Rent vs Buy in Canada 2025: Which Is Better?

A data-driven comparison of renting vs. buying across Canadian cities in 2025.

The rent vs. buy debate is one of the most consequential financial decisions Canadians face. With home prices still elevated in major cities and interest rates higher than the historic lows of 2020–2021, the calculus has shifted. This guide breaks down the real costs on both sides and helps you decide what makes sense for your situation in 2025.

The True Cost of Buying in Canada 2025

The monthly mortgage payment is just the beginning. Full ownership costs include:

The True Cost of Renting in Canada 2025

Renting also has hidden costs people undercount:

City-by-City Comparison: 2025

CityAvg. Home PriceMonthly Ownership Cost*Avg. 2BR RentVerdict
Toronto$1,050,000$5,800–$6,500$2,800–$3,200Renting cheaper short-term
Vancouver$1,200,000$6,500–$7,500$3,200–$3,800Renting cheaper short-term
Calgary$560,000$3,200–$3,800$2,000–$2,400Closer — buying competitive
Edmonton$420,000$2,500–$3,000$1,600–$2,000Buying often competitive
Ottawa$620,000$3,500–$4,200$2,100–$2,500Near parity
Montreal$520,000$3,000–$3,600$1,800–$2,300Near parity

*Ownership cost includes mortgage (20% down, 5.5% rate, 25yr), property tax, insurance, maintenance. Approximate.

The Break-Even Timeline

Buying typically becomes financially superior to renting once you hold the property long enough. The break-even point depends on:

In Toronto and Vancouver, studies suggest the break-even point is often 7–10+ years given current price-to-rent ratios. In Calgary and Edmonton, break-even can be as short as 3–5 years.

Arguments for Buying

Financial Pros

  • Building equity with each payment
  • Forced savings mechanism
  • Principal residence exemption on sale
  • Protection from rent increases
  • Leverage amplifies returns in appreciation markets

Lifestyle Pros

  • Stability and permanence
  • Freedom to renovate
  • No landlord risk
  • Pet-friendly on your terms
  • Community roots

Arguments for Renting

Financial Pros

  • Lower monthly cash outflow in expensive cities
  • Down payment invested in diversified assets
  • No maintenance costs or surprise repairs
  • Flexibility to relocate for better opportunities
  • No exposure to housing market corrections

Lifestyle Pros

  • Flexibility to move city or country
  • No responsibility for major repairs
  • Lower upfront capital required
  • Try a neighbourhood before committing

The Opportunity Cost Factor

This is the most underappreciated variable. If you rent instead of buying in Toronto, your $200,000 down payment stays invested. At a historical 7% annual return in a diversified portfolio, that $200,000 becomes:

For buying to win financially, your home must appreciate enough to exceed both the invested down payment growth and the total premium you paid in ownership costs vs. rent.

2025 Reality Check: At current mortgage rates (5–6%), many Canadian properties do not generate positive cash flow for new buyers. The bet is primarily on appreciation — which has historically rewarded patient Canadian homeowners, but past performance is not guaranteed.

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Who Should Buy in 2025?

Who Should Rent in 2025?

Conclusion

There is no universal right answer to rent vs. buy in Canada in 2025. In expensive markets like Toronto and Vancouver, renting is often more financially efficient in the short term. In more affordable markets like Calgary and Edmonton, buying is competitive. The best decision depends on your timeline, financial situation, market, and lifestyle priorities. Run the numbers for your specific scenario before committing.