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Is It Worth Buying a Condo in Canada 2026?

Updated

True Cost of Owning a Condo

$500,000 Condo in Ontario (5% Down, 5.5% Rate, 25-Year Amortization)

Monthly CostAmount
Mortgage payment$2,885
Condo fees$550
Property tax$350
Home insurance (contents)$50
CMHC insurance (in mortgage)Included
Total monthly cost$3,835

One-Time Costs

CostAmount
Down payment (5%)$25,000
CMHC insurance (4% of mortgage)$19,000 (added to mortgage)
Land transfer tax (Ontario)$6,475 (minus $4,000 first-time rebate = $2,475)
Legal fees$1,500-$2,500
Home inspection$400-$600
Status certificate review$100-$300
Moving costs$500-$2,000
Total upfront (beyond down payment)$5,000-$8,000

Rent vs Buy Comparison

$500,000 Condo vs Renting Equivalent Unit

Monthly ItemBuy (Owner)Rent
Mortgage / Rent$2,885$2,200
Condo fees$550$0 (included in rent)
Property tax$350$0
Insurance$50$30 (renter’s insurance)
Maintenance/repairs$100$0
Total monthly$3,935$2,230
Monthly difference$1,705 cheaper to rent

But What About Equity?

FactorBuyRent + Invest
Monthly equity (principal payoff)~$700/month (year 1 at 5.5%)$0
Monthly savings to invest$0$1,705/month
Down payment invested insteadIn house$25,000 + $1,705/mo at 7%
After 5 years — equity built~$55,000~$152,000 portfolio
After 10 years — equity built~$130,000~$368,000 portfolio
After 25 yearsMortgage paid off ($500K asset)~$1.4M portfolio

This analysis assumes flat rents and property values, which is unrealistic. In reality, both rents and condo values change. But it shows that renting + investing the difference can be very competitive.

When Buying Wins

ScenarioWhy Buying Wins
Stay 10+ yearsMortgage paydown builds substantial equity
Property appreciates 3%+/yearGains on leverage are amplified
Rent increases significantlyLocked-in mortgage payment doesn’t change
Interest rates dropCan refinance to lower payment
Condo fees stay stableWell-managed building keeps costs low

When Renting Wins

ScenarioWhy Renting Wins
Stay under 5 yearsTransaction costs eat into any gains
Property appreciates slowly/0%No equity growth beyond principal payoff
Condo fees spikeSpecial assessments or mismanagement
Interest rates are high (6%+)Most of your payment goes to interest
You invest the savings disciplinedNeed to actually invest, not spend the difference

Condo Fees Explained

ComponentTypical % of Fees
Building insurance15-20%
Common area maintenance20-25%
Utilities (water, common electricity)15-20%
Reserve fund contribution10-15%
Management company10-15%
Amenities (gym, pool, concierge)5-10%
Landscaping/snow removal5-10%

Average Condo Fees by City

CityAverage Monthly Condo Fee
Toronto$500-$800 (new builds) $600-$1,200 (older)
Vancouver$350-$600 (new) $500-$1,000 (older)
Montreal$200-$400
Calgary$300-$600
Edmonton$300-$500
Ottawa$400-$700
Winnipeg$300-$500
Halifax$300-$500

Red Flags in Condo Fees

Red FlagWhat It Means
Reserve fund under 25% of replacement costMay need special assessment
Special assessments in recent yearsBuilding may have ongoing issues
Fees increasing 5%+ per yearBudget pressure, costs rising
Pending lawsuitsPotential liability for owners
Deferred maintenanceMajor repairs coming
Very low fees (below average)Potentially underfunding reserve

Buy vs Rent by Canadian City

CityAvg Condo PriceAvg Comparable RentVerdict
Toronto$600,000-$700,000$2,200-$2,800Renting often better (short-medium term)
Vancouver$650,000-$750,000$2,300-$2,900Renting often better
Montreal$350,000-$450,000$1,400-$1,800Closer to breakeven
Calgary$250,000-$350,000$1,400-$1,800Buying can be better
Edmonton$200,000-$280,000$1,200-$1,500Buying often better
Ottawa$350,000-$450,000$1,600-$2,000Close to breakeven
Winnipeg$180,000-$250,000$1,100-$1,400Buying usually better
Halifax$300,000-$400,000$1,500-$1,900Close to breakeven

Condo Buying Checklist

ItemWhy It Matters
☐ Status certificate reviewed by lawyerFinancial health, lawsuits, rules
☐ Reserve fund study currentAdequate funding prevents special assessments
☐ Condo fee history (5+ years)Check for abnormal increases
☐ Special assessment historyHave there been any? How large?
☐ Building age and conditionOlder = higher fees, more maintenance
☐ Property management companyReputation matters
☐ Rental/Airbnb rulesAffects re-sale value and flexibility
☐ Parking and locker availabilityCosts $30,000-$80,000+ to buy separately
☐ Floor plan efficiencyAvoid poorly designed layouts
☐ Noise (proximity to elevator, garbage chute)Hard to fix after purchase
☐ Insurance (building + personal contents)Understand what’s covered
☐ Get pre-approved for mortgageKnow your budget before shopping

New Build vs Resale Condo

FactorNew Build (Pre-Construction)Resale
PriceOften higher per sq ftNegotiable
Condo feesLower (initially)Established (may be higher)
WarrantyTarion (Ontario) 7-year structuralNone
Move-in timeline2-5 years30-90 days
Developer riskDelays, spec changesWhat you see is what you get
Status certificateNot availableAvailable (review it!)
CustomizationSometimes (finishes, upgrades)No
HSTIncluded in pre-con price (rebate portion)No HST on resale
Investment riskHigher (market may shift before completion)Lower