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Short answer: in some Canadian cities, yes. In others, it requires serious planning, geographic flexibility, or a co-buyer. Here's the real picture of homeownership in your 20s in Canada, including what programs exist, what the barriers are, and whether it's even the right goal.
Housing affordability in Canada varies enormously by city:
Introduced in 2023, the FHSA is arguably the best thing the government has done for first-time buyers in years:
If you think homeownership is anywhere in your future, open an FHSA today. Even contributing $1,000 starts the clock and gets you the tax deduction.
The HBP lets you withdraw up to $35,000 from your RRSP tax-free for a first home purchase. If you're buying with a partner, you can each access $35,000 = $70,000 combined. You repay it over 15 years. The FHSA and HBP can be combined for even more purchasing power.
A federal tax credit of $100, translating to $1,500 back at tax time. Not huge in the context of a home purchase, but free money.
A shared equity mortgage with the government — they contribute 5-10% of the purchase price in exchange for a share of the home's appreciation. Has significant restrictions and has had limited uptake. Worth researching but not a major part of most first-time buyer strategies.
In Canada, the minimum down payment is:
For a $600,000 condo (realistic in a mid-tier Canadian city):
In Canada's expensive cities, renting and investing the difference sometimes beats buying — especially for people who value flexibility or don't plan to stay for 7+ years. Homeownership has real advantages (stability, forced savings, leverage on appreciation), but in cities where rent is 50-60% of comparable mortgage payments, the math isn't as one-sided as "renting is throwing money away."
Key factors that favor buying: staying in one place 5-10+ years, housing market appreciation in your area, access to government first-time buyer incentives, desire for stability.
Key factors that favor renting: geographic flexibility, markets where rent is much cheaper than owning, early career with potential to move cities, investing discipline to actually put the rent savings to work.
The plan that works:
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