Skip to main content

Down Payment for a Second Home in Canada: Rules & Requirements (2026)

Updated

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 TypeMinimum Down PaymentCMHC Insurance?
Owner-occupied second home (vacation/cottage)5% (up to $500K) + 10% (above $500K)✅ Available
Rental / investment property20%❌ 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 $1,000,00020%❌ Not available
Commercial property25%–35%❌ Not available

Down payment examples

Purchase PriceOwner-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

FactorOwner-Occupied Second HomeRental / Investment Property
Down payment5%–20%20% minimum
Mortgage insuranceAvailable (< 20% down)Not available
Interest rateSame as primary residence0.10%–0.25% higher
Rental income for qualificationNot applicable (owner-occupied)50%–80% of gross rent used as offset
Stress testYes — qualifying rate or contract + 2%Yes — same stress test
GDS/TDS calculationBoth properties’ costs includedBoth properties + rental offset
Intended use declarationMust declare owner-occupied useMust declare rental/investment use

Sources for your second home down payment

SourceAccepted?Details
SavingsMust show 90-day history in your account
TFSA withdrawalsTax-free; no impact on contribution room until following year
Non-registered investmentsMay trigger capital gains tax when selling
RRSP (HBP)HBP is only for first-time buyers (or if you have not owned for 4+ years)
FHSAOnly for first-time buyers
Gift from familyGift 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 propertyCapital 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 StrategyConventional (20%+)Insured (< 20%)
Allowed?✅ Generally yes❌ Not for the down payment
Impact on qualificationHELOC payment added to TDSN/A
Interest deductibilityPotentially — if the property earns rental incomeN/A
RiskHigher total debt; variable rate on HELOCN/A

Qualifying with two properties

When you apply for a second property mortgage, lenders assess your ability to carry both:

RatioCalculationMaximum
GDS (Gross Debt Service)(Primary housing costs + second property costs) ÷ gross income39% (typically)
TDS (Total Debt Service)(All housing costs + all debt payments) ÷ gross income44% (typically)

Qualification example

ItemAmount
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 IssueDetails
Rental incomeFully 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 saleTaxable — 50% inclusion rate on gains up to $250K; 66.7% above $250K (2026)
Principal residence exemptionOnly one property can be your PR per year — you must choose
HST/GST on new constructionMay apply if buying a new-build investment property
CCA (depreciation)Available but triggers recapture on sale — use cautiously

Vacation property vs rental: different rules

FactorVacation Home (Personal Use)Rental Property
Down payment5%–20%20%
Mortgage interest deductible?❌ No (personal use)✅ Yes (against rental income)
Expenses deductible?❌ No✅ Yes
Capital gains on saleTaxable (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

PolicyDetails
Intended use declarationYou must truthfully declare how you will use the property — misrepresenting use is mortgage fraud
Rental offset variesSome lenders use 50% of rent, others 80% — shop around
Max number of propertiesMost A-lenders cap at 4–5 financed properties; B-lenders and private lenders may go higher
Insurance on second homeLender requires proof of insurance; vacancy may void coverage
Property managementSome lenders require professional management for out-of-province rentals
Refinance restrictionsCannot 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
🏠

Get the best mortgage rate in Canada — in minutes

Homewise negotiates with 30+ banks and lenders for you. Free, 5 minutes, no credit check.

Get Started →

Affiliate disclosure: WealthNorth may earn a commission if you apply through this link. This does not affect your rate or cost.