Buying your first rental property is one of the most significant financial decisions you can make. It requires more capital and research than buying a home to live in, but the rewards — rental income, mortgage paydown by tenants, tax deductions, and long-term appreciation — compound powerfully over a 10–30 year hold. This guide covers the full process from qualifying to closing to renting out your first unit.
Who Should Buy a Rental Property?
| You’re Ready If… | You’re Not Ready If… |
|---|---|
| You have 20%+ down payment saved | You’re still saving for an emergency fund |
| Your GDS/TDS ratios have room for a second mortgage | You’re at the limit on your primary mortgage |
| You have 3–6 months of expense reserves beyond the down payment | The down payment is 100% of your savings |
| You understand basic landlord-tenant law in your province | You’ve never read your provincial tenancy act |
| You’re prepared for occasional maintenance calls and management tasks | You expect fully passive income from day one |
| You’ve analyzed at least 20–50 properties using cash flow metrics | You’re buying the first property you see |
Down Payment and Qualification Requirements
| Requirement | Details |
|---|---|
| Minimum down payment | 20% (no CMHC insurance for rentals) |
| Down payment source | Savings, HELOC, home equity refinance, gift (some lenders), investment redemption |
| Stress test rate | Higher of contract rate + 2% or 5.25% (B-20 rule) |
| GDS ratio limit | ≤39% (combined with owner-occupied mortgage) |
| TDS ratio limit | ≤44% (combined with all debts) |
| Credit score | 680+ (most A-lenders); 620+ (B-lenders at higher rates) |
| Rental income offset | 50–80% of gross rent added to qualifying income |
| Property condition | Must meet lender standards (bank appraisal required) |
| Net worth statement | Many lenders require for investment properties |
How Rental Income Helps You Qualify
| Scenario | Monthly Qualifying Income Added |
|---|---|
| Expected rent: $2,200/month (lender uses 50%) | $1,100 added to your gross income |
| Expected rent: $2,200/month (lender uses 80%) | $1,760 added to your gross income |
| Expected rent: $2,200/month (with signed lease, lender uses 100%) | $2,200 added to your gross income |
The offset varies by lender. Brokers can place you with the lender that uses the most favourable rental income calculation for your situation.
True Cost of Buying a Rental Property
Upfront Costs
| Cost | Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Down payment (20%) | $80,000 (on $400,000) | Non-negotiable minimum |
| Land transfer tax | $4,000–$12,000 | Varies by province; Ontario and BC highest. No first-time buyer rebate on investment properties |
| Legal fees | $1,500–$2,500 | Real estate lawyer / notary |
| Home inspection | $400–$600 | Critical — do not skip on an investment property |
| Appraisal | $300–$500 | Often lender-ordered |
| Insurance (first year) | $1,500–$3,000 | Landlord policy (not standard homeowner) |
| Immediate repairs / preparation | $2,000–$10,000 | Paint, flooring, appliance replacement |
| Total upfront (on $400,000 property) | $90,000–$109,000 |
Ongoing Monthly Costs
| Expense | Monthly | Annual |
|---|---|---|
| Mortgage payment (20% down, 4.5%, 25-year amortization) | $1,768 | $21,216 |
| Property tax | $300 | $3,600 |
| Insurance (landlord) | $130 | $1,560 |
| Maintenance reserve (5% of rent) | $110 | $1,320 |
| Capital expenditure reserve (5% of rent) | $110 | $1,320 |
| Vacancy reserve (5% of rent) | $110 | $1,320 |
| Property management (if hired, 8–10%) | $0–$220 | $0–$2,640 |
| Utilities (if included) | $0–$200 | $0–$2,400 |
| Miscellaneous (advertising, supplies) | $25 | $300 |
| Total (self-managed, tenant pays utilities) | $2,553 | $30,636 |
| Total (with PM, tenant pays utilities) | $2,773 | $33,276 |
Cash Flow Analysis: Full Example
Property Details
| Item | Value |
|---|---|
| Purchase price | $400,000 |
| Down payment (20%) | $80,000 |
| Mortgage | $320,000 at 4.5%, 25-year |
| Type | Single-family detached, 3-bedroom |
| Location | Edmonton, AB |
| Market rent | $2,200/month |
Monthly Cash Flow (Self-Managed)
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Gross rent | $2,200 |
| Vacancy (5%) | –$110 |
| Effective gross income | $2,090 |
| Mortgage payment | –$1,768 |
| Property tax | –$250 |
| Insurance | –$120 |
| Maintenance (5%) | –$110 |
| Capex reserve (5%) | –$110 |
| Net cash flow | –$268/month |
| Mortgage principal paydown | +$545/month |
| Net return (cash flow + paydown) | +$277/month |
Annual Return Analysis (Year 1)
| Return Component | Annual Amount | % of Cash Invested |
|---|---|---|
| Cash flow | –$3,216 | –3.6% |
| Mortgage paydown | $6,540 | 7.3% |
| Appreciation (4% estimate) | $16,000 | 17.8% |
| Tax savings (net deductions × 30% bracket) | $1,500 | 1.7% |
| Total return | $20,824 | 23.1% return on $90,000 invested |
Even with negative monthly cash flow, the total return is strong because of leverage, paydown, and tax benefits. The key is having reserves to cover the monthly shortfall.
Finding the Right Property
What to Look For
| Criteria | Target |
|---|---|
| Price-to-rent ratio | Under 200 (property price ÷ monthly rent) |
| Cap rate | 5%+ for cash flow; 3%+ if counting on appreciation |
| Neighbourhood | Growing population, low vacancy, close to employment, transit, schools |
| Property condition | Move-in ready or minor cosmetic updates only (for your first property) |
| Tenant desirability | 3+ bedrooms, in-suite laundry, parking — features tenants pay premium for |
| Nearby comparable rents | Verify rents on Rentals.ca, Kijiji, Facebook Marketplace, PadMapper |
| Property taxes | Compare across municipalities — taxes vary significantly |
| Insurance costs | Get a landlord policy quote before making the offer |
Where to Analyze Deals
| Source | What It Provides |
|---|---|
| Realtor.ca | Listings, sold prices, days on market |
| Rentals.ca | Rental comparables by area |
| CMHC Rental Market Report | Vacancy rates, average rents, rental demand data |
| Municipal assessment website | Property tax rates and assessed values |
| Your mortgage broker | Pre-qualification amount and rate quotes |
| Best Cities for Investment | Data-driven city rankings for investors |
Tenant Screening: Protecting Your Investment
| Screening Step | What to Check | Red Flag |
|---|---|---|
| Credit check | Score and payment history | Below 600; collections or judgments |
| Employment verification | Call employer directly; verify income ≥ 3× rent | Cannot verify; recent job changes |
| Previous landlord reference | Payment history, property condition, notice given | Landlord won’t respond; only current landlord reference (may be trying to get rid of them) |
| Government ID | Match to application | Inconsistencies |
| Income documentation | Pay stubs, T4, NOA, or bank statements | Income doesn’t support the rent |
| Social media / public records | General character check | Concerning patterns |
Rent-to-income guideline: Tenant’s gross income should be at least 3× the monthly rent. A $2,200/month unit requires $6,600+/month gross income.
Tax Deductions and Obligations
| Deductible Expense | Notes |
|---|---|
| Mortgage interest | Fully deductible on rental properties |
| Property taxes | Fully deductible |
| Insurance premiums | Fully deductible |
| Repairs and maintenance | Deductible in the year incurred (must be repairs, not improvements) |
| Advertising for tenants | Fully deductible |
| Property management fees | Fully deductible |
| Legal and accounting fees | Deductible |
| Travel to property | Vehicle expenses at CRA rate if property is out of your area |
| CCA (depreciation) | Available but be cautious — recaptured on sale |
| Utilities (if landlord pays) | Fully deductible |
Capital Improvements vs Repairs
| Type | Tax Treatment | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Repair | Deductible in full in the current year | Fixing a leak, replacing a faucet, patching drywall |
| Capital improvement | Added to the cost base; depreciated over time (CCA) | New roof, new furnace, kitchen renovation, structural changes |
Provincial Tenancy Law Basics
| Province | Tenant-Friendly? | Key Rules |
|---|---|---|
| Ontario | Very | Rent control on most units (except post-Nov 2018 builds); LTB hearing required for eviction; eviction backlog of months |
| BC | Very | Annual rent increase cap (inflation); RTB hearing for disputes; fixed-term tenancies can’t force move-out |
| Alberta | Moderate | No rent control (can raise at renewal); faster eviction process; 1-month minimum notice |
| Manitoba | Moderate | Rent increase capped by guideline; Residential Tenancies Branch handles disputes |
| Quebec | Very | Tribunal administratif du logement; complex tenant protections; lease transfers mandatory |
| Saskatchewan | Moderate | No rent control; reasonable eviction timelines |
| Atlantic provinces | Moderate | Varies; generally faster eviction process; some have rent caps (PEI, NS) |
Critical: Read your province’s Residential Tenancies Act before buying. The rules around rent increases, eviction, security deposits, and property access vary significantly and directly affect your returns.
Building Your Team
| Team Member | Role | How to Find |
|---|---|---|
| Mortgage broker | Financing; access to multiple lenders | Referral; verify they handle investment properties regularly |
| Real estate agent (investor-savvy) | Deal sourcing; offer strategy; market data | Ask specifically about their own investment experience |
| Real estate lawyer / notary | Purchase review; lease drafting | Referral from agent or broker |
| Accountant (real estate experienced) | Tax optimization; CCA strategy; incorporation advice | Must have rental property clients |
| Home inspector | Pre-purchase inspection | Licensed; look for experience with rental/investment properties |
| Insurance broker | Landlord policy; liability coverage | Compare 3+ quotes |
| Contractor (reliable) | Repairs and renovation | Referral from other investors; start with small jobs |
| Property manager (optional) | Tenant management; rent collection; maintenance | Interview 3+; check references from other landlords |
Common First-Time Investor Mistakes
| Mistake | Consequence | Prevention |
|---|---|---|
| Not running the numbers before buying | Negative cash flow surprise | Use a rental property calculator for every property |
| Skipping the home inspection | Costly surprise repairs within months | Always inspect; budget for inspector + estimates |
| Underestimating vacancy | Cash reserves drain fast | Budget 5% vacancy minimum; higher in smaller markets |
| Not screening tenants | Damage, non-payment, eviction costs | Follow the screening checklist above for every applicant |
| Ignoring provincial tenancy law | Illegal actions; tenant penalties | Read the act; consult a lawyer |
| No cash reserves | One furnace replacement wipes you out | Keep 3–6 months of expenses per property |
| Emotional purchasing | Overpaying or buying in the wrong area | Stick to your numbers; walk away if they don’t work |