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Income Needed to Afford an $800,000 Home in Canada

Updated

Income needed to afford an $800,000 home

To buy an $800,000 home in Canada, you typically need a household income of $155,000 to $190,000 per year.

Down PaymentMortgage AmountIncome NeededMonthly Payment*
Minimum ($55,000)$745,000 + CMHC~$182,000~$4,725
10% ($80,000)$720,000 + CMHC~$175,000~$4,575
20% ($160,000)$640,000~$155,000~$4,000

Note: Minimum down on $800K = 5% of first $500K ($25K) + 10% of next $300K ($30K) = $55,000

Monthly housing costs breakdown

ExpenseMin Down20% Down
Mortgage payment$4,725$4,000
Property tax$665$665
Heating$200$200
Total$5,590$4,865

Where does $800,000 buy a home?

CityMedian Home$800K Buys…
Edmonton~$400,000Luxury home
Calgary~$550,000Very nice detached
Ottawa~$650,000Good detached
Hamilton~$750,000Average detached
Toronto~$1,100,000Townhouse / large condo
Vancouver~$1,200,000Condo or East Van townhouse

Who buys an $800,000 home?

At $800,000, the buyer profile shifts toward established dual-income households earning $155,000–$190,000 combined — think two professionals in their mid-thirties to forties. In Hamilton and Ottawa this is roughly the average detached-home price, so these buyers are families prioritizing good school districts and space. In Calgary and Edmonton, $800,000 buys a premium property with upgrades like a finished basement or double garage. In the GTA and Lower Mainland, buyers at this price are typically choosing between a freehold townhouse and a very well-located condo. Many purchasers at this level are selling a first home and rolling $150,000–$250,000 in equity into their next down payment.

Strategies for the $800K price range

Minimum down at this price is $55,000, but you should seriously consider saving to 20% ($160,000) since it eliminates mortgage insurance and drops the income requirement by roughly $27,000. If you are a move-up buyer, bridging financing or a flexible closing date that lets you sell first and apply the proceeds can make the 20% target realistic. Rate negotiation is critical at this mortgage size: on a $640,000 mortgage, a 0.15% rate difference saves about $1,600 per year, so compare offers from at least three lenders or work with a mortgage broker. If the property has a legal secondary suite, ask your lender about counting projected rental income — CMHC guidelines allow 50–80% of suite revenue to be added to your qualifying income.

How to reach the income threshold

If you are earning in the $140,000–$155,000 range, closing the gap without a pay raise is still possible. First, clear non-housing debts: eliminating $500/month in car or line-of-credit payments frees up about $13,600 in qualifying income. Second, increase your down payment to 20% so you qualify on an uninsured basis, which has slightly different ratio targets and eliminates the CMHC premium from your amortization. Third, if one partner is currently working part-time, adding even 10 hours per week during the qualification period can generate the extra $10,000–$15,000 of provable income that tips the ratios in your favour.


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