Freehold vs Leasehold vs Condo: Canadian Ownership Types Explained (2026)
Updated
Understanding the type of ownership you are buying is one of the most fundamental aspects of real estate in Canada. Each ownership type carries different rights, costs, and long-term implications.
Available only if lease meets specific criteria (registered, long-term)
Private lenders
Will finance but at higher rates
Musqueam leasehold example (Vancouver)
Musqueam leasehold properties in Vancouver have been a high-profile example of leasehold risk:
Homes originally sold at significant discounts to freehold comparable properties
When leases came up for renewal, ground rent increased dramatically (in some cases from a few hundred dollars per year to $30,000+ per year)
Property values dropped sharply
Owners who bought near the end of a lease term faced severe losses
This example illustrates why lease terms and renewal conditions must be carefully analyzed before purchasing any leasehold property.
Condominium ownership
How condo ownership works
When you buy a condo, you own:
Your unit — the interior space as defined in the declaration
A share of common elements — hallways, elevators, parking, amenities, building structure
The condo corporation (elected board of unit owners) manages:
Building maintenance and repairs
Insurance for common areas and the building structure
Reserve fund for major future expenses
Enforcement of condo bylaws and rules
Condo fees breakdown
Category
Portion of Fees
What It Covers
Building operations
30%–40%
Common area maintenance, cleaning, security, management company
Utilities
15%–25%
Heat, water (if included), common area electricity
Reserve fund contribution
15%–25%
Future major repairs (roof, elevator, parking, facade)
Insurance
10%–15%
Building insurance (not your contents — you need your own)
Amenities
5%–15%
Pool, gym, concierge, party room
Condo fees by property type
Property Type
Typical Monthly Fees
Low-rise townhouse condo
$200–$400
Low-rise apartment (no amenities)
$300–$500
Mid-rise with basic amenities
$400–$700
High-rise with full amenities
$600–$1,000+
Luxury high-rise
$1,000–$2,000+
Special assessments
If the reserve fund is insufficient for a major repair, the condo corporation can levy a special assessment — a one-time charge to all unit owners. Special assessments can range from $2,000 to $50,000+ per unit.
Warning signs of potential special assessments:
Reserve fund study shows underfunding
Building is 15+ years old with no major upgrades completed
Status certificate reveals pending major repairs with insufficient reserves
Status certificate: your protection
Before buying a condo, your lawyer should review the status certificate, which includes:
Document
What It Reveals
Declaration and bylaws
Rules, restrictions, pet policies, rental restrictions
Reserve fund study
Is the fund adequately funded for upcoming major expenses?
Financial statements
Is the corporation financially healthy?
Insurance certificate
What does building insurance cover?
Outstanding litigation
Is the corporation suing or being sued?
Special assessments
Any pending or recent special assessments
Arrears
How many units are behind on fee payments?
Co-operative housing (co-op)
A fourth ownership type that is often overlooked:
Feature
Co-op
What you own
Shares in the co-op corporation (not real property)