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Am I Ready to Buy a House in Canada?

Updated

Being ready to buy a house is about more than qualifying for a mortgage. Plenty of Canadians can technically get approved and still are not financially ready for the pressure of ownership. The real question is whether buying strengthens your finances or makes them fragile.

Quick home-buying readiness checklist

Question Ready Not Ready Yet
Down payment saved Yes Still borrowing or scrambling
Closing costs saved Yes No separate buffer
Emergency fund 3 to 6 months Almost nothing left after closing
Credit and debt Stable, manageable High balances or missed payments
Income Predictable and stable Variable or uncertain

If multiple items fall into the “not ready yet” column, you may be forcing the timeline.

Money you need before buying

At minimum, budget for three buckets of cash:

Cash Need Why It Matters
Down payment Required to qualify
Closing costs Legal fees, land transfer tax, inspection, moving
Emergency reserve Repairs, job changes, rate shocks

Many buyers focus only on the down payment and ignore the other two.

A realistic savings target

Home Price Minimum Down Payment Closing Costs Buffer
$500,000 $25,000 $7,500 to $20,000
$650,000 $40,000 $10,000 to $25,000
$800,000 $55,000 $12,000 to $30,000

The right target depends on province, land transfer tax, and whether you are buying a condo or freehold home.

Debt and income matter just as much as savings

You may not be ready if your monthly obligations are already too high.

Issue Why It Hurts
Credit card debt High payments reduce qualification
Car loan Raises debt-service ratios
Student loan Can still affect affordability
Variable income Lenders may discount it or require history

Use the mortgage affordability calculator and debt service ratio calculator.

Signs you probably are ready

You are more likely ready if:

  • you can cover the down payment, closing costs, and still keep savings
  • you have stable employment or reliable self-employment income
  • your housing costs will fit comfortably within your budget
  • you plan to stay in the home for several years
  • you understand repair, maintenance, and insurance costs

Signs you may not be ready yet

You may want to wait if:

  • buying would wipe out all cash reserves
  • you are stretching to the absolute maximum approval amount
  • you expect to move cities soon
  • your relationship or job situation is unstable
  • you are buying mainly because of fear of missing out

Buying vs renting: timing still matters

Home ownership is not automatically the better move if the timing is bad.

Situation Better Move May Be
Stable city, strong savings, long timeline Buying
Uncertain location or career Renting
Thin savings and major debt Waiting and saving

Bottom line

You are probably ready to buy a house if you have more than just the minimum down payment: you also have closing costs, emergency savings, stable income, and manageable debt. If buying would leave you cash-poor and stressed from day one, you likely need more time.

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