Buy, Rehab, Rent, Refinance, Repeat — how Canadian investors recycle capital to build rental portfolios.
The BRRRR strategy (Buy, Rehab, Rent, Refinance, Repeat) is one of the most popular wealth-building approaches among Canadian real estate investors. Instead of tying up all your capital in one property, BRRRR lets you recycle your down payment by refinancing after adding value through renovation — then redeploying that capital into the next property.
Purchase a below-market property that needs renovation. The key is buying at a discount — either distressed, outdated, or underpriced relative to renovated comparables in the area. Cash or bridge financing is often used at this stage since the property may not qualify for conventional financing in its current condition.
Renovate the property to increase its value and rental appeal. Focus on improvements that maximize appraised value and rental income: kitchens, bathrooms, flooring, painting, and curb appeal. Avoid over-improving beyond neighbourhood standards. Track all renovation costs carefully — they add to your ACB.
Find a quality tenant and establish stable rental income. Having a signed lease and rental history makes refinancing easier, as lenders want to see income-producing status. Screen tenants carefully — a problem tenant during the refinance window complicates everything.
Once renovated and rented, refinance the property based on its new appraised value. Pull out up to 80% of the new value (standard uninsured LTV for investment properties). If you've added enough value, the refinance proceeds can return most or all of your original down payment and renovation costs.
Deploy the returned capital into the next BRRRR property. Repeat the cycle to build a portfolio of cash-flowing rentals with minimized tied-up capital.
| Metric | Target | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Purchase price vs. ARV | Buy at 65–75% of ARV | Leaves room for reno + refinance |
| Renovation budget | Stay within 10–15% of purchase price | Controls total cost vs. ARV |
| Refinance LTV | 80% of ARV (standard) | Max cash-out without CMHC |
| Post-refinance cash flow | Positive (rents cover new mortgage) | Sustainable hold strategy |
| Cap rate on ARV | 5%+ preferred | Validates investment at full value |
The refinance stage is where Canadian BRRRR investors face the most friction:
| Market | BRRRR Suitability | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Hamilton, ON | Good | Discounted properties, strong rental demand |
| Windsor, ON | Strong | Lower prices, renovation upside, strong yields |
| Edmonton, AB | Strong | Affordable, cash-flow positive post-refinance |
| Calgary, AB | Good | Rising rents, renovation upside in older stock |
| Moncton, NB | Strong | Low prices, high price-to-rent ratio |
| Toronto, ON | Difficult | High prices, tight margins, hard to find deals |
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Get KOHO Free — Use Code 45ET55JSYAThe BRRRR strategy can dramatically accelerate portfolio growth by recycling capital across multiple properties. In Canada's 2025 market, it works best in affordable cities with strong rental demand, older housing stock, and reasonable price-to-rent ratios. Run conservative numbers, account for all costs, and ensure post-refinance cash flow is positive before committing to the strategy.