Buying a second property in Canada — whether a rental, cottage, or vacation home — requires a larger financial commitment than your first home. Here is what you need.
Minimum down payment by property type
| Property Type | Minimum Down Payment | CMHC Insurance? |
|---|---|---|
| Owner-occupied second home (vacation/cottage) | 5% (up to $500K) + 10% (above $500K) | ✅ Available |
| Rental / investment property | 20% | ❌ Not available |
| Mixed-use (live in one unit, rent others) | 5%–10% (if you occupy one unit) | ✅ Available on owner-occupied multi-unit |
| Any property over $1,000,000 | 20% | ❌ Not available |
| Commercial property | 25%–35% | ❌ Not available |
Down payment examples
| Purchase Price | Owner-Occupied Second Home (Min.) | Rental Property (20%) |
|---|---|---|
| $300,000 | $15,000 (5%) | $60,000 |
| $500,000 | $25,000 (5%) | $100,000 |
| $600,000 | $35,000 (5% on $500K + 10% on $100K) | $120,000 |
| $750,000 | $50,000 (5% on $500K + 10% on $250K) | $150,000 |
| $1,000,000 | $75,000 (5% on $500K + 10% on $500K) | $200,000 |
| $1,200,000 | $240,000 (20% — over $1M) | $240,000 |
Qualification differences: second home vs investment
| Factor | Owner-Occupied Second Home | Rental / Investment Property |
|---|---|---|
| Down payment | 5%–20% | 20% minimum |
| Mortgage insurance | Available (< 20% down) | Not available |
| Interest rate | Same as primary residence | 0.10%–0.25% higher |
| Rental income for qualification | Not applicable (owner-occupied) | 50%–80% of gross rent used as offset |
| Stress test | Yes — qualifying rate or contract + 2% | Yes — same stress test |
| GDS/TDS calculation | Both properties’ costs included | Both properties + rental offset |
| Intended use declaration | Must declare owner-occupied use | Must declare rental/investment use |
Sources for your second home down payment
| Source | Accepted? | Details |
|---|---|---|
| Savings | ✅ | Must show 90-day history in your account |
| TFSA withdrawals | ✅ | Tax-free; no impact on contribution room until following year |
| Non-registered investments | ✅ | May trigger capital gains tax when selling |
| RRSP (HBP) | ❌ | HBP is only for first-time buyers (or if you have not owned for 4+ years) |
| FHSA | ❌ | Only for first-time buyers |
| Gift from family | ✅ | Gift letter required; some lenders restrict for investment properties |
| HELOC on primary residence | ✅ (conditions) | Accepted for conventional mortgages; counted in debt ratios |
| Existing property equity (refinance) | ✅ | Refinance up to 80% LTV; new debt increases ratios |
| Proceeds from selling another property | ✅ | Capital gains tax may apply if not your PR |
| Borrowed funds (personal loan, credit card) | ❌ | Not accepted as a down payment source for insured mortgages |
Using a HELOC for the down payment
| HELOC Strategy | Conventional (20%+) | Insured (< 20%) |
|---|---|---|
| Allowed? | ✅ Generally yes | ❌ Not for the down payment |
| Impact on qualification | HELOC payment added to TDS | N/A |
| Interest deductibility | Potentially — if the property earns rental income | N/A |
| Risk | Higher total debt; variable rate on HELOC | N/A |
Qualifying with two properties
When you apply for a second property mortgage, lenders assess your ability to carry both:
| Ratio | Calculation | Maximum |
|---|---|---|
| GDS (Gross Debt Service) | (Primary housing costs + second property costs) ÷ gross income | 39% (typically) |
| TDS (Total Debt Service) | (All housing costs + all debt payments) ÷ gross income | 44% (typically) |
Qualification example
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Household gross income | $180,000/year ($15,000/month) |
| Primary home: mortgage + tax + heat | $3,200/month |
| Second property: mortgage + tax + heat + condo fees | $2,400/month |
| Rental offset (if renting out, 50% of $2,800 rent) | −$1,400/month |
| Net second property cost | $1,000/month |
| Other debt (car, credit line) | $600/month |
| GDS | ($3,200 + $1,000) ÷ $15,000 = 28% ✅ |
| TDS | ($3,200 + $1,000 + $600) ÷ $15,000 = 32% ✅ |
Tax considerations for second properties
| Tax Issue | Details |
|---|---|
| Rental income | Fully taxable — report on Form T776 |
| Mortgage interest (rental property) | Deductible against rental income |
| Property tax (rental) | Deductible against rental income |
| Insurance, maintenance, repairs (rental) | Deductible against rental income |
| Capital gains on sale | Taxable — 50% inclusion rate on gains up to $250K; 66.7% above $250K (2026) |
| Principal residence exemption | Only one property can be your PR per year — you must choose |
| HST/GST on new construction | May apply if buying a new-build investment property |
| CCA (depreciation) | Available but triggers recapture on sale — use cautiously |
Vacation property vs rental: different rules
| Factor | Vacation Home (Personal Use) | Rental Property |
|---|---|---|
| Down payment | 5%–20% | 20% |
| Mortgage interest deductible? | ❌ No (personal use) | ✅ Yes (against rental income) |
| Expenses deductible? | ❌ No | ✅ Yes |
| Capital gains on sale | Taxable (unless designated PR) | Taxable |
| PR exemption available? | ✅ Can designate for some or all years (reduces gains) | ✅ Same — but you lose the exemption on your main home for those years |
| CMHC insurable? | ✅ If owner-occupied | ❌ No |
Lender policies to know
| Policy | Details |
|---|---|
| Intended use declaration | You must truthfully declare how you will use the property — misrepresenting use is mortgage fraud |
| Rental offset varies | Some lenders use 50% of rent, others 80% — shop around |
| Max number of properties | Most A-lenders cap at 4–5 financed properties; B-lenders and private lenders may go higher |
| Insurance on second home | Lender requires proof of insurance; vacancy may void coverage |
| Property management | Some lenders require professional management for out-of-province rentals |
| Refinance restrictions | Cannot refinance a rental property above 80% LTV |
Strategy checklist
- Confirmed property type (owner-occupied vs rental) and minimum down payment
- Identified down payment source (savings, HELOC, equity refinance, etc.)
- Pre-qualified with a lender — both properties’ costs factored into GDS/TDS
- Stress-tested at qualifying rate — can handle rate increases
- Tax plan in place — understand rental income reporting and capital gains implications
- Insurance secured for the second property
- If rental: set rent based on market appraisal; prepared lease for qualification
- If vacation: confirmed CMHC eligibility and intended-use requirements
- Estate plan updated to reflect second property ownership