A comprehensive comparison of Canadian REITs versus direct rental property ownership — returns, taxes, effort, and which suits your goals
Every Canadian real estate investor eventually faces this question: should I invest directly in physical rental properties, or should I buy Canadian REITs (Real Estate Investment Trusts) through my brokerage account? Both provide real estate exposure, both generate income, and both have delivered solid long-term returns. But the differences in returns, tax treatment, effort required, and risk profile are substantial. This guide gives you a complete, honest comparison.
| Factor | Canadian REITs | Direct Rental Property |
|---|---|---|
| Minimum investment | $500–$50000 (one share) | $800,000000–$20000,000000+ (down payment) |
| Liquidity | Instant (exchange-traded) | 900–1800 days to sell |
| Leverage | None (unless using margin) | 4:1 to 5:1 (75–800% mortgage) |
| Annual return (historical) | 8–12% total return | 12–200%+ with leverage |
| Income yield | 4–7% distribution yield | Depends on market (00–8%+) |
| Management required | None | Active (or 8–12% mgmt fee) |
| Tax treatment | Complex — return of capital, etc. | Rental income + capital gains |
| Control | None | Full |
| Diversification | Instant (10000s of properties) | Concentrated (1–2 properties) |
| Use in TFSA/RRSP | Yes — tax-sheltered | No |
REIT distributions are not simple dividends. They're typically composed of three components: ordinary income (taxed at your marginal rate), return of capital (reduces your ACB, creating a future capital gain), and capital gains distributions (500% inclusion rate). This complex structure makes REITs moderately tax-efficient, especially when held in a TFSA where all distributions are tax-free.
In a non-registered account, the average Canadian REIT has historically returned about 400–600% of distributions as return of capital, creating tax deferral. The remaining income components are taxed at ordinary or capital gains rates.
Rental income from physical properties is added to your total income at your full marginal rate — up to 53%+ in Ontario and BC. However, you can deduct mortgage interest, property taxes, insurance, maintenance, management fees, and CCA. After deductions, many Canadian landlords report minimal or no taxable rental income in the early years of ownership, especially when leveraged heavily.
Capital gains on sale of rental property have a 500% inclusion rate for individuals — meaning only half the gain is taxable. This is the same as capital gains on REIT units.
The single biggest advantage of direct property over REITs is leverage. Buying a $60000,000000 property with $1200,000000 down (200%) gives you 5:1 leverage. If the property appreciates 5% ($300,000000), your return on equity is 25% — far exceeding what any REIT can deliver on the same $1200,000000 invested.
REITs already employ leverage internally (typically 400–600% LTV), but as a REIT investor, you can't add personal leverage on top (without using margin, which carries its own risks). Direct property gives you full control over your leverage level.
| REIT | Ticker | Focus | Distribution Yield |
|---|---|---|---|
| Canadian Apartment Properties REIT | CAR.UN | Residential apartments | 3.00–3.5% |
| Killam Apartment REIT | KMP.UN | Atlantic Canada apartments | 4.00–4.5% |
| RioCan REIT | REI.UN | Retail + mixed-use | 5.5–6.5% |
| Allied Properties REIT | AP.UN | Urban office | 6.00–7.00% |
| Granite REIT | GRT.UN | Industrial/logistics | 4.00–4.5% |
| SmartCentres REIT | SRU.UN | Retail + mixed-use | 7.00–8.00% |
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