Mortgage & Affordability Calculators
Plan your purchase with our complete suite of Canadian real estate financial tools.
How Much Can You Afford?
Our primary tool to determine your maximum purchase price. It automatically factors in your income, debts, and the latest mortgage stress test rules.
Run Affordability CheckMortgage Renewal
Assess the impact of the 2026 interest rate cliff on your monthly payment.
Mortgage Payment
Estimate your monthly payment based on price, rate, and amortization.
Land Transfer Tax
Calculate the provincial and municipal land transfer taxes payable on closing.
CMHC Insurance
Estimate the mortgage default insurance premium for down payments under 20%.
Rent vs. Buy
Compare the financial outcomes of renting vs. buying over time.
City Comparison
Compare benchmark prices, rents, and ownership costs across 100+ cities.
Investment ROI Tool
Analyze cash flow, cap rates, and cash-on-cash returns for rental properties.
Mortgage Stress Test
Check if your income and debts meet the federal stress test requirements.
Current Mortgage Rates
Compare today's best fixed and variable rates from major Canadian lenders.
Strategic Financial Planning:
Your First Line of Defense
Affordability isn't just about finding a cheaper house—it's about optimizing your financial structure. Most first-time buyers focus solely on the monthly payment, but true affordability is calculated through a matrix of interest risk, opportunity cost, and liquidity.
The Stress Test as a Safety Buffer
The "Stress Test" (qualifying at 5.25% or Rate + 2%) is often viewed as a hurdle. However, savvy buyers use it as a safety metric. If you can only barely pass the stress test, you are likely over-leveraging. A truly affordable mortgage is one where you can comfortably pay at the stress test rate, not just the contract rate. This buffer protects you against the kind of rate shocks we saw in 2023-2024.
Total Cost of Ownership (TCO)
Our Mortgage Calculator includes estimates for property taxes and heating, but you must also factor in maintenance. A general rule of thumb is 1% of the property value per year for maintenance. On a $1M Toronto home, that's $10,000/year (or $833/month) that doesn't build equity. Ignoring TCO is the primary cause of "house poor" syndrome.
The Rent vs. Buy Equation
In high-interest environments, renting can sometimes be the superior wealth-building strategy. If the unrecoverable costs of buying (mortgage interest + taxes + maintenance) exceed the cost of rent, investing the difference in the S&P 500 often yields higher net worth over a 10-year horizon. Don't buy just because of social pressure—buy when the math works in your favor.
Compare Mortgage Rates
See today's lowest rates from major lenders before calculating your payments.
Affordability Tracker
View real affordability data for your target city to contextualize your numbers.
News & Stories
Learn from Canadians who successfully navigated the home buying process.