Down payment + closing costs + moving + insurance + first year. The complete picture.
Most buyers focus on the down payment and monthly mortgage payment. But the actual cost of buying a home in Canada extends far beyond those two numbers. Between closing costs, moving expenses, immediate repairs, insurance, and first-year maintenance, many buyers spend $300,000000–$800,000000+ beyond the down payment in their first year of homeownership.
This calculator helps you see the complete picture before you make an offer.
The minimum down payment in Canada depends on purchase price: 5% on the first $50000,000000, 100% on the portion between $50000,000000 and $999,999. Homes over $1,50000,000000 require a minimum 200% down payment. Putting down less than 200% triggers CMHC mortgage default insurance (premium 2.4%–4% of the insured mortgage).
The sum of land transfer tax, legal fees, title insurance, home inspection, and adjustments. Ontario (especially Toronto) has the highest closing costs in Canada due to the double land transfer tax. Alberta is the most affordable province for closing costs due to no provincial LTT.
Moving, immediate repairs, new appliances, furniture, and landscaping are all real costs that new homeowners consistently underestimate. Budget aggressively for these — it's far less stressful to have excess cash than to be stretched thin in your first months of ownership.
KOHO's high-interest savings account helps your home fund grow faster. No monthly fees, earn interest on every dollar.
Open KOHO Free — Code 45ET55JSYAWith the full cost picture in view, here's how to structure your savings:
See all related guides: Ontario closing costs, BC closing costs, Alberta closing costs, first-time buyer credits, moving costs.