Net worth is the most honest single number in personal finance. It tells you exactly where you stand financially — not just how much you earn or spend, but whether you are actually building wealth over time. Every Canadian who wants to get a handle on their finances should calculate their net worth at least once a year.
Net worth = Assets minus Liabilities.
In plain English: what you own minus what you owe. If your assets total $250,000 and your debts total $180,000, your net worth is $70,000. If your debts exceed your assets, your net worth is negative — which is common for young Canadians just starting out, and not a crisis as long as the trend is moving in the right direction.
An asset is anything you own that has monetary value:
Do not include everyday possessions like furniture, appliances, or clothing — they have minimal resale value and clutter the calculation.
A liability is any debt you owe:
Do this in a simple spreadsheet or even on paper. It takes about 15–30 minutes the first time, and 5–10 minutes in future years once you have the template.
Meet Ahmed, 34, living in Mississauga:
Assets:
Total assets: $666,200
Liabilities:
Total liabilities: $478,400
Net worth: $666,200 − $478,400 = $187,800
Ahmed has a positive net worth driven largely by home equity. His liquid net worth (excluding the condo) is $187,800 − $580,000 + $462,000 = $69,800 — a useful secondary number that shows how much he'd have if he couldn't count the home.
Statistics Canada publishes household wealth data periodically. Rough benchmarks based on recent data:
These are medians — the midpoint, not the average. Median is more meaningful here because very wealthy Canadians pull the average way up. If your net worth is below these benchmarks, don't panic — the median includes the asset-rich effect of Toronto and Vancouver real estate. Focus on your own upward trend.
Someone earning $200,000/year but spending $195,000 has almost no net worth growth. Someone earning $60,000/year and saving $15,000 is building wealth steadily. Income is a flow — it comes in and goes out. Net worth is a stock — it accumulates. The goal is to grow the stock.
Net worth is also the number that determines financial independence. You become financially independent when your assets generate enough return to cover your living expenses indefinitely — not when your salary crosses a certain threshold.
Two levers: increase assets, decrease liabilities. In practice:
Calculate your net worth today. Even if the number is negative or small, knowing it is the first step to changing it.
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