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 Type | Description | Typical Cap Rate | Typical Lease | Complexity |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Multi-unit residential (5+ units) | Apartment buildings | 4%–6% | 1-year leases | Moderate |
| Retail | Strip malls, standalone retail, malls | 5%–8% | 5–10 year NNN | Moderate to high |
| Industrial | Warehouses, distribution centres, flex space | 4.5%–6.5% | 5–15 year NNN | Moderate |
| Office | Office buildings, professional centres | 5.5%–9% | 5–10 year gross/net | High |
| Mixed-use | Retail ground floor + residential above | 5%–7% | Mixed | Moderate |
| Self-storage | Storage unit facilities | 5%–8% | Month-to-month | Low to moderate |
| Hotels / hospitality | Hotels, motels | 6%–10% | Operator/management | Very high |
Key metrics
| Metric | Formula | What It Tells You |
|---|---|---|
| Cap rate | NOI ÷ purchase price | Return on the asset (unlevered) |
| Cash-on-cash return | Annual cash flow ÷ total cash invested | Return on your actual capital invested |
| NOI | Gross income − operating expenses | Property earnings before debt |
| DSCR | NOI ÷ annual debt service | Can the property cover its mortgage? |
| GRM | Purchase price ÷ gross annual rent | Quick comparison tool (lower = better value) |
| Price per unit | Purchase price ÷ number of units | Per-unit cost comparison |
| Price per sq ft | Purchase price ÷ total rentable sq ft | Cost comparison for office/retail/industrial |
| Occupancy rate | Rented units ÷ total units | How full is the building? |
| Break-even occupancy | (Operating expenses + debt service) ÷ gross income | What occupancy level is needed to cover all costs? |
Investment analysis example
12-unit apartment building
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| 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 |
| DSCR | 1.08 ⚠️ (below most lender minimums) |
| Annual cash flow | $8,640 |
| Cash-on-cash return | 1.7% |
| Cap rate | 5.9% |
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 Type | Who Pays Expenses | Common In | Investor Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gross lease | Landlord pays all expenses | Office | Higher rent but more expense risk |
| Modified gross | Shared — base year expenses by landlord, increases by tenant | Office | Moderate risk sharing |
| Single net (N) | Tenant pays property tax | Varies | One less expense for landlord |
| Double net (NN) | Tenant pays tax + insurance | Varies | Two fewer expenses |
| Triple net (NNN) | Tenant pays tax + insurance + maintenance | Retail, industrial | Minimal landlord expenses — most predictable income |
| Absolute net | Tenant pays everything, including structural | Single-tenant retail | True passive income for landlord |
Ways to invest
| Method | Capital Needed | Control | Liquidity | Returns | Complexity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Direct ownership | $200K–$1M+ | Full | Low | 6%–15%+ | High |
| Syndication / limited partnership | $25K–$100K | None — passive | Very low | 7%–12% targeted | Low (for investor) |
| Public REITs | $15–$50/share | None | High (stock market) | 4%–8% dividend + growth | Low |
| Private REITs | $25K–$100K | None | Low to moderate | 6%–10% targeted | Low |
| Mortgage investing (MIC) | $10K–$50K | None | Low to moderate | 6%–10% | Low |
| Joint venture | Varies | Shared | Low | Varies | Moderate |
Canadian REITs for commercial exposure
| REIT Type | Examples | Focus |
|---|---|---|
| Diversified | Canadian REIT, H&R REIT | Multi-sector |
| Retail | RioCan, SmartCentres | Shopping centres, retail plazas |
| Industrial | Granite, Summit Industrial | Warehouses, distribution |
| Office | Allied Properties, Dream Office | Office buildings |
| Residential | CAPREIT, Morguard, Minto | Multi-unit apartments |
| Healthcare | NorthWest Healthcare | Medical offices, hospitals |
| Self-Storage | StorageVault Canada | Storage 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
Legal
- 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
| Risk | Details | Mitigation |
|---|---|---|
| Vacancy | Losing a major tenant can eliminate cash flow | Diversify tenants; maintain a lease expiry schedule |
| Interest rate | Higher rates reduce cash flow and property values | Fixed-rate mortgages; stress-test at higher rates |
| Market decline | Economic downturns reduce demand and rents | Buy in strong locations; diversify property types |
| Liquidity | Commercial properties take months to sell | Maintain cash reserves; do not overleverage |
| Capital expenditure | Unexpected repairs (roof, HVAC) can cost $50K–$500K | Building condition report; reserve fund |
| Environmental | Contamination liability can be severe | Phase I ESA before purchase; environmental insurance |
| Tenant default | Commercial tenants can go bankrupt | Creditworthy tenants; lease guarantees; diversification |
| Regulatory | Zoning changes, rent control (residential), building code upgrades | Due diligence; legal review |
Getting started: a path for beginners
| Stage | Action |
|---|---|
| 1. Education | Read, take courses, network with investors, attend real estate meetups |
| 2. REITs | Start with public REITs for exposure and education — low capital, liquid |
| 3. Small multi-residential | Buy a 2–4 unit building (residential rules, lower capital) to learn landlording |
| 4. Small commercial | Move to a 5–12 unit apartment or small retail/industrial property |
| 5. Scale | Add properties, consider syndications, build a portfolio |
| 6. Diversify | Spread across property types and geographies |
Tax advantages of commercial real estate
| Advantage | Details |
|---|---|
| Mortgage interest deduction | Deduct against rental income |
| Operating expense deduction | Property tax, insurance, management, repairs — all deductible |
| CCA (depreciation) | Claim Capital Cost Allowance (4% for most buildings) — but triggers recapture on sale |
| Capital gains deferral | Hold and refinance instead of selling — defer gains indefinitely |
| Incorporation | Hold properties in a corporation for tax planning; potential for small business deduction on active business income |
| HST rebate | May claim input tax credits on expenses if registered for HST |