How much house can I afford on $70,000 a year?
On a $70,000 salary with no significant debts, you can typically afford a home in the $280,000 to $350,000 range in Canada. The exact amount depends on your down payment, other debts, credit score, and current mortgage rates.
| Scenario | Home Price | Down Payment | Mortgage Amount | Monthly Payment* |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Minimum down (5%) | $295,000 | $14,750 | $280,250 + CMHC | ~$1,750 |
| 10% down | $315,000 | $31,500 | $283,500 + CMHC | ~$1,775 |
| 20% down | $345,000 | $69,000 | $276,000 | ~$1,725 |
*Estimated monthly payment at 5% interest rate, 25-year amortization. Does not include property tax or insurance.
How Canadian lenders calculate affordability
Canadian mortgage lenders use two key ratios to determine how much you can borrow:
Gross Debt Service (GDS) ratio — max 39%
Your housing costs cannot exceed 39% of your gross monthly income.
| Your $70K salary | Calculation |
|---|---|
| Monthly gross income | $5,833 |
| Maximum housing costs (39%) | $2,275/month |
Housing costs include:
- Mortgage payment (principal + interest)
- Property taxes
- Heating costs
- 50% of condo fees (if applicable)
Total Debt Service (TDS) ratio — max 44%
Your total debt payments (housing + all other debts) cannot exceed 44% of gross income.
| Your $70K salary | Calculation |
|---|---|
| Monthly gross income | $5,833 |
| Maximum total debt payments (44%) | $2,567/month |
If you have a $400/month car payment, that reduces your available housing budget by $400.
The stress test: Why you qualify for less than you expect
Canadian lenders must qualify you at the stress test rate — the higher of your contract rate + 2%, or 5.25%. This ensures you can handle rate increases.
| Actual mortgage rate | Stress test rate |
|---|---|
| 4.5% | 6.5% |
| 5.0% | 7.0% |
| 5.5% | 7.5% |
At a 5% contract rate (7% stress test), a $70,000 income qualifies for roughly $265,000–$280,000 in mortgage principal — even though your actual payments would be based on the lower contract rate.
Sample budget: $70K salary buying a $300,000 home
| Category | Monthly | Annual |
|---|---|---|
| Gross income | $5,833 | $70,000 |
| Net income (after tax, Ontario) | ~$4,450 | ~$53,400 |
| Mortgage payment (5%, 25yr, $285K) | $1,660 | $19,920 |
| Property tax | $300 | $3,600 |
| Home insurance | $100 | $1,200 |
| Utilities (heat, hydro, water) | $250 | $3,000 |
| Total housing costs | $2,310 | $27,720 |
| Remaining for other expenses | $2,140 | $25,680 |
Housing costs would represent about 52% of your net income — manageable but tight. The 30% rule of thumb would suggest keeping housing to ~$1,335/month, which is difficult in most Canadian cities at this income level.
Down payment impact on a $70K salary
Your down payment significantly affects what you can afford:
| Down Payment | Amount on $300K home | CMHC Insurance | Total Mortgage |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5% | $15,000 | ~$11,400 (4%) | $296,400 |
| 10% | $30,000 | ~$8,370 (3.1%) | $278,370 |
| 20% | $60,000 | $0 | $240,000 |
With less than 20% down, you must pay CMHC mortgage insurance, which protects the lender (not you) and adds to your mortgage balance.
Impact of existing debt
Debt reduces how much mortgage you qualify for:
| Monthly Debt Payment | Mortgage Reduction | Home Price Impact |
|---|---|---|
| $300 car payment | ~$45,000 less | ~$47,000 less |
| $500 car payment | ~$75,000 less | ~$79,000 less |
| $400 student loan | ~$60,000 less | ~$63,000 less |
If you have significant debt, consider paying it down before buying to maximize your purchasing power.
Where can you buy on a $70K salary?
A $70,000 salary limits your options in expensive markets but opens doors in many Canadian cities:
| City | Median Home Price | Affordable on $70K? |
|---|---|---|
| Toronto | ~$1,100,000 | No (condo only with help) |
| Vancouver | ~$1,200,000 | No |
| Calgary | ~$550,000 | Stretch / condo |
| Edmonton | ~$400,000 | Possible |
| Ottawa | ~$650,000 | Condo only |
| Montréal | ~$525,000 | Condo / small home |
| Winnipeg | ~$350,000 | Yes |
| Halifax | ~$500,000 | Condo / stretch |
| Saskatoon | ~$375,000 | Yes |
| Regina | ~$325,000 | Yes |
For detailed income and affordability data, see our income by city pages.
Tips to afford more on $70K
- Pay down debt first — Eliminating a $400/month car payment adds ~$60,000 to your borrowing power
- Save a larger down payment — 20% down eliminates CMHC insurance and reduces your mortgage
- Buy with a partner — Two $70K incomes can afford dramatically more than one
- Consider a longer amortization — 30-year amortization (if available) lowers monthly payments but costs more interest overall
- Look at secondary markets — Cities within commuting distance of major centres often have much lower prices
- Get pre-approved — Know exactly what you qualify for before house hunting
Use our mortgage affordability calculator
Every situation is different. Use our mortgage affordability calculator to get a personalized estimate based on your exact income, debts, down payment, and current rates.
Related pages
- How Much House Can I Afford? — overview and all salary levels
- Income Needed for a $300K Home — flip the question
- Mortgage Affordability Calculator
- Income Needed to Buy a House — by home price
- CMHC Mortgage Insurance
- Average Income in Canada