How much house can I afford on $200,000 a year?
On a $200,000 household income with no significant debts, you can typically afford a home in the $800,000 to $1,000,000 range — enough to enter Toronto’s condo market or buy a detached home in most other Canadian cities.
| Scenario | Home Price | Down Payment | Mortgage Amount | Monthly Payment* |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Minimum down | $850,000 | $60,000 | $790,000 + CMHC | ~$4,975 |
| 15% down | $925,000 | $138,750 | $786,250 + CMHC | ~$4,950 |
| 20% down | $1,000,000 | $200,000 | $800,000 | ~$5,000 |
*Estimated at 5% interest rate, 25-year amortization.
Note: For homes over $1 million, you must put at least 20% down. CMHC insurance is not available.
How lenders calculate your affordability
On a $200,000 household income:
| Your Income | Calculation |
|---|---|
| Monthly gross income | $16,667 |
| Maximum housing costs (39% GDS) | $6,500/month |
| Maximum total debt (44% TDS) | $7,333/month |
How existing debt affects affordability at $200K
At higher incomes, debt ratios matter even more because lenders cap the TDS at 44% regardless of income. A $200K earner with significant debt can qualify for significantly less than expected:
| Monthly Non-Housing Debt | Max Home Price |
|---|---|
| $0 | ~$1,000,000 |
| $500 (car loan) | ~$900,000 |
| $1,000 (car + line of credit) | ~$800,000 |
| $1,500 (car + student loan + credit card) | ~$700,000 |
At $200K income, every $500/month of non-housing debt reduces your maximum purchase price by roughly $90,000–$100,000.
The $1 million threshold
Homes priced at $1 million or more have different rules:
| Under $1M | $1M and Over |
|---|---|
| 5–19.99% down OK | 20% minimum |
| CMHC insurance available | No CMHC insurance |
| Insured mortgage rates | Uninsured rates (slightly higher) |
To buy a $1 million home, you need at least $200,000 down payment regardless of your income.
Where can you buy on a $200K income?
| City | Median Home Price | Affordable on $200K? |
|---|---|---|
| Calgary | ~$550,000 | Easily |
| Edmonton | ~$400,000 | Easily |
| Ottawa | ~$650,000 | Easily |
| Montréal | ~$525,000 | Easily |
| Halifax | ~$500,000 | Easily |
| Hamilton | ~$750,000 | Yes |
| Toronto (condo) | ~$700,000 | Yes |
| Toronto (townhouse) | ~$900,000 | Yes |
| Toronto (detached) | ~$1,400,000 | No |
| Vancouver (condo) | ~$750,000 | Yes |
| Vancouver (townhouse) | ~$1,100,000 | Stretch |
| Vancouver (detached) | ~$1,800,000 | No |
Sample budget: $200K income buying a $950,000 home
| Category | Monthly |
|---|---|
| Gross income | $16,667 |
| Net income (after tax, Ontario) | ~$11,500 |
| Mortgage payment (20% down) | $4,725 |
| Property tax | $700 |
| Utilities | $400 |
| Total housing | $5,825 |
| Remaining | $5,675 |
Housing at 51% of net income is tight but standard for high-cost markets.
First-time buyer programs at $200K income
A common question at this income level: “Am I too high-income for first-time buyer programs?” The answer is no for most programs:
- FHSA — No income limit. Both partners can contribute $8,000/year each; a couple can access $150,000 tax-free through FHSA + HBP combined
- RRSP Home Buyers’ Plan — No income cap. $35,000 per person (tax-free withdrawal; must repay over 15 years)
- Land transfer tax first-time buyer rebates — Ontario rebate up to $4,000; Toronto adds another $4,475; BC up to $8,000. No income limit in most provinces
- 30-year amortization for first-time buyers of new builds — Available regardless of income on insured mortgages
Stretching to $1.2M+ on $200K income
Some buyers stretch beyond the standard ratios using:
- Larger down payment — 30–35% down reduces mortgage and payments
- Gifted funds — Family help for down payment
- Variable rate — Lower initial rate (but more risk)
- Co-ownership — Buying with family members
However, stretching increases financial risk. Consider whether the extra house is worth reduced flexibility.