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How to Buy a Home with Friends in Canada: Co-Buying Guide

Updated

Buying a home with friends is one of the most practical strategies for entering an expensive housing market — but it comes with legal, financial, and relationship complexities that most buyers do not think about until it is too late. This guide covers everything you need to know.

Why co-buying is becoming common

FactorImpact
Unaffordable single-buyer marketAverage home prices in Toronto and Vancouver require $150,000–$250,000+ household income
Combined buying powerTwo incomes of $75,000 qualify for roughly double what one income can
Shared costsMortgage, property taxes, insurance, utilities, and maintenance split 2+ ways
Building equity togetherBoth owners build equity instead of paying rent

Joint tenancy

FeatureDetail
Ownership splitEqual shares only (50/50, 33/33/33, etc.)
SurvivorshipIf one owner dies, their share automatically transfers to the other(s)
SaleAll owners must agree to sell the entire property
Best forEqual partners who want simplicity

Tenancy in common

FeatureDetail
Ownership splitCan be unequal (e.g., 60/40, 70/30)
SurvivorshipNo automatic transfer — deceased owner’s share goes to their estate/heirs
SaleEach owner can sell their share independently (though finding a buyer for a partial share is difficult)
Best forUnequal contributions, investors, or situations where you want your share to go to your estate

Recommendation: Most co-buying arrangements between friends should use tenancy in common because contributions are often unequal and you want the flexibility to specify what happens to your share.

How mortgage qualification works

FactorHow Lenders Handle Co-Buyers
IncomeCombined gross income of all applicants
DebtCombined debts of all applicants
CreditAll applicants’ credit scores reviewed — weakest score may affect rate offered
LiabilityJoint and several — each person is liable for the full mortgage amount
Down paymentCan come from any combination of the applicants

Example: two friends buying together

Friend AFriend BCombined
Income$75,000$85,000$160,000
Monthly debts$300$200$500
Credit score720680Lender uses lower: 680
Down payment contribution$40,000$60,000$100,000
Max home price (approximate)~$725,000

The co-ownership agreement (essential)

This is the single most important document in a co-buying arrangement. A real estate lawyer should draft it before you make an offer.

What it must cover

ClauseWhy It Matters
Ownership percentagesWho owns what share — especially if down payment contributions are unequal
Monthly cost splittingHow you divide mortgage, taxes, insurance, utilities, maintenance
Major expense decisionsWhat requires unanimous approval (e.g., renovations over $5,000)
Right of first refusalIf one owner wants to sell, the other gets first option to buy their share
Valuation methodHow the property is valued for a buyout (independent appraisal, average of two appraisals, etc.)
Exit timelineHow much notice is required and how long the buyout process takes (typically 90–180 days)
Default provisionsWhat happens if one owner stops paying their share
Dispute resolutionMediation before litigation — saves money and relationships
Death or incapacityWhat happens to a deceased owner’s share (estate rights vs. surviving owner’s rights)
Relationship changesWhat happens if one co-owner gets married, has kids, or wants to move a partner in

Cost of a co-ownership agreement

ServiceTypical Cost
Lawyer drafting co-ownership agreement$1,500–$3,500
Incorporating a buyout clause and valuation methodologyIncluded in above
Title registration (tenants in common with specified shares)$200–$500 additional

Do not skip this step. The legal fee is trivial compared to the cost of a dispute. Friendships that survive co-ownership have a clear, written agreement from day one.

Financial considerations

How to handle unequal contributions

ScenarioHow to Structure It
Equal down payment, equal income50/50 ownership, split everything equally
Unequal down payment (60/40)Ownership at 60/40 or equal ownership with a promissory note for the difference
Equal down payment, unequal incomeConsider a proportional split based on income contribution, or equal ownership with a side agreement
One person does most renovations (sweat equity)Assign a dollar value to the work and adjust ownership percentages periodically

Tax implications

Tax IssueDetail
Principal residence exemptionEach co-owner can claim the PRE on their share if they live in the home — you cannot designate another property
Rental income (if one moves out)If one owner moves out and the other pays “rent,” this may create taxable rental income
Capital gains on saleEach owner reports their proportional share of any capital gain
Attribution rulesIf ownership splits differ from economic contributions, CRA attribution rules may apply

What can go wrong (and how to prevent it)

RiskPrevention
One person stops payingDefault clause in co-ownership agreement with cure period and buyout option
One person wants to sell, other does notRight of first refusal clause with defined timeline and valuation method
Disagreement about renovations or maintenanceMajor expense threshold requiring mutual written agreement
One person moves a partner inClause addressing additional occupants and how it affects costs
One person’s credit deterioratesDoes not directly affect the mortgage in place, but prevents future refinancing — address in agreement
One person loses their jobEmergency provision: temporary payment adjustment with catch-up schedule
Friendship deterioratesMediation-first dispute resolution clause avoids costly litigation

Step-by-step: how to co-buy a home

StepAction
1Have an honest financial conversation: incomes, debts, credit scores, savings, risk tolerance
2Agree on budget, location, property type, and ownership structure
3Hire a real estate lawyer to draft the co-ownership agreement
4Get pre-approved for a mortgage together
5Search for properties and make an offer
6Register title as tenants in common with specified shares
7Set up a joint account for housing costs (mortgage, taxes, insurance)
8Review the agreement annually and update if circumstances change

Alternatives to full co-ownership

AlternativeHow It WorksBest For
One person buys, other pays rentOwner on title, friend as tenantUnequal financial positions; simpler structure
Parent co-signs but does not live thereParent helps with qualification but has no ownershipFirst-time buyers who need income support
Shared equity with a companyPrograms like Key or Ourboro provide down payment in exchange for equity shareBuyers who want to own solo but need help with down payment
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