Laneway houses — small detached dwellings built at the back of a property, typically where a lane or alley provides rear access — have exploded in popularity in Vancouver and Toronto. They offer significant rental income potential, space for multi-generational living, and meaningful value addition to already-expensive urban lots. Financing them, however, requires more planning than a typical renovation. Here's what you need to know.
A laneway house is a self-contained dwelling unit built on the rear portion of a residential lot, usually facing a lane. They're separate from the main house — not an addition — and typically range from 400 to 900 square feet. In Toronto, similar structures are called "garden suites" or "garden homes." In Vancouver, they're specifically called laneway houses.
Laneway homes are permitted on most RS-1 (single-family) lots in Vancouver. The lot must typically have rear lane access. Maximum size is roughly 10% of the lot area (or up to 83.6 sq m/900 sq ft, whichever is smaller). Vancouver's laneway house program is well-established since 2009.
Each municipality has its own rules. As of BC's 2023 legislation, most municipalities with populations over 5,000 must allow at least 3–4 units per lot, which typically includes a laneway unit. Contact your specific municipal planning department.
Toronto legalized garden suites (equivalent to laneway houses) city-wide in 2022. Most residential lots with rear lane access qualify. Maximum size is typically 60 sq m (645 sq ft) or 15% of lot area. The City of Toronto has a detailed guide on its website.
Laneway houses are expensive relative to their size because you're building a fully self-contained dwelling from scratch:
Cost per square foot: $500–$900/sq ft in Metro Vancouver; $400–$750/sq ft in Toronto. This is higher than typical construction because of the complexity of building in a tight urban lot with lane access, and the full infrastructure required (separate utilities, egress, etc.).
If you have substantial equity in your primary home, a HELOC is the most cost-effective financing option. In Vancouver, where average home values exceed $1.5M, a homeowner with $600,000+ in equity can typically access $300,000–$400,000 through a HELOC at prime + 0.5–1% (roughly 6–7% in 2025).
At mortgage renewal, roll the laneway construction cost into a new mortgage. This gives you a single payment at mortgage rates, which are typically the lowest available borrowing rates. The challenge: you need enough equity and a lender willing to lend against the projected improved value.
A construction mortgage is designed specifically for new builds. Funds are drawn in stages as construction milestones are hit (foundation, framing, lock-up, completion). This reduces interest costs during construction. The mortgage converts to a conventional mortgage upon completion.
For homeowners with lower equity or unique situations, private construction lenders offer higher-cost financing. Rates of 8%–14% are typical. Use private lenders as a bridge only — refinance to conventional once the laneway is complete and appraised.
The financial case for laneway houses is compelling in Vancouver and Toronto:
At $2,500/month rent in Vancouver, a $400,000 laneway house generates $30,000/year in rental income. After property tax and insurance allocation, net yield is approximately 7%–8% annually on the construction cost — excellent by any measure. Payback in 12–15 years on the build cost alone.
A completed and rented laneway house typically adds $400,000–$700,000 to a Vancouver property's market value, depending on size and quality. In Toronto, garden suites add $200,000–$450,000. This is because the rental income capitalizes into the property value (buyers pay for income-producing properties at a multiple of annual income).
Budget time and money for approvals:
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