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Commercial Real Estate Investing in Canada: Beginner's Guide (2026)

Updated

Commercial real estate investing offers higher yields and longer lease terms than residential — but demands more capital, expertise, and due diligence. Here is how to get started in Canada.

Types of commercial real estate

Property TypeDescriptionTypical Cap RateTypical LeaseComplexity
Multi-unit residential (5+ units)Apartment buildings4%–6%1-year leasesModerate
RetailStrip malls, standalone retail, malls5%–8%5–10 year NNNModerate to high
IndustrialWarehouses, distribution centres, flex space4.5%–6.5%5–15 year NNNModerate
OfficeOffice buildings, professional centres5.5%–9%5–10 year gross/netHigh
Mixed-useRetail ground floor + residential above5%–7%MixedModerate
Self-storageStorage unit facilities5%–8%Month-to-monthLow to moderate
Hotels / hospitalityHotels, motels6%–10%Operator/managementVery high

Key metrics

MetricFormulaWhat It Tells You
Cap rateNOI ÷ purchase priceReturn on the asset (unlevered)
Cash-on-cash returnAnnual cash flow ÷ total cash investedReturn on your actual capital invested
NOIGross income − operating expensesProperty earnings before debt
DSCRNOI ÷ annual debt serviceCan the property cover its mortgage?
GRMPurchase price ÷ gross annual rentQuick comparison tool (lower = better value)
Price per unitPurchase price ÷ number of unitsPer-unit cost comparison
Price per sq ftPurchase price ÷ total rentable sq ftCost comparison for office/retail/industrial
Occupancy rateRented units ÷ total unitsHow full is the building?
Break-even occupancy(Operating expenses + debt service) ÷ gross incomeWhat occupancy level is needed to cover all costs?

Investment analysis example

12-unit apartment building

ItemAmount
Purchase price$2,000,000
Down payment (25%)$500,000
Mortgage ($1,500,000 at 5.5%, 25-year amortization)$9,180/month
Gross annual rental income$216,000 ($1,500/unit × 12 units × 12 months)
Vacancy (5%)−$10,800
Operating expenses (40% of gross)−$86,400
NOI$118,800
Annual mortgage payments$110,160
DSCR1.08 ⚠️ (below most lender minimums)
Annual cash flow$8,640
Cash-on-cash return1.7%
Cap rate5.9%

This example shows a property that is marginally cash-flow positive. Investors would look for: lower purchase price, higher rents (value-add opportunity), or lower operating expenses to improve returns.

Lease structures

Lease TypeWho Pays ExpensesCommon InInvestor Impact
Gross leaseLandlord pays all expensesOfficeHigher rent but more expense risk
Modified grossShared — base year expenses by landlord, increases by tenantOfficeModerate risk sharing
Single net (N)Tenant pays property taxVariesOne less expense for landlord
Double net (NN)Tenant pays tax + insuranceVariesTwo fewer expenses
Triple net (NNN)Tenant pays tax + insurance + maintenanceRetail, industrialMinimal landlord expenses — most predictable income
Absolute netTenant pays everything, including structuralSingle-tenant retailTrue passive income for landlord

Ways to invest

MethodCapital NeededControlLiquidityReturnsComplexity
Direct ownership$200K–$1M+FullLow6%–15%+High
Syndication / limited partnership$25K–$100KNone — passiveVery low7%–12% targetedLow (for investor)
Public REITs$15–$50/shareNoneHigh (stock market)4%–8% dividend + growthLow
Private REITs$25K–$100KNoneLow to moderate6%–10% targetedLow
Mortgage investing (MIC)$10K–$50KNoneLow to moderate6%–10%Low
Joint ventureVariesSharedLowVariesModerate

Canadian REITs for commercial exposure

REIT TypeExamplesFocus
DiversifiedCanadian REIT, H&R REITMulti-sector
RetailRioCan, SmartCentresShopping centres, retail plazas
IndustrialGranite, Summit IndustrialWarehouses, distribution
OfficeAllied Properties, Dream OfficeOffice buildings
ResidentialCAPREIT, Morguard, MintoMulti-unit apartments
HealthcareNorthWest HealthcareMedical offices, hospitals
Self-StorageStorageVault CanadaStorage facilities

Due diligence checklist

Financial

  • Reviewed 3 years of income and expense statements
  • Verified rent roll against actual leases
  • Confirmed current occupancy and lease expiry schedule
  • Calculated NOI, cap rate, DSCR, and cash-on-cash return
  • Reviewed property tax assessments and appeals history
  • Identified upcoming capital expenditure needs (roof, HVAC, elevator, parking lot)
  • Assessed below-market rents (upside potential) or above-market rents (risk)

Physical

  • Commissioned a building condition report
  • Ordered a Phase I Environmental Site Assessment (ESA)
  • Reviewed recent and planned capital improvements
  • Assessed deferred maintenance
  • Confirmed zoning permits current use
  • Reviewed building code compliance
  • Reviewed all leases — terms, renewal options, tenant rights
  • Confirmed no outstanding litigation
  • Reviewed title — easements, encumbrances, liens
  • Confirmed property tax status (no arrears)
  • Reviewed insurance claims history

Risks

RiskDetailsMitigation
VacancyLosing a major tenant can eliminate cash flowDiversify tenants; maintain a lease expiry schedule
Interest rateHigher rates reduce cash flow and property valuesFixed-rate mortgages; stress-test at higher rates
Market declineEconomic downturns reduce demand and rentsBuy in strong locations; diversify property types
LiquidityCommercial properties take months to sellMaintain cash reserves; do not overleverage
Capital expenditureUnexpected repairs (roof, HVAC) can cost $50K–$500KBuilding condition report; reserve fund
EnvironmentalContamination liability can be severePhase I ESA before purchase; environmental insurance
Tenant defaultCommercial tenants can go bankruptCreditworthy tenants; lease guarantees; diversification
RegulatoryZoning changes, rent control (residential), building code upgradesDue diligence; legal review

Getting started: a path for beginners

StageAction
1. EducationRead, take courses, network with investors, attend real estate meetups
2. REITsStart with public REITs for exposure and education — low capital, liquid
3. Small multi-residentialBuy a 2–4 unit building (residential rules, lower capital) to learn landlording
4. Small commercialMove to a 5–12 unit apartment or small retail/industrial property
5. ScaleAdd properties, consider syndications, build a portfolio
6. DiversifySpread across property types and geographies

Tax advantages of commercial real estate

AdvantageDetails
Mortgage interest deductionDeduct against rental income
Operating expense deductionProperty tax, insurance, management, repairs — all deductible
CCA (depreciation)Claim Capital Cost Allowance (4% for most buildings) — but triggers recapture on sale
Capital gains deferralHold and refinance instead of selling — defer gains indefinitely
IncorporationHold properties in a corporation for tax planning; potential for small business deduction on active business income
HST rebateMay claim input tax credits on expenses if registered for HST
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