Rent vs Buy Calculator β€” Canada

Compare renting and buying over time with realistic Canadian assumptions: property appreciation, opportunity cost, and all carrying costs.

One of Life's Biggest Decisions

The rent-versus-buy question is one of the most nuanced financial decisions Canadians face. There's no universal answerβ€”it depends on your time horizon, local market conditions, investment discipline, and lifestyle preferences. The popular rule of thumb "buying always wins" is wrong. Renting can be superior financially for short time horizons or in high-appreciation markets where home prices are inflated.

What often gets overlooked is opportunity cost. If you rent instead of buying, you can invest your down payment and any monthly surplus. Over 7–10 years, that invested capital can compound significantly. However, buying builds equity through both mortgage paydown and property appreciation, which often outpaces rental costs in the long run.

This calculator models a realistic scenario: you enter your assumptions about home price, rent, mortgage rate, property appreciation, and investment returns. The calculator then runs a year-by-year simulation to show when (or if) buying overtakes renting financially.

πŸ”‘ Your Scenario
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Investment return applies to down payment + any monthly surplus if renting is cheaper

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πŸ“… Year-by-Year Net Worth Comparison
YearBuy: Home ValueBuy: EquityBuy: Net PositionRent: InvestedBetter

How It Works

  1. Enter your buying scenario: home price, down payment, mortgage rate, amortisation, property taxes, maintenance costs, and expected home appreciation.
  2. Enter your renting scenario: monthly rent, annual rent increases, and investment return rate (what you'd earn on your invested capital).
  3. Choose your time horizon (5, 10, 20, or 30 years) and run the comparison.
  4. Review the results: You'll see your net worth in each scenario and a year-by-year breakdown showing when (if ever) buying overtakes renting.

Key insight: The calculator assumes you, as a renter, have the discipline to invest your down payment and any monthly rent savings. If renting costs less than buying and you pocket the difference, that surplus is invested at your specified return rate. If buying costs less, the renter invests only the initial down payment.

Canadian Example (2026)

Scenario: Greater Toronto Area, 10-year horizon
  • Home price: $650,000 | Down payment: $130,000 (20%, no CMHC)
  • Mortgage rate: 4.75% | Amortisation: 25 years
  • Property tax: 1% of home value annually
  • Maintenance: 1% of home value annually
  • Home appreciation: 3% per year
Buying costs:
  • Monthly mortgage payment: ~$3,680
  • Annual carrying costs: ~$13,000 (tax + maintenance)
  • Total annual cost: ~$57,000
Renting alternative:
  • Monthly rent: $2,800 for equivalent unit
  • Annual rent: ~$33,600
  • Monthly surplus: ~$880 (if buying costs more)
  • Surplus invested at 7% annual return
Year 10 outcome:
  • Buying: Home worth ~$873,000, remaining mortgage ~$380,000, net equity ~$493,000
  • Renting: Down payment + invested surplus = ~$480,000
  • Buying wins by ~$13,000, but it's close!

What Your Results Mean

When Does Buying Win?

Buying typically wins over 7+ years because of equity buildup and property appreciation. However, if you rent and invest the difference, the margin may be small. In hot markets where appreciation is high (e.g., 5% annually), buying wins faster. In slower markets (1–2% appreciation), it takes longer.

Opportunity Cost

Renters have an often-overlooked advantage: the opportunity cost of your down payment. If you invest $150,000 at 7% annual returns over 10 years, that grows to ~$295,000. Buyers don't have that liquidity; their capital is tied up in home equity. The calculator accounts for this by assuming the renter invests the down payment.

Time Horizon Matters

If you plan to move in 3 years, renting often wins because you avoid closing costs (land transfer tax, legal fees, inspections). If you stay 10+ years, buying usually wins as you amortise your mortgage and the property appreciates.

Lifestyle and Flexibility

This calculator is purely financial. Renting offers flexibility: you can relocate easily, avoid maintenance headaches, and aren't exposed to property price declines. Buying provides stability, forced savings through mortgage payments, and the intangible benefit of homeownership. These factors don't show up in the numbers but matter deeply.

Frequently Asked Questions

When does buying beat renting in Canada?
Generally after 7–10 years, depending on local market conditions and your assumptions. If property appreciates at 3%+ annually, buying wins faster. If rent and property appreciation are both low, the breakeven point is longer. This calculator helps you determine the exact breakeven for your scenario.
What appreciation rate should I use?
Canadian property appreciation varies widely by region and time period. Historically, the long-term average is 2–3% annually. However, in hot markets (Toronto, Vancouver) it can be 4–5%, and in slower markets it might be 1–2% or even negative. Use a conservative estimate (2–3%) to avoid over-optimism. Remember: past appreciation doesn't guarantee future returns.
What is opportunity cost and why does it matter?
Opportunity cost is the return you give up by putting money into a home instead of investments. If you use $150,000 as a down payment, you can't invest that $150,000 in stocks earning 7% returns. This calculator accounts for this by showing the renter's invested portfolio growing over time, making the comparison fairer.
Should I include condo fees and property tax?
Absolutely. Property tax and condo fees (if applicable) are ongoing carrying costs. This calculator includes property tax as a percentage of home value (typically 0.8–1.5% depending on province). If you're evaluating a condo, treat condo fees as additional maintenance/carrying costs.
Does rent-vs-buy analysis change by city?
Yes, dramatically. In Vancouver and Toronto, where home prices are high relative to rents, renting can be financially superior for longer. In Calgary or Winnipeg, where prices are lower, buying wins faster. Regional variations in property tax, rent growth, and appreciation make the analysis highly location-specific.
How do I factor in the emotional value of homeownership?
You can't quantify it in this calculator, but it's real. Many Canadians value the stability, freedom to renovate, and sense of ownership that homeownership provides. If these factors matter to you, it may justify buying even if renting is marginally cheaper. Conversely, if flexibility and minimal responsibility matter more, rent.

5 Tips for Your Rent-vs-Buy Decision

1. Include all carrying costs, not just mortgage Property tax typically runs 0.8–1.5% of home value annually. Maintenance is typically 1–2%. Insurance, utilities, and HOA/condo fees add more. The true annual cost of homeownership is usually 50–70% higher than just mortgage payments.
2. Consider rent control in your province Ontario has rent control (annual increases capped at inflation + 2.5% for most tenants). BC and Quebec also have rent controls. Alberta and other provinces don't. Rent-controlled provinces favour renting long-term; uncontrolled markets can see sharp rent jumps.
3. Be realistic about property appreciation Avoid assuming 5%+ annual appreciation unless your local market has proven it repeatedly. Use 2–3% as a conservative baseline. Property appreciation is real over decades, but not guaranteed year-to-year.
4. Factor in your time horizon from the start If you plan to move in 3–5 years, renting is usually cheaper when you account for closing costs (land transfer tax, legal fees, inspections). Buying makes sense for 7+ year horizons in most Canadian markets.
5. Test multiple scenarios Run this calculator with different appreciation rates, investment returns, and time horizons. Sensitivity analysis shows how sensitive the outcome is to your assumptions. If buying wins under pessimistic scenarios, it's a stronger case for buying.

Related Calculators

Disclaimer: This calculator provides a simplified comparison based on your assumptions. It does not include closing costs on the buy side, home insurance, condo fees (unless you add them), or tax implications. Real estate conditions vary widely by city and time period. This is not financial or investment advice. Always consult a financial advisor, real estate professional, and tax specialist for your specific situation.