Home Equity Sharing Programs in Canada: How They Work (2026)
Updated
Home equity sharing programs let you buy a home with less of your own money. An investor or company puts up a portion of the down payment, and in exchange, they receive a share of the home’s future value change. These programs are relatively new in Canada and are an alternative to traditional mortgages, CMHC insurance, or the discontinued federal shared equity program.
How equity sharing works
Step
What Happens
1. Apply
You apply to an equity sharing company and qualify based on income, credit, and property
2. Partnership
The company contributes funds toward your purchase (typically 5%–15% of the home price)
3. You buy the home
You own the home, live in it, maintain it, and make all mortgage payments
4. Exit event
When you sell, refinance, or reach the agreement end date, you settle with the partner
5. Share the gain (or loss)
The equity partner receives their original contribution plus their share of appreciation
Equity sharing vs traditional down payment
Factor
100% Your Down Payment
With Equity Sharing Partner
Home price
$600,000
$600,000
Your down payment
$60,000 (10%)
$30,000 (5%)
Equity partner contribution
$0
$30,000 (5%)
Mortgage amount
$540,000
$540,000
CMHC insurance
$16,740 (3.1%)
Potentially avoided if combined = 10%+
Monthly payment
~$2,850
~$2,850
If home appreciates 20% to $720,000
Your equity: $180,000
Your equity: ~$150,000 (partner takes ~$30,000 + share of gain)
The core trade-off: You buy sooner with less cash, but give up some future upside.
Canadian equity sharing companies
Ourboro
Feature
Details
Contribution
Up to $250,000 toward your home purchase
What they receive
Share of future appreciation
Property types
Residential — detached, semi, townhouse, condo
Location
Currently focused on the Greater Toronto Area
Agreement term
Up to 15 years
Buyout allowed
Yes — through refinancing or cash payment
Monthly cost
No monthly fees to the equity partner
Maintenance
Your responsibility (as the homeowner)
Key Living
Feature
Details
Contribution
Varies based on property and applicant profile
What they receive
Share of future appreciation
Focus
Helping buyers who are close to qualifying but need down payment help
Location
Select Canadian markets
Comparison with the discontinued federal program
Feature
First-Time Home Buyer Incentive (Ended 2024)
Private Equity Sharing (Ourboro/Key)
Provider
CMHC (federal government)
Private companies
Contribution
5%–10% of home price
Varies (up to $250K)
Price cap
$722,000 (up to $950K in select cities)
Market-based, higher limits
Repayment
Return contribution + share of gain after 25 years or on sale
Similar — return + share of gain
Status
Discontinued (March 2024)
Active
When equity sharing makes sense
Situation
Why It Helps
You have steady income but limited savings
Access the market sooner instead of waiting years to save
Home prices are rising faster than you can save
Missing out on appreciation costs more than sharing it
You need to avoid CMHC insurance
Combined down payment may reach 20%, eliminating the insurance premium
You’re buying in an expensive market
The gap between your savings and the required down payment is large
You have a short timeline
Job relocation or family needs require buying soon
When equity sharing doesn’t make sense
Situation
Why
You can make the down payment yourself
No need to share appreciation
Home prices are expected to decline
The partner shares in losses, which is an advantage — but you may be better off waiting
You plan to hold the home for 20+ years
The cost of shared appreciation compounds over time
You value maximizing wealth accumulation
Every dollar of appreciation you share is a dollar you don’t keep
The agreement terms are unclear
Never enter an equity sharing agreement without full legal review
The math: When does equity sharing cost more than CMHC insurance?
Scenario: $600,000 home, 5% personal down payment + 5% equity partner
Equity partner’s share of appreciation after 5 years (home up 15%)
~$13,500 + $30,000 return = $43,500
Net cost vs CMHC
Higher if appreciation is strong
The breakpoint: If the home appreciates significantly (15%+ over 5 years), CMHC insurance is often the cheaper option. If appreciation is modest (under 10%), equity sharing can be cheaper because the partner’s share of the smaller gain is less than the CMHC premium you avoided.
Legal considerations
Factor
Details
Legal review
Essential — have a real estate lawyer review the equity sharing agreement before signing
Title registration
Equity sharing may or may not be registered on title — understand how the partner’s interest is secured
Mortgage lender approval
Your lender must agree to the equity sharing arrangement; not all lenders will
Renovation rights
Confirm whether you can renovate freely and how renovation value is handled
Buyout terms
Understand the exact formula for buying out the partner at any point
Default provisions
What happens if you miss mortgage payments or the partner calls the agreement
Tax implications
The equity partner’s share is typically not a taxable event for you (consult a tax advisor)