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What Is a Duplex in Canada? Investing, Zoning & Financing (2026)

Updated

Duplexes are one of the best entry points into Canadian real estate investing — live in one unit, rent the other, and let your tenant help pay your mortgage.

Types of duplexes

TypeDescriptionCommon In
Side-by-sideTwo units share a centre wall; each has its own entranceOntario, Prairies
Stacked (up/down)One unit on top of the other; separate entrancesMontreal, older urban areas
Converted houseSingle-family home converted into two unitsEverywhere (with proper permits)
Purpose-built duplexDesigned and built as two units from the startNew construction
Semi-detached (sometimes called)Two separate addresses sharing a wall — technically two separate propertiesOntario

Note: A true duplex is one property with two units. A semi-detached is two separate properties that share a wall.

Duplex investing: the numbers

House hacking example (owner-occupied)

ItemAmount
Purchase price$650,000
Down payment (5%)$32,500
CMHC insurance~$24,700
Total mortgage~$642,200
Monthly mortgage (5.5%, 25yr)~$3,940
Property tax$400/month
Insurance$200/month
Maintenance reserve$300/month
Total monthly cost$4,840
Rental income (other unit)$2,200/month
Your net housing cost$2,640/month

The rental income covers ~45% of your total housing cost.

Pure investment example (non-owner-occupied)

ItemAmount
Purchase price$650,000
Down payment (20%)$130,000
Mortgage$520,000
Monthly mortgage (5.75%, 25yr)~$3,270
Property tax$400/month
Insurance$200/month
Maintenance$300/month
Management (10%)$440/month
Total monthly cost$4,610
Rental income (both units)$4,400/month ($2,200 × 2)
Monthly cash flow−$210 (slightly negative)

Even at a slight negative cash flow, the equity buildup (~$1,200/month in principal payoff) and appreciation make it a wealth-building investment.

Financing a duplex

ScenarioDown PaymentCMHC InsuranceRateRental Income for Qualification
Owner-occupied (live in one unit)5% minimum✅ AvailableStandard residential50%–80% of other unit’s rent
Non-owner-occupied (investment)20% minimum❌ Not available+0.10%–0.25% premium50%–80% of both units’ rent
Duplex over $1,000,00020% minimum❌ Not availableStandard + possible premium50%–80% of gross rent

How lenders use rental income

Lender ApproachCalculation
Rental offset (most common)50%–80% of gross rent reduces your housing costs in GDS/TDS
Add-back methodAdd 50% of rent to your income
Net rental incomeGross rent minus 50% vacancy/expenses = net; added to income

Zoning and legality

FactorWhat to Check
ZoningIs the property zoned for two units (R2 or equivalent)?
Building permitsWas the second unit built with proper permits?
Fire separationAdequate fire-rated separation between units (1-hour minimum)
Separate entrancesEach unit must have its own entrance
Separate servicesIdeally separate electrical panels, water heaters, HVAC
ParkingMany municipalities require 1+ parking spaces per unit
Non-conformingA duplex may be legal but non-conforming (existed before current zoning) — still legal but restrictions on changes
Illegal suiteIf converted without permits, the second unit may be considered illegal — insurance and liability issues

Provincial secondary suite legislation

ProvinceStatus
OntarioMost municipalities now allow secondary suites as-of-right (provincial legislation)
BCSecondary suites and laneway homes broadly permitted in many municipalities
AlbertaVaries by municipality — Edmonton and Calgary have expanded permissions
QuebecDuplexes are very common — zoning generally permissive in urban areas
ManitobaVaries — Winnipeg has expanded secondary suite allowances
AtlanticIncreasingly permissive as provinces address housing supply

Converting a house to a duplex

Steps

StepDetailsCost
1. Confirm zoningCheck with your municipality — is a second unit permitted?Free
2. Hire an architect / designerCreate plans that meet building code$2,000–$8,000
3. Apply for permitsBuilding permit, plumbing, electrical$500–$3,000
4. Fire separationInstall fire-rated drywall/doors between units$3,000–$10,000
5. Second kitchenFull kitchen in the new unit$10,000–$30,000
6. Second bathroomIf not already existing$8,000–$20,000
7. Separate entranceExternal door if not existing$3,000–$10,000
8. ElectricalSeparate panel for each unit (or sub-metering)$3,000–$8,000
9. Egress / safetyEgress windows, smoke alarms, CO detectors$1,000–$5,000
10. InspectionsMunicipal inspections at various stagesIncluded in permits
Total estimate$30,000–$100,000+

Pros and cons of duplex investing

ProsCons
✅ Rental income offsets mortgage❌ Tenant management responsibilities
✅ 5% down if owner-occupied❌ Shared property — less privacy than detached
✅ Two income streams (lower vacancy risk)❌ Maintenance costs for two units
✅ Build equity while someone else helps pay❌ Proximity to tenants (if house hacking)
✅ Strong demand in most markets❌ Zoning restrictions in some areas
✅ Appreciation + cash flow❌ Insurance is more complex/expensive than single-family
✅ Stepping stone to larger multi-unit❌ Potential for problem tenants

Duplex prices by market

CityAvg. Duplex PriceTypical Rent (per unit)Potential Gross Yield
Toronto (GTA)$800,000–$1,200,000$2,000–$2,8004%–5.5%
Montreal$500,000–$800,000$1,200–$1,8004.5%–5.5%
Ottawa$550,000–$750,000$1,600–$2,2005%–6%
Calgary$400,000–$600,000$1,400–$2,0005.5%–7%
Edmonton$350,000–$500,000$1,200–$1,8005.5%–7%
Winnipeg$300,000–$450,000$1,000–$1,5005.5%–7%
Halifax$400,000–$600,000$1,400–$1,8005%–6.5%

Duplex due diligence checklist

  • Confirmed zoning permits two legal units
  • Verified building permits for both units (if converted)
  • Reviewed current leases and rental history
  • Confirmed fire separation meets building code
  • Checked separate entrances, kitchens, and bathrooms
  • Reviewed utility setup (separate meters or shared?)
  • Assessed structural condition (roof, foundation, systems)
  • Confirmed adequate parking
  • Reviewed property tax classification (residential vs multi-res)
  • Obtained insurance quote for a duplex (landlord or owner-occupied)
  • Calculated cash flow with realistic vacancy (5%) and maintenance (10%) assumptions
  • Reviewed local rent control rules (Ontario, BC, PEI, Manitoba)
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