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Shared Equity Mortgages in Canada: How Equity Sharing Programs Work (2026)

Updated

Shared equity mortgages offer a path to homeownership by reducing the amount you need to borrow — but at the cost of sharing your future home equity with a partner. Here is how these programs work in Canada, what options are currently available, and whether they make financial sense.

How shared equity works

In a shared equity arrangement, a partner (government or private) contributes funds toward your home purchase. In return, they receive a share of the home’s future value.

Example: $500,000 home purchase

ComponentWithout Shared EquityWith 10% Shared Equity
Purchase price$500,000$500,000
Your down payment$25,000 (5%)$25,000 (5%)
Shared equity contribution$50,000 (10%)
Your mortgage$475,000$425,000
CMHC insurance$19,000 (4.00%)$10,625 (2.50%)
Monthly payment (5%, 25 yrs)$2,782$2,489
Monthly savings$293

You save $293/month — but the equity partner owns a share of your home’s future value.

What you owe at sale

Home Sells ForAppreciationEquity Partner Gets (10% share)Your Gain
$550,000+$50,000$55,000 (original $50K + $5K share of gain)$45,000
$600,000+$100,000$60,000$90,000
$700,000+$200,000$70,000$180,000
$450,000−$50,000$45,000 (shares the loss)Loss of $30,000

As the home appreciates, you give up a growing dollar amount to the equity partner, even though their contribution was fixed at $50,000.

Programs available in Canada (2026)

Federal programs

ProgramStatusDetails
First-Time Home Buyer Incentive (FTHBI)Discontinued (March 2024)Offered 5% (resale) or 10% (new build) shared equity. Repayment after 25 years or at sale. Low uptake due to price caps ($500K–$600K in select markets)

Provincial and municipal programs

ProgramProvinceHow It Works
Attainable Homes CalgaryAlbertaBelow-market homes with shared equity. Repay equity share at sale
Trillium HousingOntarioAffordable housing shared equity partnerships — limited availability
BC Housing programsBritish ColumbiaVarious equity-share programs through BC Housing partnerships
CMHC Seed FundingNationalProvides seed funding for affordable housing development — not direct to buyers

Program availability changes frequently. Check with your provincial housing authority for current options.

Private shared equity companies

CompanyModelTypical Terms
OurboroCo-invests in your home alongside your down paymentContributes up to 15% of purchase price. Takes a share of appreciation. Buyout within 5 years
Key (formerly Arrive Home)Down payment assistance for shared equity stakeProvides up to $100,000 toward down payment. Share of appreciation at sale or buyout
Other private programsVariesTerms differ widely — equity share, minimum terms, buyout conditions

Caution: Private shared equity agreements are complex financial contracts. Have a real estate lawyer review any agreement before signing.

The math: shared equity vs larger mortgage

The key question is whether the equity you give up costs more or less than the additional mortgage interest you would have paid otherwise.

Scenario: $500,000 home, 5% annual appreciation, 10-year hold

PathMonthly CostEquity at Sale (10 yrs)Total Interest/Cost PaidNet Equity
Standard mortgage ($475K)$2,782$814,447 − $357,844 balance = $456,603$176,987 interest$456,603
Shared equity ($425K + $50K partner)$2,489$814,447 − $320,175 balance − $81,445 equity share = $412,827$158,316 interest + $81,445 equity share$412,827

The shared equity path saves you $18,671 in interest over 10 years but costs you $81,445 in equity sharing — a net cost of $62,774. In a rising market, shared equity is almost always more expensive than simply borrowing more.

When shared equity wins

Shared equity is financially advantageous only when:

  • Home prices are flat or declining — the equity partner shares the loss
  • You literally cannot qualify for a larger mortgage — shared equity is the only way into the market
  • The equity share percentage is small relative to appreciation — uncommon in major Canadian markets

Pros and cons

ProsCons
Lower monthly paymentsGive up a share of future appreciation
Smaller mortgage — less interestIn a rising market, equity share cost exceeds interest savings
Lower CMHC insurance premiumComplex agreements with buyout timelines
Downside protection — partner shares lossesMay restrict renovations or how you use the property
Can bridge the affordability gapLimited program availability in Canada
No monthly payments on the equity contributionMust repay equity partner at sale or after set period

Key terms to understand in any shared equity agreement

Before signing any shared equity agreement, ensure you understand:

TermWhat to Check
Equity share percentageIs it proportional to their contribution, or do they take a larger share?
Appreciation calculationBased on appraised value or sale price? Who pays for the appraisal?
Maximum termWhen must you repay? 10 years? 25 years? At sale only?
Buyout optionCan you buy out the equity partner early? At what price?
Renovation approvalDo you need the equity partner’s permission for renovations?
RefinancingCan you refinance your mortgage without triggering the equity repayment?
Occupancy requirementsMust you live in the home? Can you rent it?
Depreciation sharingDoes the equity partner share losses, or is there a minimum repayment floor?
Transfer/sale restrictionsAny restrictions on who you can sell to or when?

Alternatives to shared equity

AlternativeHow It HelpsTrade-Off
Gifted down paymentFamily gift increases down payment — no equity sharingRequires family with available funds
Co-ownershipBuy with friend/family to pool resourcesJoint liability, exit complexity
FHSA + HBPUse FHSA ($40K) + RRSP HBP ($60K) for larger down paymentRequires saving time
Insured mortgage (5% down)Buy with minimum down and CMHC insuranceHigher monthly payments, insurance premium
Rent and saveWait and save for a larger down paymentRisk of prices rising further while saving
Secondary suite incomeBuy with a rental suite to offset costsMust qualify with property type, manage tenants

The bottom line

Shared equity mortgages reduce your monthly payments and can make homeownership accessible when you cannot qualify on your own. But in a market where Canadian home prices have historically appreciated 3%–7% annually, the equity share you give up almost always costs more than the mortgage interest you save. Only consider shared equity if you truly cannot buy without it — and always run the numbers with different appreciation scenarios before signing.

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