Rent vs Buy Canada Calculator
Compare long-term renting and buying outcomes with a transparent year-by-year model focused on total costs, equity, and invested savings.
Last updated: May 2026
Estimated comparison summary
Break-even style summary
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Plain-English explanation
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Warnings and insights
Renting vs buying in Canada
Costs renters should include
Include monthly rent, renter insurance, and annual rent increases. You should also consider opportunity cost: what could grow if you invest money that would otherwise go toward a down payment and ownership costs.
Costs buyers should include
Ownership costs go beyond the mortgage payment. Include property taxes, insurance, condo/maintenance fees, repairs, closing costs, and future selling costs.
Why time horizon matters
Buying can have high front-end and exit costs. A longer time horizon gives more time for mortgage principal repayment and home value growth to offset those costs.
Why mortgage payment is not the full cost of ownership
Part of your mortgage payment builds equity, but ownership still requires recurring non-equity expenses. Evaluating total ownership costs helps avoid underestimating real monthly cash flow.
When renting may be better
Renting may be better when flexibility is important, your planned stay is short, or investing assumptions are realistic and competitive versus ownership outcomes.
When buying may be better
Buying may be better when you expect to stay longer, can handle ownership cash flow, and expect to build meaningful equity after costs over time.
Frequently asked questions
Does this include every tax and legal factor?
No. This tool is simplified and educational. It does not model all tax, legal, financing, or provincial program details.
Is this a mortgage approval tool?
No. For lending qualification and official affordability checks, use lender and regulator resources and speak with licensed professionals.
Should I only use one scenario?
No. Run multiple conservative and optimistic scenarios. Small assumption changes can shift results materially.
Can renting ever outperform buying?
Yes. Depending on rent levels, time horizon, ownership costs, and investment returns, renting can come out ahead in some scenarios.
Disclaimer
This calculator is for educational purposes only and is not financial, tax, investment, legal, real estate, or mortgage advice. Results are estimates and may not reflect your personal situation.
Trust, assumptions, and maintenance
Last updated: May 2026
Calculator Accuracy
Methodology summary
This calculator provides a simplified estimate based on your inputs and educational assumptions for planning scenarios.
Accuracy notes
Results are estimates. Actual outcomes can vary based on full tax rules, lender terms, benefit formulas, timing, and personal circumstances.
Assumptions
- Calculations are simplified and educational.
- Results depend on your inputs and scenario choices.
- Tax, benefit, mortgage, and government rules can change over time.
- Users should verify important decisions with official sources or qualified professionals.
When to verify with an official source or professional
Verify before filing taxes, signing mortgages or loans, drawing retirement income, making contribution decisions, or relying on benefits calculations.
Disclaimer
This calculator is for educational purposes only and is not financial, tax, legal, accounting, mortgage, debt, retirement, investment, or government benefits advice.
Found a mistake or outdated assumption? Contact us so we can review it.