Investment Property Mortgage Canada 2026: Rules & Rates | mrates.ca

investment property mortgage Canadare

Canadian real estate investors face a more complex financing environment in 2026 than at any point in the past decade — tighter qualification rules, higher rates, and stricter rental income treatment. Yet with vacancy rates low in most Ontario markets and rental demand strong, investment properties remain a compelling asset class. Here’s how to finance one correctly in 2026.

Down Payment Requirements for Investment Properties

  • 1–2 unit rental property (not owner-occupied): Minimum 20% down — no mortgage insurance available
  • 3–4 unit rental property: Minimum 20% down
  • Owner-occupied (live in one unit): As low as 5–10% down with mortgage insurance — significant advantage
  • Second home (vacation property, not rented): Minimum 5% if under $1M with mortgage insurance, 20% if over $1M

How Rental Income Is Treated for Qualification

Lender Type Rental Income Treatment Notes
A-Lender (Big Bank) 50–80% of gross rental income added to qualifying income Requires lease agreement or market rent appraisal
Monoline Lender 50–70% of market rent from appraisal More flexible with new properties
B/Alternative Lender DSCR approach — rental income vs. debt service Higher rate premium; better for portfolios

Using a HELOC to Fund Your Down Payment

One popular strategy in 2026: using equity from your primary residence (via HELOC) to fund the down payment on an investment property. This is legal and widely used — but lenders will count the HELOC payment as an existing liability in your TDS ratio. Structure carefully: a higher rental income or lower HELOC balance ensures the math still works at stress test rates.

Investment Property Rates vs. Primary Residence

Expect to pay a 0.10%–0.30% rate premium on investment property mortgages vs. owner-occupied rates. This reflects the higher default risk lenders associate with investment properties when borrowers face financial stress. On a $600,000 investment mortgage, a 0.20% premium costs approximately $1,200/year — worth factoring into your cap rate analysis.

Compare investment property mortgage rates and speak with a broker at mrates.ca.

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