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House Hacking in Canada: The Complete Guide for 2026

Updated

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.