Condo vs House in Canada (2025)

Monthly condo fees, no maintenance hassles, vs. space and equity. Here's the full comparison.

The Real Cost Comparison: Condo vs House in Canada

The choice between a condo and a detached house in Canada is often framed as a lifestyle decision — but it's equally a financial one. Condos typically have lower purchase prices but add mandatory monthly condo fees. Houses give you more space but come with full maintenance responsibility.

FactorCondoDetached House
Purchase price (Toronto avg.)$700K–$850K$1.2M–$1.6M+
Monthly condo fees$400–$1,200+$0
Property tax (Toronto)~$3,500–$5,500/yr~$6,000–$12,000/yr
Maintenance responsibilityInterior onlyFull property
Outdoor spaceBalcony or noneYard
Parking1 spot (if included)Driveway/garage
Building amenitiesGym, concierge, etc.None (or DIY)
PrivacyShared buildingHigher

Understanding Condo Fees

Monthly condo fees (or strata fees in BC) pay for the upkeep of common areas, building insurance, property management, and contributions to the reserve fund. They do not cover your in-suite electricity, internet, or property tax.

In Toronto and Vancouver, condo fees typically run $0.60–$1.20 per square foot per month. A 700 sq ft condo pays $420–$840/month. For a 900 sq ft unit, expect $540–$1,080/month.

Red Flag: Abnormally low condo fees (under $0.40/sq ft) can signal an underfunded reserve. This often leads to special assessments — one-time charges to condo owners when the reserve fund can't cover a major repair. Special assessments of $100–$50,000+ per unit are not uncommon.

How to Evaluate a Condo's Financial Health

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House Ownership: The True Cost

Owning a house involves costs that condo owners often forget to factor:

A rough rule of thumb is to budget 1–2% of the home's value annually for maintenance. On a $900,000 house, that's $9,000–$18,000/year.

Which Builds More Equity?

Historically in Canada's major cities, detached houses have appreciated faster than condos per square foot. But with entry prices 40–80% higher than condos, the absolute dollar investment (and therefore risk) is also much larger. Condos remain the entry point for many first-time buyers in expensive markets.

See: Ontario closing costs, first-time buyer credits, new build vs resale.