyUsually yesMay need updates
SecurityConcierge, cameras, fob accessSelf-managed
AmenitiesGym, pool, party room, rooftopMust pay separately

Condo-specific risks

Special assessments

When the reserve fund cannot cover a major repair, the condo board levies a special assessment — a one-time charge to all owners. These can range from $2,000 to $50,000+ per unit.

Common TriggersTypical Cost Per Unit
Roof replacement$3,000–$8,000
Garage membrane repair$5,000–$15,000
Window replacement (high-rise)$8,000–$25,000
Plumbing replacement$10,000–$30,000
Elevator modernization$3,000–$10,000
Building envelope repair$10,000–$50,000+

How to protect yourself: Review the status certificate before buying. Look for:

  • Reserve fund study — is the fund adequately funded (ideally 25%+ of replacement cost)?
  • Planned special assessments — are any already voted on?
  • Reserve fund balance vs building age — older buildings with low reserves are high-risk

Condo board restrictions

RestrictionImpact
No short-term rentalsCannot Airbnb your unit
Minimum lease termsOften 6 or 12 months minimum
Pet restrictionsWeight limits, breed bans, no dogs
Renovation approvalMust submit plans; board can reject
Noise rulesQuiet hours enforced
Moving restrictionsSpecific days/times for moving, elevator booking
Satellite dishesOften prohibited
BBQ on balconyOften prohibited for safety

House-specific risks

RiskDetails
Major repairsRoof ($8,000–$20,000), furnace ($3,500–$7,000), foundation ($10,000–$50,000+) — entirely your cost
Hidden defectsNo status certificate to review; rely on home inspection
Higher insuranceFull structure coverage vs unit-only
Maintenance timeYard work, snow removal, general upkeep — time commitment or cost to hire
Property tax increasesHouses in appreciating areas see larger tax increases

Decision framework — which is right for you?

Choose a condo if:

  • You prioritize low maintenance and lifestyle convenience
  • Your budget does not stretch to a house in your preferred area
  • You want to be in a central urban location
  • You travel frequently and want a lock-and-leave lifestyle
  • You are a first-time buyer using a condo as a stepping stone
  • You are investing for rental cash flow in a transit-accessible area

Choose a house if:

  • You want long-term appreciation and land value exposure
  • You value privacy, outdoor space, and renovation freedom
  • You plan to stay 10+ years — the appreciation gap widens over longer holding periods
  • You have a family or large pets
  • You are comfortable with hands-on maintenance or hiring contractors
  • You want to build a secondary suite (basement apartment, laneway house)

The stepping-stone strategy

Many Canadian buyers use a condo as a stepping stone to a house:

StepTimelineAction
1Years 1–5Buy a condo, build equity, live affordably
2Year 5+Sell (or rent) the condo, use equity as a down payment on a house
3Year 5+Port your mortgage to avoid penalties if possible

This strategy works well in markets where condo appreciation at least keeps pace with inflation. In markets where condos are flat or declining, the stepping-stone loses its step.

Condo buying checklist

StepAction
1Get pre-approved — know your budget including condo fees
2Research the building — reputation, age, maintenance history
3Review the status certificate — reserve fund, rules, special assessments, lawsuits
4Hire a real estate lawyer to review the status certificate
5Confirm what is included — parking, locker, appliances
6Check for rental restrictions if you may rent the unit
7Factor in the full monthly cost — mortgage + condo fees + tax + insurance
8Verify insurance requirements — the condo corporation’s master policy vs your unit policy
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