“How much can I afford?” is the first question every home buyer asks — and the most important one to answer honestly. Lenders will tell you the maximum they’ll lend. This guide helps you figure out the maximum you should actually borrow, which is often quite different.
Before running numbers, check what lenders use as qualification rules, estimate your full closing costs by province, and benchmark with the first-time buyer framework.
The two types of “afford”
| Type | Definition | Who Sets It |
|---|---|---|
| Maximum qualification | The most a lender will approve based on income, debts, and the stress test | The lender (using GDS/TDS rules) |
| Comfortable affordability | What you can actually pay while still saving, living, and sleeping at night | You (using your actual budget) |
The gap between these two numbers can be $100,000–$200,000. Most financial pain in homeownership comes from borrowing closer to maximum qualification than to comfortable affordability.
How lenders calculate your maximum mortgage
Your result is only as strong as your debt inputs, so update credit card, loan, and line-of-credit payments first using a debt-to-income ratio worksheet before trusting any affordability estimate.
Step 1: GDS ratio (housing costs)
The Gross Debt Service ratio measures housing costs as a percentage of gross income:
GDS = (Mortgage Payment + Property Tax + Heating + 50% of Condo Fees) ÷ Gross Annual Income
| Component | Typical Estimate |
|---|---|
| Mortgage payment | Calculated at stress test rate |
| Property tax | 1% of home value ÷ 12 (per month) |
| Heating | $100–$175/month (varies by region) |
| Condo fees (50%) | Half of monthly condo fee |
| GDS limit | ≤39% of gross income |
Step 2: TDS ratio (all debts)
The Total Debt Service ratio adds all other debt payments:
TDS = (Housing Costs + Car Payment + Student Loan Payment + Credit Card Minimums + Other Loans) ÷ Gross Annual Income
| Debt Type | How It’s Counted |
|---|---|
| Car loan/lease | Monthly payment |
| Student loan | Monthly payment |
| Credit card | 3% of outstanding balance per month |
| Line of credit | 3% of outstanding balance per month (or interest-only if stated) |
| HELOC | Interest-only payment at qualifying rate |
| Other loans | Monthly payment |
| TDS limit | ≤44% of gross income |
Step 3: The stress test
You must qualify at the higher of:
- Your actual mortgage rate + 2%, OR
- 5.25% (the qualifying floor rate)
| Your Actual Rate | Stress Test Rate | Which Applies |
|---|---|---|
| 3.50% | 5.50% (3.50 + 2.0) | 5.50% (higher than floor) |
| 4.00% | 6.00% | 6.00% |
| 4.50% | 6.50% | 6.50% |
| 5.00% | 7.00% | 7.00% |
| 2.50% | 5.25% (floor) | 5.25% (2.50 + 2.0 = 4.50, below floor) |
Mortgage affordability by income
How much you can borrow (no other debts)
Assumptions: 5-year fixed at 4.50%, stress test at 6.50%, 25-year amortization, $350/month property tax, $150/month heating, no condo fees, no other debts.
| Gross Annual Income | Max Mortgage (GDS ≤39%) | Monthly Payment (actual rate) | Home Price (20% down) | Home Price (5% down) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $50,000 | $195,000 | $1,081 | $244,000 | $205,000 |
| $60,000 | $245,000 | $1,358 | $306,000 | $258,000 |
| $70,000 | $295,000 | $1,636 | $369,000 | $311,000 |
| $80,000 | $345,000 | $1,913 | $431,000 | $363,000 |
| $90,000 | $395,000 | $2,191 | $494,000 | $416,000 |
| $100,000 | $445,000 | $2,468 | $556,000 | $468,000 |
| $110,000 | $495,000 | $2,746 | $619,000 | $521,000 |
| $120,000 | $545,000 | $3,023 | $681,000 | $574,000 |
| $130,000 | $595,000 | $3,301 | $744,000 | $626,000 |
| $140,000 | $645,000 | $3,578 | $806,000 | $679,000 |
| $150,000 | $695,000 | $3,856 | $869,000 | $732,000 |
| $175,000 | $820,000 | $4,549 | $1,025,000 | $863,000 |
| $200,000 | $945,000 | $5,243 | $1,181,000 | $995,000 |
Impact of existing debts
| Monthly Debt Payments | Reduction in Max Mortgage | Example: $100K income |
|---|---|---|
| $0 | $0 | $445,000 max mortgage |
| $300 (car payment) | −$55,000 | $390,000 |
| $500 (car + student loan) | −$90,000 | $355,000 |
| $800 (car + student loan + credit card) | −$145,000 | $300,000 |
| $1,200 (multiple debts) | −$215,000 | $230,000 |
Key insight: Paying off a $300/month car loan before applying adds roughly $55,000 to your mortgage qualification — equivalent to earning $7,000 more per year.
Dual-income affordability
Combined income scenarios
| Income 1 | Income 2 | Combined Income | Max Mortgage | Home Price (20% down) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $50,000 | $50,000 | $100,000 | $445,000 | $556,000 |
| $60,000 | $50,000 | $110,000 | $495,000 | $619,000 |
| $70,000 | $60,000 | $130,000 | $595,000 | $744,000 |
| $80,000 | $70,000 | $150,000 | $695,000 | $869,000 |
| $90,000 | $80,000 | $170,000 | $795,000 | $994,000 |
| $100,000 | $80,000 | $180,000 | $845,000 | $1,056,000 |
| $100,000 | $100,000 | $200,000 | $945,000 | $1,181,000 |
Same assumptions as single-income table. Both incomes used for qualification.
What you can buy in each city
Single income: $100,000 (max mortgage ~$445,000)
| City | Max Purchase (20% down) | What You Can Buy | Realistic? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vancouver | $556,000 | Studio or small 1BR condo | Very limited |
| Toronto | $556,000 | Small 1BR condo | Very limited |
| Victoria | $556,000 | 1BR condo | Limited |
| Ottawa | $556,000 | 2BR condo or small townhouse | Feasible |
| Montreal | $556,000 | 2BR condo or older semi | Feasible |
| Calgary | $556,000 | 2–3BR condo, townhouse, or small detached | Good options |
| Edmonton | $556,000 | 3BR detached home | Excellent options |
| Winnipeg | $556,000 | 3–4BR detached home | Excellent options |
| Halifax | $556,000 | 2–3BR home or townhouse | Good options |
Dual income: $150,000 combined (max mortgage ~$695,000)
| City | Max Purchase (20% down) | What You Can Buy | Realistic? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vancouver | $869,000 | 1–2BR condo | Limited |
| Toronto | $869,000 | 2BR condo or small townhouse | Limited |
| Victoria | $869,000 | 2BR condo or townhouse | Moderate |
| Ottawa | $869,000 | 3BR townhouse or semi | Good |
| Montreal | $869,000 | 3BR home or large condo | Good |
| Calgary | $869,000 | 3–4BR detached home | Excellent |
| Edmonton | $869,000 | 4BR detached home, likely with upgrades | Excellent |
| Winnipeg | $869,000 | Large detached home | Excellent |
The “comfortable” affordability test
What lenders approve and what you should borrow are different things. Here’s a more conservative framework:
The 28/36 rule (conservative approach)
| Rule | Formula | Application |
|---|---|---|
| 28% rule | Housing costs ≤28% of gross income (not 39%) | Leaves more room for savings and unexpected expenses |
| 36% rule | Total debt payments ≤36% of gross income (not 44%) | Keeps you well within safe debt levels |
Conservative vs maximum mortgage by income
| Gross Income | Max Mortgage (39% GDS) | Conservative Mortgage (28% GDS) | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| $80,000 | $345,000 | $230,000 | $115,000 less |
| $100,000 | $445,000 | $300,000 | $145,000 less |
| $120,000 | $545,000 | $375,000 | $170,000 less |
| $150,000 | $695,000 | $480,000 | $215,000 less |
Why borrowing less matters
| Factor | At Maximum ($445K on $100K income) | Conservative ($300K on $100K income) |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly payment | $2,468 | $1,664 |
| Monthly savings capacity | $200–$400 | $1,000–$1,200 |
| Buffer for rate increase | Tight — limited room | Comfortable — can absorb 2%+ increase |
| Emergency fund timeline | Hard to build | 6+ months within 1–2 years |
| Lifestyle trade-offs | Significant | Moderate |
| Stress level | High | Low |
The complete cost of homeownership
Your mortgage payment is only part of the cost. Here’s what a home actually costs:
Total monthly cost of owning
| Cost | Monthly Estimate | Annual | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mortgage payment | $2,500 | $30,000 | Based on $450K, 4.5%, 25yr |
| Property tax | $400 | $4,800 | ~1% of home value |
| Home insurance | $125 | $1,500 | Varies by province and coverage |
| Utilities (heat, water, electric) | $300 | $3,600 | Higher for detached homes |
| Maintenance/repairs | $300 | $3,600 | 1% of home value per year (rule of thumb) |
| Condo fees (if applicable) | $400+ | $4,800+ | Varies widely |
| Total (non-condo) | $3,625 | $43,500 | Mortgage is only 69% of total cost |
| Total (condo) | $4,025 | $48,300 | Condo fees add significant cost |
The 1% maintenance rule
Budget 1% of your home’s value annually for maintenance and repairs:
| Home Value | Annual Maintenance Budget | Monthly |
|---|---|---|
| $400,000 | $4,000 | $333 |
| $600,000 | $6,000 | $500 |
| $800,000 | $8,000 | $667 |
| $1,000,000 | $10,000 | $833 |
Many first-time buyers don’t budget for this. A new roof ($10,000–$20,000), furnace ($5,000–$8,000), or foundation repair ($10,000+) can devastate finances without a maintenance fund.
Down payment and its impact on affordability
Minimum down payment rules in Canada
| Purchase Price | Minimum Down Payment | Amount on $500K Home |
|---|---|---|
| Up to $500,000 | 5% | $25,000 |
| $500,001–$999,999 | 5% on first $500K + 10% on remainder | $25,000 + 10% of amount above $500K |
| $1,000,000+ | 20% | N/A (minimum $200,000) |
How down payment affects your costs
| Down Payment | Mortgage Amount (on $600K home) | CMHC Premium | Total Mortgage | Monthly Payment (4.5%, 25yr) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5% ($30,000) | $570,000 | $22,800 (4.0%) | $592,800 | $3,288 |
| 10% ($60,000) | $540,000 | $16,740 (3.1%) | $556,740 | $3,088 |
| 15% ($90,000) | $510,000 | $14,280 (2.8%) | $524,280 | $2,908 |
| 20% ($120,000) | $480,000 | $0 | $480,000 | $2,663 |
| 25% ($150,000) | $450,000 | $0 | $450,000 | $2,496 |
Putting 20% down saves you $22,800 in CMHC insurance premium — but requires $90,000 more upfront. For many buyers, the trade-off of paying the insurance premium and getting into the market sooner is worthwhile.
Self-employed affordability
Self-employed borrowers face additional qualification challenges:
| Factor | Employed | Self-Employed |
|---|---|---|
| Income verification | T4/pay stubs | 2 years of T1 Generals / NOAs |
| Income used | Gross employment income | Average of 2-year net business income (often lower than gross) |
| Max qualification | Standard GDS/TDS | Often 10–20% less due to lower stated income |
| Documentation | Employer letter + pay stub | Business financials, T1/T4, sometimes CRA business account |
| Lender options | All lenders | Some lenders more flexible; B-lenders may be needed |
Self-employed income calculation example
| Year | Gross Business Revenue | Net Business Income (after expenses) |
|---|---|---|
| 2024 | $180,000 | $85,000 |
| 2025 | $200,000 | $95,000 |
| 2-year average (used for qualification) | $90,000 |
A self-employed person earning $200K gross but declaring $95K net qualifies similarly to an employee earning $90K — a significant discount.
Quick affordability calculator
Rule of thumb: 4x gross income
As a rapid estimate, most Canadians can qualify for approximately 4–4.5x their gross annual income in mortgage amount (assuming no other debts and current rates).
| Gross Income | Estimated Max Mortgage (4–4.5x) | With 20% Down (Home Price) |
|---|---|---|
| $60,000 | $240,000–$270,000 | $300,000–$338,000 |
| $80,000 | $320,000–$360,000 | $400,000–$450,000 |
| $100,000 | $400,000–$450,000 | $500,000–$563,000 |
| $120,000 | $480,000–$540,000 | $600,000–$675,000 |
| $150,000 | $600,000–$675,000 | $750,000–$844,000 |
This is a rough estimate only. Actual qualification depends on debts, property taxes, rates, and lender-specific criteria.
The bottom line
- Lender maximum and comfortable affordability are very different — borrowing less gives you financial breathing room
- The stress test reduces your maximum by 15–20% — it’s protective, not punitive
- Each $300/month in existing debt reduces your mortgage by ~$55,000 — pay off debts before applying
- Total homeownership cost is 30–45% more than the mortgage payment alone — budget for taxes, insurance, maintenance, and utilities
- The 28% rule is safer than the 39% GDS maximum — aim to keep housing costs under 28% of gross income
- Your city determines what your money buys — $100K income gets a detached home in Edmonton or a studio condo in Vancouver