House Hacking in Canada
House hacking is buying a multi-unit property — duplex, triplex, or fourplex — as your primary residence, living in one unit, and renting out the rest. The rental income reduces or eliminates your housing cost. In Canada, this strategy works with CMHC-insured financing, allowing qualified buyers to get started with as little as 5–10% down.
What is House Hacking?
| Scenario | Property Type | Your Unit | Rental Units | Concept |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Basic house hack | Duplex | 1 unit | 1 unit | 50/50 split, one tenant |
| Standard house hack | Triplex | 1 unit | 2 units | Two tenants offset mortgage |
| Full house hack | Fourplex | 1 unit | 3 units | Maximum rent offset, still CMHC eligible |
| Large multi-family | 5+ units | — | 5+ units | Commercial financing, no longer owner-occupied rules |
A property with 5 or more units requires commercial financing and cannot use CMHC residential insurance. The sweet spot for house hacking is 2–4 units.
CMHC Insured Financing Rules
| Property Type | Minimum Down Payment | Max Purchase Price | Owner Occupancy Requirement |
|---|---|---|---|
| Duplex (2 units) | 5% | $1.5M | Must live in one unit |
| Triplex (3 units) | 10% | $1.5M | Must live in one unit |
| Fourplex (4 units) | 10% | $1.5M | Must live in one unit |
| 5+ units | 20%+ (commercial) | No cap | Not required |
Note: The $1.5M purchase price cap for CMHC insured mortgages applies as of 2024. Properties above this cap require a conventional mortgage with 20% down and cannot use CMHC insurance.
How Lenders Count Rental Income
| Lender Approach | Rental Income Included | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Conservative (most big banks) | 50% of market rent | Applied to existing or projected rents |
| Add-back method | 80% of actual rent | Some lenders use lease agreements |
| Rental offset method | Subtract rental income from carrying costs | Net cost used in GDS/TDS ratios |
Most lenders require either a signed lease agreement or a market rent appraisal from an appraiser to count rental income in mortgage qualification.
Numbers Example: Toronto-Area Duplex
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Purchase price | $850,000 |
| Down payment (5%) | $42,500 |
| CMHC insurance premium (4.00%) | $32,300 |
| Total mortgage | $839,800 |
| Mortgage payment (5.24%, 25 yr) | ~$5,100/month |
| Market rent for unit 2 | $2,400/month |
| Your effective housing cost | ~$2,700/month |
| Comparable rent for same unit | ~$2,800–$3,200/month |
In this example, you are essentially living in a similar-sized unit at a market rent or below, while building equity across the entire property and having a tenant pay down your mortgage principal.
Numbers Example: Hamilton Triplex
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Purchase price | $650,000 |
| Down payment (10%) | $65,000 |
| CMHC insurance premium (3.10%) | $18,135 |
| Total mortgage | $603,135 |
| Mortgage payment (5.24%, 25 yr) | ~$3,660/month |
| Market rent: 2 units × $1,500 | $3,000/month |
| Your effective housing cost | ~$660/month |
| Property tax + insurance (~$600/month) | Splits to ~$200/unit |
| True all-in cost for your unit | ~$860/month |
A Hamilton triplex illustrates how house hacking in a secondary market approaches cash-flow neutral housing — paying under $900/month to live in a property you own, while tenants build your equity.
Tax Implications
| Situation | Tax Treatment |
|---|---|
| Rental income | Taxable; deduct mortgage interest, maintenance, insurance, property tax pro-rated to rented units |
| Capital gains on sale | Principal residence exemption on your unit’s share; capital gains on rented portion |
| CCA (depreciation) | Allowed on rented units; but recaptured on sale — use cautiously |
| GST/HST | Not applicable to residential rent income |
| Short-term rental income | Fully taxable; may trigger GST/HST registration above $30,000/year in annual revenue |
Owner-Occupied Exemption for Short-Term Rentals
CRA allows short-term rentals (Airbnb) in an owner-occupied unit without losing the principal residence exemption — provided the overall character of the home remains residential and you have not made structural changes to convert it to a commercial use. Renting out the non-owner units short-term (Airbnb) is a separate issue and may violate municipal bylaws. Most major Canadian municipalities restrict short-term rentals to the owner’s principal unit only.
Pros and Cons
| Factor | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|
| Entry cost | Low down payment (5–10%), CMHC eligible | Still large absolute dollar amounts in major cities |
| Cash flow | Tenants reduce or cover your housing cost | Negative cash flow possible in Toronto/Vancouver |
| Wealth building | Equity grows across full property | Concentrated in one illiquid asset |
| Lifestyle | Own your home with reduced carrying cost | You live next to your tenant — privacy trade-off |
| Financing | Residential rates apply (not commercial) | Must occupy; cannot rent all units |
| Scalability | First step toward larger portfolio | Must eventually move out to scale up |
Getting Started With No Experience
| Step | Action |
|---|---|
| 1 | Get pre-approved — ask specifically about multi-unit owner-occupied mortgages |
| 2 | Research zoning — search for legal duplex/triplex in target municipalities |
| 3 | Inspect carefully — multi-unit properties have more systems (HVAC, electrical, plumbing) |
| 4 | Review local rental market — vacancy, demand, achievable rents before you buy |
| 5 | Understand landlord-tenant law — each province has tenant protections; read the RTA |
| 6 | Structure finances — keep rental income/expenses in a separate account from day one |
| 7 | Set reserves — budget 1% of property value/year for maintenance, 5% for vacancy |
Bottom Line
House hacking is the most accessible entry point into Canadian real estate investing. With as little as 5% down on a duplex and CMHC-insured financing, you can buy a multi-unit property, live in one unit, and have your tenants offset — sometimes nearly eliminate — your housing cost. The strategy works best in secondary markets where purchase prices and rents create a favourable ratio. In high-cost cities like Toronto or Vancouver, house hacking still reduces housing cost below equivalent renting but rarely creates cash-flow neutral housing without a larger down payment.