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Buying a Duplex to Live In — House Hacking in Canada

Updated

Buying a duplex and living in one unit while renting out the other — often called “house hacking” — is one of the smartest real estate strategies for Canadian buyers. You get homeownership benefits, rental income to offset your costs, and a stepping stone into real estate investing.

Why buy a duplex?

BenefitDetails
Rental income offsets your mortgageTenants pay 30–60% of your total housing cost
Easier mortgage qualificationLenders count a portion of rental income in your qualifying income
Lower effective housing costYour net out-of-pocket is far less than a single-family home
Build investing experienceLearn to be a landlord with one tenant, on-site
Property appreciationDuplexes in established neighborhoods appreciate well — land value drives returns
Future flexibilityMove out later and rent both units, or convert to single-family

Financing a duplex — owner-occupied

Down payment requirements

ScenarioMinimum Down PaymentCMHC Insurance Required?
Owner-occupied duplex (2 units)5%Yes (if under 20%)
Owner-occupied triplex (3 units)10%Yes (if under 20%)
Owner-occupied fourplex (4 units)10%Yes (if under 20%)
Non-owner-occupied (investment)20%No — conventional only

Key advantage: An owner-occupied duplex qualifies for the same 5% minimum down payment as a single-family home. This is the single biggest financing advantage of house hacking.

How lenders count rental income

Lenders use one of two approaches to factor in rental income from the second unit:

Method 1: Rental offset (most common)

The lender adds a percentage of projected rental income to your gross income:

LenderRental Income Used
CMHC-insured50% of gross rental income added to qualifying income
Big Five banks (conventional)50–80% depending on the bank
Credit unions50–80% — varies by institution
B-lendersUp to 80% in some cases

Method 2: Rental offset against expenses

Some lenders subtract the rental income from the carrying costs rather than adding it to income. The effect is similar.

Qualification example

FactorWithout Rental IncomeWith Rental Income
Household income$95,000/yr ($7,917/mo)$95,000/yr ($7,917/mo)
Rental income from 2nd unitNot counted$1,800/mo (using 50% = $900/mo added)
Effective qualifying income$7,917/mo$8,817/mo
Max mortgage (approx.)$425,000$475,000
Extra purchasing power~$50,000

Cash flow analysis

Example: $650,000 duplex in Ontario

ItemAmount
Purchase price$650,000
Down payment (10%)$65,000
CMHC insurance (3.10%)$18,135
Total mortgage$603,135
Mortgage payment (5.5%, 25 yr)$3,680/mo
Property tax$450/mo
Insurance$200/mo
Maintenance (5% of rent)$90/mo
Total carrying cost$4,420/mo
IncomeAmount
Rent from unit 2$1,800/mo
Vacancy allowance (5%)–$90/mo
Net rental income$1,710/mo
Your Effective CostAmount
Total carrying cost$4,420/mo
Less rental income–$1,710/mo
Your net monthly cost$2,710/mo

Comparison: A comparable single-family home at $650,000 would cost you $4,330/mo with no rental offset. The duplex saves you $1,620/mo — that is $19,440 per year.

Cash flow comparison across price points

Purchase PriceMortgage PaymentTaxes + InsuranceRental IncomeYour Net CostSavings vs House
$450,000$2,459/mo$500/mo$1,300/mo$1,659/mo$1,300/mo
$550,000$3,070/mo$550/mo$1,600/mo$2,020/mo$1,600/mo
$650,000$3,680/mo$650/mo$1,800/mo$2,530/mo$1,800/mo
$800,000$4,596/mo$750/mo$2,100/mo$3,246/mo$2,100/mo

Assumes 10% down, 5.5% rate, 25-year amortization, 50% rental income offset for qualification

Finding the right duplex

What to look for

FactorWhat to Check
Separate entrancesEssential — tenants need their own entrance for privacy and resale value
Separate utilitiesIdeally separate hydro, gas, water meters; avoids disputes
Legal duplex statusConfirm with the municipality — many “duplexes” are illegal conversions
Unit size balanceTwo similar-sized units are more flexible than a large/small split
ParkingTenants expect at least one parking space
SoundproofingCheck the shared wall/floor — poor sound insulation causes turnover
ZoningConfirm the property is zoned for two residential units
Rental historyIf already rented, review lease terms, rental history, and tenant quality
FactorLegal DuplexIllegal Conversion
Building permitIssued and approvedNo permit on file
Fire separationCode-compliantMay not meet code
Separate egressTwo independent exitsMay share entrances
InsuranceStandard coverageMay void your policy or increase premiums
Rent collectionFully enforceable under provincial tenancy lawMay face challenges
Mortgage qualificationLenders count rental incomeSome lenders will not count income from illegal units
ResaleFull market valueDiscount — buyers face the same issues

Warning: An illegal conversion can be ordered shut down by the municipality, leaving you with lost rental income and potential renovation costs to bring it to code. Always verify legal status before purchasing.

Tax implications

Rental income reporting

You must report the rental income from your second unit on your tax return. You can deduct a proportionate share of expenses.

Deductible ExpenseHow to Calculate
Mortgage interestProportional to rental unit (e.g., 50% if units are equal size)
Property taxSame proportional split
InsuranceSame proportional split
Maintenance & repairs100% of expenses specific to the rental unit; proportional for shared expenses
Utilities (if you pay them)Proportional
Advertising for tenants100% deductible
Property management (if applicable)100% deductible

Capital gains on sale

When you sell, the portion of the property that was your principal residence is exempt from capital gains tax. The rental portion is subject to capital gains tax on the appreciated value.

ExampleCalculation
Purchase price$650,000
Sale price$900,000
Total gain$250,000
Rental portion (50%)$125,000 taxable capital gain
Your portion (50%)$125,000 — principal residence exempt
Taxable capital gain$125,000 × 50% inclusion = $62,500 added to your income

CCA (depreciation) — be cautious

You can claim Capital Cost Allowance (CCA) on the rental portion of the building, but this triggers “recapture” when you sell — meaning you may owe more tax. Many accountants recommend not claiming CCA on a property you plan to sell, because the recapture eliminates the benefit.

Becoming a landlord — what to expect

Provincial tenancy laws

ProvinceKey Rules
OntarioRent control on buildings occupied before Nov 15, 2018; LTB adjudicates disputes; 90-day notice for own-use eviction
BCAnnual rent increase capped at CPI; RTB handles disputes; 4-month notice for own-use with 1-month rent compensation
AlbertaNo rent control; periodic tenancies require proper notice
QuebecRent control through Tribunal administratif du logement; new tenants can challenge the rent
ManitobaAnnual rent increase capped by Residential Tenancies Branch

Tips for living next to your tenant

StrategyWhy
Set clear boundariesYou are their landlord, not their friend — maintain a professional relationship
Screen thoroughlyCredit check, references, employment verification. Living next door to a problem tenant is worse than a bad tenant in a remote property
Document everythingUse a proper lease agreement; keep records of all communication
Maintain the propertyHappy tenants stay longer and cause fewer issues
Respect privacyGive proper notice before entering their unit (24 hours minimum in most provinces)
Separate entrancesMinimizes daily interactions

Step-by-step: buying your first duplex

StepAction
1Get pre-approved — tell your broker you are buying a duplex and want rental income counted
2Research rental rates — check comparable units in target neighborhoods on Rentals.ca, Kijiji, Facebook Marketplace
3Find a duplex — work with a realtor experienced in multi-family; look for legal duplexes with separate entrances
4Verify legal status — check municipal permits and zoning
5Get a home inspection — both units, plus foundation, roof, electrical, plumbing
6Review existing leases — if tenants are in place, their leases transfer to you
7Close and take possession — coordinate move-in logistics, meet the tenant
8Set up separate accounting — track rental income and expenses from day one

Duplex vs other investment strategies

StrategyMin DownCash FlowEffortRisk
Owner-occupied duplex5%30–60% cost offsetMedium (on-site landlord)Low
Investment property (single)20%Often negative cash flow at current ratesMedium (remote landlord)Medium
REIT investing$0 (any amount)4–6% dividend yieldNoneMarket risk
Condo rental20% (investment)Often break-even or negativeLow–mediumMedium
Laneway / garden suiteBuild cost ($150K–$400K)$1,500–$3,000/moHigh (construction)Medium
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