Is short-term rental still a viable investment strategy in Canada? Revenue potential, regulations, taxes, and market analysis
Short-term rental (STR) investing in Canada has undergone a dramatic transformation since 2020. Once a straightforward arbitrage play — buy a condo, list on Airbnb, earn 2–3× long-term rental rates — the landscape is now defined by municipal restrictions, provincial licensing, federal tax scrutiny, and platform regulations. Yet in the right markets with the right properties, Airbnb investment still delivers superior returns. This guide helps you navigate the new reality.
Canada's short-term rental market is bifurcating into two clear segments: heavily restricted urban condos where STR viability has collapsed, and resort/tourist markets where demand remains strong and regulations are more permissive. Understanding which segment you're targeting is the most important analytical decision you'll make.
Toronto banned STR of properties where the host doesn't live (non-principal residence STR). Vancouver similarly restricts STR to principal residences only. Montreal, Ottawa, and other major cities have implemented licensing with principal-residence requirements. In these markets, purchasing a second condo as a pure Airbnb play is no longer legal — or financially viable.
Whistler, Banff, Canmore, Collingwood, Prince Edward County, Tofino, Kelowna, and Muskoka operate under different frameworks. These markets have tourism-dependent economies and many zoning designations that permit or encourage STR. Cap rates of 8–15% on purchase price are achievable in the right Whistler or Canmore property.
| Market | Avg Nightly Rate | Avg Occupancy | Gross Annual Revenue | STR Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Whistler, BC | $350 | 65% | $83,000 | Permitted (zoned) |
| Canmore, AB | $280 | 70% | $71,500 | Permitted |
| Tofino, BC | $250 | 65% | $59,000 | Permitted |
| PEI / Charlottetown | $180 | 60% | $39,000 | Licensed |
| Muskoka, ON | $350 | 50% | $64,000 | Township varies |
| Toronto (principal res) | $180 | 55% | $36,000 | Principal res only |
| Kelowna, BC | $220 | 60% | $48,000 | Licensed |
Almost every municipality now requires a short-term rental licence or registration. Requirements vary but typically include: proof of principal residence (in restricted markets), building permit compliance, fire safety inspection, insurance documentation, and an annual licence fee ($50–$500/year). Operating without a licence risks fines of $1,000–$100,000 in some jurisdictions.
The decision between STR and LTR comes down to revenue premium versus operating cost premium. STR typically generates 1.5–3× long-term rental income, but requires significantly more active management, higher operating costs, and carries seasonality risk.
| Factor | Short-Term Rental | Long-Term Rental |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly Revenue | $3,500–$7,000+ | $1,800–$3,000 |
| Vacancy Risk | High (seasonal) | Low (annual lease) |
| Operating Costs | 25–40% of revenue | 10–20% of revenue |
| Management Intensity | Very High | Low–Medium |
| Regulatory Risk | High | Low |
| Tax Treatment | Business income (T2125) | Rental income (T776) |
| HST Required | Yes (over $30K) | No (exempt supply) |
STR income where significant services are provided (hotel-like model) is classified as business income, reported on T2125 (not T776). This means it's subject to CPP contributions on net income. The upside: business income allows more flexible deduction rules and potential CCA claims without the principal residence exemption concerns that affect T776 landlords.
Short-term accommodation (under 30 consecutive days) is a taxable supply — not an exempt supply like long-term residential rentals. Once your STR revenue exceeds $30,000 in four consecutive quarters, you must register for GST/HST, charge it on bookings, and remit to the CRA. In many provinces, Airbnb collects and remits HST on your behalf, but your own registration requirements still apply once you cross the threshold.
Use AirDNA, Rabbu, or STR Insights to get actual occupancy and ADR (average daily rate) data for your target market before buying. Key metrics to evaluate:
Managing a short-term rental yourself requires significant time investment — guest communications, check-ins, cleaning coordination, maintenance, and review management. Full-service STR property managers charge 20–30% of gross revenue. Co-hosts on Airbnb charge 10–20%. For out-of-province investors or those with multiple properties, professional management is almost essential.
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