Canadian Household Net Worth Trends: How Housing Drives Wealth
Updated
Housing is the foundation of Canadian household wealth. No other asset class comes close to real estate in its impact on Canadian family net worth — for better and for worse. Understanding how housing drives wealth helps explain why housing policy is economic policy in Canada.
Canadian household net worth: the big picture
Total household wealth
Year
Total Household Assets
Total Liabilities
Net Worth
Per Household (avg)
2005
$8.0 trillion
$1.5 trillion
$6.5 trillion
~$500,000
2010
$10.5 trillion
$2.0 trillion
$8.5 trillion
~$610,000
2015
$13.0 trillion
$2.3 trillion
$10.7 trillion
~$730,000
2019
$14.5 trillion
$2.5 trillion
$12.0 trillion
~$790,000
2021
$17.5 trillion
$2.8 trillion
$14.7 trillion
~$940,000
2023
$17.0 trillion
$2.9 trillion
$14.1 trillion
~$880,000
2025 (est.)
$18.0 trillion
$2.9 trillion
$15.1 trillion
~$940,000
2026 (est.)
$18.5 trillion
$3.0 trillion
$15.5 trillion
~$960,000
Sources: Statistics Canada National Balance Sheet, CMHC. Recent years are estimates.
Net worth dipped in 2023
The 2022–2023 rate hiking cycle caused the first meaningful decline in aggregate household net worth in over a decade:
Home prices fell ~15% from the 2022 peak in some markets
Stock/bond portfolios declined
Higher debt service costs reduced savings
Net worth recovered through 2024–2025 as markets and prices stabilized
How household assets break down
Asset composition
Asset Class
Value (approx. 2025)
Share of Total
Trend
Residential real estate
$9.5 trillion
~53%
Dominant — grew faster than other assets
Pension assets
$3.0 trillion
~17%
Steady growth
Financial securities (stocks, bonds, funds)
$2.5 trillion
~14%
Volatile year-to-year
Deposits (savings, GICs)
$1.5 trillion
~8%
Grew during COVID, slowed since
Non-residential real estate
$0.8 trillion
~4%
Includes land, commercial property
Other (vehicles, business equity, etc.)
$0.7 trillion
~4%
Miscellaneous
Canada’s real estate concentration
Canada is unusually reliant on real estate for household wealth:
Country
Real Estate Share of Household Assets
Context
Canada
~53%
Heavily concentrated
Australia
~50%
Similar pattern
United Kingdom
~40%
Moderate
France
~40%
Moderate
United States
~25%
More diversified (larger stock market wealth)
Germany
~35%
More renters, lower homeownership rate
This concentration means Canadian household wealth is highly sensitive to home prices. A 10% decline in home values erases roughly $950 billion in household wealth.
Net worth by age
Average and median net worth by age group
Age Group
Average Net Worth
Median Net Worth
Primary Asset
Under 35
$150,000
$50,000
Savings/pension; some have starter homes
35–44
$580,000
$320,000
Home equity (early mortgage), pension
45–54
$1,050,000
$600,000
Home equity (significant), pension, investments
55–64
$1,400,000
$800,000
Home equity (substantial), pension, investments
65+
$1,200,000
$700,000
Home equity (mortgage-free), pension drawdown
Approximate figures based on Statistics Canada Survey of Financial Security, extrapolated to 2025–2026 values.
Age-driven wealth patterns
Life Stage
Wealth Driver
Housing Role
20s–early 30s
Saving for down payment, paying student debt
Housing is a goal, not yet an asset
Mid-30s–40s
Homeownership, early mortgage paydown
Housing becomes #1 asset, mortgage is #1 liability
Late 40s–50s
Peak earning years, aggressive paydown
Home equity grows rapidly, mortgage shrinks
60s
Approaching or entering retirement
Mortgage-free (often), house is largest asset
70s+
Decumulation, potential downsizing
May unlock equity through HELOC, reverse mortgage, or sale
Homeowner vs renter wealth gap
The wealth gap between Canadian homeowners and renters is stark and growing.
Net worth comparison
Metric
Homeowners (with mortgage)
Homeowners (mortgage-free)
Renters
Median net worth
~$600,000
~$900,000
~$50,000
Mean net worth
~$1,000,000
~$1,300,000
~$120,000
Wealth multiple
12x renters (median)
18x renters (median)
Baseline
Why the gap is so large
Factor
Explanation
Forced savings
Mortgage payments build equity automatically; rent builds no equity
Leverage
Buying with 5–20% down means 5–20x leveraged exposure to price appreciation
Tax-free gains
Principal residence exemption means no tax on home value increases
Compounding appreciation
Average Canadian home prices grew ~5–7% annually over past 20 years
Income correlation
Higher-income households are more likely to own → higher savings rate overall
Intergenerational transfers
Homeowner families more likely to help children buy (gifted down payments)
The leverage effect
The power of leverage in homeownership:
Scenario
Initial Investment
Home Value Growth (5% annual, 10 years)
Total Return
Return on Down Payment
$500K home, 10% down ($50K)
$50,000
Home now worth $814,000 → $314,000 gain
$314,000
628% (on $50K invested)
$500K investment portfolio (no leverage)
$500,000
Portfolio grows at 7% annual
$483,000
97% return
$50K investment portfolio (same as down payment)
$50,000
Portfolio grows at 7% annual
$48,300
97% return
The leveraged home purchase produces dramatically higher returns on the initial cash investment — but also higher risk if prices fall.
Net worth by province
Median household net worth by province
Province
Median Net Worth (approx.)
Primary Driver
British Columbia
$650,000
High home values
Ontario
$600,000
High home values, diversified economy
Alberta
$520,000
Home equity + higher incomes
Saskatchewan
$430,000
Affordable housing, resource income
Manitoba
$380,000
Affordable housing
Quebec
$370,000
Lower home values, different retirement system
Nova Scotia
$340,000
Growing home values (recent)
New Brunswick
$300,000
Lower home values
PEI
$310,000
Lower home values, growing
Newfoundland
$280,000
Lower home values, oil dependence
Urban vs rural
Area
Median Net Worth
Key Difference
Toronto/Vancouver homeowner
$900,000+
Massive home equity
Mid-size city homeowner
$500,000–$700,000
Solid equity, lower cost base
Rural homeowner
$300,000–$500,000
Lower home values, often mortgage-free
Urban renter (any city)
$30,000–$80,000
No home equity
Housing wealth risks
Concentration risk
Having 50%+ of your net worth in a single asset (your home) carries risks:
Risk
Impact
Regional price decline
A Calgary homeowner in 2014–2016 saw 10–20% value loss during oil crash
Illiquidity
Can’t sell a fraction of your home — it’s all-or-nothing
Maintenance costs
Ongoing expenses that financial assets don’t have
Interest rate sensitivity
Higher rates reduce what buyers will pay → your home’s market value
Regulatory risk
Tax or policy changes could reduce housing investment returns
Debt-fueled wealth
Much of Canadian housing “wealth” is offset by mortgage debt:
Metric
Young Homeowner (35, 5 years in)
Mid-Career (50, 20 years in)
Retired (70, mortgage-free)
Home value
$700,000
$900,000
$800,000
Mortgage balance
$550,000
$200,000
$0
Home equity
$150,000
$700,000
$800,000
Equity as % of home value
21%
78%
100%
Equity as % of net worth
~40%
~55%
~65%
The young homeowner’s “wealth” is heavily leveraged — a 20% price decline would nearly wipe out their equity.
Trends shaping future wealth
Trend
Direction
Impact on Net Worth
Housing supply constraints
Ongoing
Supports home values → wealth grows for owners
Immigration
High (though moderating)
Supports demand → home values
Aging population
Accelerating
More downsizing, potential estate transfers
Rate normalization
Rates settling 3–5%
Moderate home price growth (not zero-rate booms)
Generational wealth transfer
$1 trillion+ expected over next decade
Existing wealth concentration reinforces itself
Potential policy changes
Uncertain
Capital gains tax, principal residence exemption changes could shift dynamics
The bottom line
Housing is Canada’s #1 wealth creator — 53% of household assets are residential real estate
Homeowners are 12–18x wealthier than renters — leverage, forced savings, and tax-free gains drive the gap
The wealth gap is widening — rising prices benefit existing owners and make entry harder for renters
Concentration risk is real — too much wealth in a single, illiquid, geographically-fixed asset
Net worth growth has been uneven — location and timing of purchase matter enormously
Housing wealth is not guaranteed — price declines, rate shocks, and policy changes can erode value