How Much Home Can You ACTUALLY Afford In Canada (By Salary)

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  • Опубликовано: 27 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 140

  • @SzybkiTom
    @SzybkiTom Год назад +33

    The average home price in Canada is around 700k$ according to a WOWA report. According to the government census, a top 10% income in Canada hovers around 100k$.
    According to your video, to afford the average home in Canada, you need to be making around 175k$.
    I'm sure there are some fortunate folks who make that kind of money, however I'm speaking for the bottom 90% of the population. How can I afford a house in Canada today Nolan?

    • @Rspsand07
      @Rspsand07 Год назад +1

      That sounds very high because that's above top 5% in many cities like Halifax or mtl

    • @walkawalka4ni9
      @walkawalka4ni9 Год назад +1

      there are a lot of places where decent homes are less expensive than 700k, and it is household income that needs to be considered for affordability instead of personal income

    • @catsika3887
      @catsika3887 9 месяцев назад

      Lol, you can't. You need to rent and continue to be a slave like the rest.

    • @Albertdoessomething-df9vr
      @Albertdoessomething-df9vr 7 месяцев назад

      Living in the rural areas

    • @safetzukic7445
      @safetzukic7445 7 месяцев назад

      Basically? Get married, lol.if Average 3.5 bedroom home is Average 750k, and average income is 100k, then 2 peeps have a possible 200k Household income, which by dude's maths is 800k mortgage potential.

  • @dasalekhya
    @dasalekhya Год назад +11

    (If this info helps anyone here) I recently bought a 800 sq ft 2 bed 2 bath condo in Edmonton -
    - my salary is $101K (pre tax)
    - TD bank approved me for a $150K mortgage
    - my condo is $125K (condo fees 520/month)
    - I took a $100K mortgage (5% fixed rate)
    🙂

    • @NolanMatthias
      @NolanMatthias  Год назад +3

      Any idea why your pre-approval was so low?

    • @dasalekhya
      @dasalekhya Год назад

      @@NolanMatthias I asked for the minimal pre approval amount

    • @NolanMatthias
      @NolanMatthias  Год назад +3

      @@dasalekhya And they responded with $150k 🤣

    • @DSavageGentleman
      @DSavageGentleman Год назад +3

      That sounds low for a pre approval do you have a lot of debt?

  • @rachelk8368
    @rachelk8368 Год назад +14

    People forget that if you spend $100, you have to earn $140.
    Likewise, when you buy a house for $500,000 it costs you more like $900,000 after you consider tax and borrowing costs.

    • @Brian-dg3gh
      @Brian-dg3gh Год назад +1

      And in this scenario you’re saying the person spending the money is the problem, and not the fact that the government is taking such a huge chunk of everyone’s income?

    • @rachelk8368
      @rachelk8368 Год назад +2

      @@Brian-dg3gh I’m highlighting how much you actually need to earn to pay off X amount for a house. People often don’t remember that they worked more for what they paid as they had tax so it changes one’s perspective when you consider the time it take to make X after tax and borrowing costs.

    • @CanadaTop5
      @CanadaTop5 Год назад +2

      There are many ways to look at this. There is a common saying among high income people (>50% tax slap) that we work govt from Jan to June and then for ourself from Jul to Dec as tax rate is 50%

    • @Brian-dg3gh
      @Brian-dg3gh Год назад

      @@CanadaTop5 no, there is only one way to look at it, the government is stealing our money. Any money we can steal back by predicting their actions and counter-exploiting them should be acted on with any opportunity.

  • @rosegirl9874
    @rosegirl9874 Год назад +44

    How are people buying such expensive houses??? The medium income in Canada is 685000, this makes no sense. I am baffled by Canadian real estate.

    • @HDCanadianTrainVideos
      @HDCanadianTrainVideos Год назад +25

      I think you put 1 too many 0s lol

    • @NolanMatthias
      @NolanMatthias  Год назад +13

      I think she did to

    • @BrainWearmouth
      @BrainWearmouth Год назад +2

      Is that then almost $140,000 household income!?

    • @rosegirl9874
      @rosegirl9874 Год назад +6

      Lol, I did, but it would make a lot more sense if that was the average income considering our market.

    • @CanadaTop5
      @CanadaTop5 Год назад +2

      Income is not the only way to determine one’s eligibility. Those who own atleast 1 home since 2019 or before are sitting at hundreds of thousands dollars equity.
      There is a big difference between two people who earn same medium income, one owns a home and other who doesn’t or bought in last 2 years.
      In short, Canadians are richer than we think.

  • @chandrangmakwana252
    @chandrangmakwana252 Год назад +5

    Buy a big house. Rent out basements and afford the payments. Thats how majority of the new immigrants in fraser valley are affording the houses.
    However, lets see how the new rates impact the valuation in the short term. The income levels required are absolutely insane.

  • @BentSmore
    @BentSmore Год назад +9

    please people don't buy homes at the absolute max you were approved for.

    • @Rspsand07
      @Rspsand07 Год назад +2

      Don't worry, something that cheap doesn't exist anywhere in the country. I'd need more like 3-4x the amount

    • @firewoodlake
      @firewoodlake 5 месяцев назад

      Ohhh I did 😃😃😃

  • @CalCalCal6996
    @CalCalCal6996 Год назад +5

    Let me make this quick. You can afford basically nothing unless you have a ludicrous salary or are bringing tonnes of equity with you from another home. Goodbye

  • @Brian-dg3gh
    @Brian-dg3gh Год назад +7

    I owe 1.375 million on 3 mortgages and net about 70k/year as a small business owner in home construction. My wife hasn’t been employed since buying the first house. We bought the first two houses cheap (2010,2015) and then paid way too much for the last one (2022) but it was an emotional purchase (for family members to live in because rental options were brutal) using equity from the first two homes. Combined mortgages are 6400 and we bring in 5k in rent monthly for the two rentals with great long term tenants. Yes, I’m essentially running a Ponzi scheme given the massive debt load versus relatively low income, but I’m resourceful and we will be ok. I could work a lot more if necessary and the odds of a recession effecting my work load are slim to none since I work almost exclusively for wealthy individuals. A modest estimated value of our 3 homes, given today’s instability, is 1.875 million so we are still doing pretty well.

    • @NolanMatthias
      @NolanMatthias  Год назад +6

      🤔

    • @Brian-dg3gh
      @Brian-dg3gh Год назад

      @@NolanMatthias we bought the first house for 165,000 and that was in 2010. Then my mother-in-law was living alone in a big four-bedroom house in a nice neighbourhood that needed a lot of work so we purchased it from her and she paid us a very low monthly amount for rent and continued living with us there while we made a lot of major repairs/upgrades. I rented out the first house and haven’t missed a payment in 12 years. Then home prices sky-rocketed. That continued for a while until she moved out to rent somewhere else as our kids got older. Her landlord then sold during covid and we couldn’t find anything suitable for her to rent so we refinanced our two houses and put a sizeable down payment on a condo for her to live in with her son (my brother-in-law who works for/with me) and they cover the mortgage and all expenses. Long story short, as long as we can hang on for the near future, which I don’t see being an issue, we are headed for early retirement. That or I’ll be working forever. We will see.

    • @rachelk8368
      @rachelk8368 Год назад +11

      And this is why Canada has a housing bubble and people will be very screwed.

    • @Brian-dg3gh
      @Brian-dg3gh Год назад

      @@NolanMatthias I should add for the purchase of the second home it was a an unusual circumstance that lead to us being able to buy it without selling the first house. My mother-in-law had worked for a credit union for many years, and her mortgage was with them, but she had been making interest only payments for a long time so they were willing to work with us despite the single income in order to get her mortgage closed. We were very fortunate. This is also why we eventually were willing to overpay for a condo at the peak of the market in order to find her a place she would be happy to live. Also, my sister-in-law, who had a vested interest in finding a great place for her mother to live, was a co-applicant on the mortgage for the third house in exchange for 5% ownership, and we provided the entire down payment. When there is a will, there is a way.

    • @Brian-dg3gh
      @Brian-dg3gh Год назад

      @@rachelk8368no, it’s not. Our population is outpacing the new construction of places to live. That is not my fault.

  • @ADobbin1
    @ADobbin1 Год назад +2

    I can't. At this point I can't even afford rent if I had to find a new place.

  • @firewoodlake
    @firewoodlake 5 месяцев назад

    I'm happy I bought a condo in 2022 at a low variable rate. I saved more money than a fixed rate I believe.

  • @firewoodlake
    @firewoodlake 5 месяцев назад

    I bought a condo in 2021 in a variable rate. I always do variable rates. I don't like fixed rates. If you choose a fixed rate, you will end up paying much more per month.

  • @MrFanstar007
    @MrFanstar007 Год назад +11

    Great information! Its all come down to your T4 income. Given that most Canadians rely on their T4 income which is generally under $100k household income, and given the situation with the housing market, I don't see how the next generation of Canadians can escape the poverty trap with the numbers that you shared in your video. In short, they are doomed.

    • @NolanMatthias
      @NolanMatthias  Год назад +1

      Appreciate the comment thank you. For clarity, because I don’t want anyone thinking that whatever it says on their t4 is what they can use for qualifying purposes, your t4 might be used by a lender, but it is not the primary tool, nor a reliable one, for establishing income for mortgage purposes.

    • @MrFanstar007
      @MrFanstar007 Год назад

      @@NolanMatthias Yeah, thanks for the insight! what I was trying to get to is the level of income required to support the new era of mortgage in this country. My wife and I are very lucky as we entered the market back in 2014 and already have two properties. I just don't see the same luck for current buyers with current price range, specially where 5 percent down payment for first time home buyers is no longer the norm and sample NOA slip with even $100k is considered a drop in the bucket.

    • @jamesj2212
      @jamesj2212 Год назад +1

      @@MrFanstar007 Don't worry, the fact that the majority of people can't qualify is actually a good thing... It means prices will need to come down, as the pool of potential buyers is shrinking. One major factor from keeping homes from coming to market due to distressed sales, is the banks manipulating the market and deferring extra interest and adding to balance and amortization. Im sure regulators will take care of this soon.

    • @MrFanstar007
      @MrFanstar007 Год назад

      @@jamesj2212 Hopefully! We are all routing for real estate price to crumble. If things stay they way they are now with skyrocking price of renting and buying, we will need to embrace for a country with very Low GDP per capita, a Canadian population with very low to no purchasing power, a dividing country where the majority of citizens become very poor and a disappearing middle class.

  • @BradMcCallum
    @BradMcCallum Год назад +1

    When are you putting in an offer on that home in Whistler? :)

    • @NolanMatthias
      @NolanMatthias  Год назад +1

      Just need to find another 38 friends with $1 million each to put in, then we’re good to go.

  • @sipofcola69
    @sipofcola69 11 месяцев назад

    if you use it as rental income its surprisingly easy (once you get the 20% down required by the bank for an investment property) ie vancouver a 500k appartment with a 410k mortgage accounting for closing costs will run you 2400 mortgage with a current variable rate of over 6%, as an investor being able to cover a 300-400 strata monthly and property tax which are current expenditure tax benefits anyway to build 10k+ in equity a year is such a great roi for 100k investment.

  • @nairbos
    @nairbos Год назад +1

    This is a great outlook - includes the GDS/TDS, taxes and other fees. Even as a non-landlord or aspirational landlord, this is super helpful as I look at properties and try to keep my GDS/TDS at 25/30% if possible

  • @forestrymatters
    @forestrymatters Год назад +2

    Cool App, thanks for sharing!

  • @stukatz2445
    @stukatz2445 Год назад +2

    A Good addition would nof been to show which portion of the population earns what is required at each price point

  • @CosmicCreationsDIY
    @CosmicCreationsDIY 8 месяцев назад

    The whole stress test from a bank is rediculous ! The actual stress stest is having a rented roof over your head and never falling behind on your bills water, hydro, gas, well over 2500$-3500$ amonth and yet they deny you at the bank saying you cant afford 1200$m

  • @rrmetalbox4969
    @rrmetalbox4969 10 месяцев назад

    Average detached house in greater Vancouver area is 120-500millions, its insane, no one can afford one by income of a job. This city is very seriously sick

  • @LisaSmith-i9c
    @LisaSmith-i9c 27 дней назад

    Literally zero rentals or homes to purchase in Canada at the moment are cheap enough to be considered affordable or 30% or less of the average persons income. I give up in life and this country.

  • @NFTwizardz
    @NFTwizardz Год назад

    Great video thanks! ❤

  • @gurpreetbajwa8734
    @gurpreetbajwa8734 3 дня назад

    These are annual numbers right? Required income”

  • @thisisnotpublic6569
    @thisisnotpublic6569 11 месяцев назад +2

    I was once someone making 250k in Canada. House prices, general cost of living and taxes (with low return) made me move out of Canada. Until Canada can get healthcare in order and figure out this chaos that is observed in the real estate market I have zero plans to come back. It was ridiculous paying over 50% in taxes due to my income, having zero ability to buy a property for my family and seeing the insane long lines in healthcare to talk to a specialist when needed.
    Pretty sure like me many will have to do the same. It’s super sad. I love Canada, I decided to become a Canadian in the past but this pseudo-government treating people like money machines without getting nothing in return is a no no.

    • @jemmrich
      @jemmrich 9 месяцев назад +1

      Damn I feel this so much.. I pay 6 figures in taxes alone, and every day, there seems to be something that makes me feel like I am being pushed out of my own country. I feel like I get absolutely no benefit to paying such high taxes except more laws that errode peoples freedoms and a country whose debt just keeps increasing.
      My plan right now is to maintain zero debt, invest and reduce expenses as much as I can while I travel out of the country for 2 months a year to find a place where I can settle down. So far, I have been exploring SE Asia, but who knows where I'll ultimately land.
      At the end of it all, what does Canada gain by pushing high income earners out of the country? It seems like the start of a death spiral.

  • @littleripper312
    @littleripper312 7 месяцев назад +1

    This is of course assuming you are able to work non stop for 25 years with no lay offs or health issues which is not reality.

  • @1m9
    @1m9 Год назад

    holy , i must say brother what an app!

  • @phillipbrennan7082
    @phillipbrennan7082 Год назад +1

    How much of the allowance my wife gives me can i use to qualify?

  • @sidharth.kavalu
    @sidharth.kavalu Год назад

    Bendigi has got a great potential business model with that app. I'm sure everyone in real estate would want that calculator now. Is this a new venture for you @Nolan?

  • @nicholasbaker8158
    @nicholasbaker8158 Год назад +2

    Is the required income net or gross?

  • @checudia
    @checudia Год назад +1

    I would recommend you removing these embedded subtitles. These are too hard to follow at that speed and confusing

  • @LisaSmith-i9c
    @LisaSmith-i9c 2 месяца назад

    What if you make $80,000 and have stupid condo fees?

  • @DummMoney-rr1fi
    @DummMoney-rr1fi Год назад

    I have renters wanting to stay put because their rent rate is from 4 plus years ago. They were actively looking to buy but after last months rate hike decided to stay put cause its become cheaper

    • @weaselsoup3105
      @weaselsoup3105 Год назад

      Currently trying to decide on this myself. Pre approved for 378k but the best we can do is a 370 k condo which will cost us 2700 per month. Right now our rent is 885 for a 1 bedroom apartment.

    • @Babyblue3333
      @Babyblue3333 6 месяцев назад

      @@weaselsoup3105885!?!!? Whereeeee

  • @darshittripathi1792
    @darshittripathi1792 Год назад +1

    Hiii 👍I completed my bachelor's in civil engineering with 8.60 cgpa in july 2022. I want to make a career in real estate field. Can you tell me which colleges provide this course & most important thing is it possible to get visa or reject because i'm an international student from india. Is it irrelevant course or relevant course to take a decision after completing civil engineering background

    • @jamesj2212
      @jamesj2212 Год назад +1

      Bad timing to enter the housing market for work. Everyone and their mother became an agent during the boom, way too many now for the small inventory of homes.

  • @Lifeisapartydresslikeit
    @Lifeisapartydresslikeit Год назад

    Nolan, thanks for this! When I got my home 20 years ago - and all my other properties afterwards- I was qualified with my income, spousal support AND child tax credits- all had to be proven by court documents and at the time I didn’t have that and they used an affidavit and bank statements. If you have a part time job they can use that too as well as Basement income etc or even a co signor

    • @NolanMatthias
      @NolanMatthias  Год назад

      👏

    • @brarautorepairs
      @brarautorepairs Год назад

      With the interest rates being high, it is difficult to find properties with a decent ROI

    • @Lifeisapartydresslikeit
      @Lifeisapartydresslikeit Год назад

      @@brarautorepairs true. I’m very lucky…. My properties put $1000 or even slightly more in my pockets - once you can rent the basement it will cash flow

  • @JMLestino
    @JMLestino 8 месяцев назад

    Better talk to agents and guide u to brokers because 80k income will be approved for 610k from private lenders. Don't just base on this guy's bla bla bla

  • @CosmicCreationsDIY
    @CosmicCreationsDIY 8 месяцев назад

    So lets see . Average income is 60-80k for 2 working people in one home. And the average home cost is 600kfor 2-3 bedroom ..... Covid has ruined home owning for this gen of people in ontario

    • @LisaSmith-i9c
      @LisaSmith-i9c 27 дней назад +1

      Is ruined for this generation across the entire country. Two bedroom townhomes in Calgary are $450000+ and you are stuck with condo fees. The average household income you have affordable home would be $300,000, you cannot even get a 2 bedroom apartment in Calgary for $300,000 anymore, perhaps in the ghetto, but average condo in an average community is more than $300,000. It’s sad and disgusting, and those of us that cannot buy are stuck paying insane rents to pay for rich people’s investments now….

  • @LisaSmith-i9c
    @LisaSmith-i9c День назад

    This is depressing… only people owning anything these days have household incomes of like $125000+ . Going to be a bunch of homeless seniors in 20 to 30 years because no one was able to buy a house and they cannot even afford rent on oap because they couldn’t afford to save a dime because their entire income went to pay off some rich persons income instead of their retirement or a permanent home…I HATE Canada I don’t want to be here anymore….

  • @CGL119
    @CGL119 Год назад +3

    "$100,000 dollar for every $35,000 dollars in income that you make" means that you only want to be 2.85x leveraged.
    Salary / 35,000 * 100,000 = mortgage
    Salary * (2.85) = mortgage

  • @joshuanbray
    @joshuanbray Год назад

    "Required income"... is that your gross or net income?

  • @swakelin97910
    @swakelin97910 Год назад

    You should look at the housing marking in Prince Edward Island you will be horrified,

  • @Airam7828
    @Airam7828 2 месяца назад

    Your app doesn't work properly. 😒

    • @NolanMatthias
      @NolanMatthias  2 месяца назад

      What’s not working?

    • @Airam7828
      @Airam7828 2 месяца назад

      Tried to change the amount and wouldn't let me, then I turd to change the income, wouldn't let me, kept going back to $0

  • @pran3661
    @pran3661 Год назад +2

    Job market is collapsing. Also no jobs for new immigrants. Interest rates will fall

    • @GreenBeanGreenBean
      @GreenBeanGreenBean Год назад +1

      no matter how many times you spam that across as many channels as you can find, that doesn't make what you say remotely true. Clown.

    • @NolanMatthias
      @NolanMatthias  Год назад

      Where are you seeing data that supports the job market collapsing?

    • @pran3661
      @pran3661 Год назад

      @@NolanMatthias last 2 month full time job numbers fell.

    • @jamesj2212
      @jamesj2212 Год назад

      LOL unemployment still at 5.1% which is extremely tight job market, rates are going higher, not lower...

    • @nephilimshammer9567
      @nephilimshammer9567 11 месяцев назад +1

      Immigrants will jack housing up not down

  • @tvted6160
    @tvted6160 Год назад +1

    Hence why all young people are moving out of Vancouver…..ridiculous

  • @firewoodlake
    @firewoodlake 5 месяцев назад

    Bro my place is worth more than 40,000 000$ why you mention this property for? Noone cares

  • @Susanne-zuku
    @Susanne-zuku Год назад +11

    Amazing video, A friend of mine referred me to a financial adviser sometime ago and we got talking about investment and money. I started investing with $120k and in the first 2 months , my portfolio was reading $274,800. Crazy right!, I decided to reinvest my profit and gets more interesting. For over a year we have been working together making consistent profit just bought my second home 2 weeks ago and care for my family...

    • @Susanne-zuku
      @Susanne-zuku Год назад +1

      @rachealhubert74 Quitting may not be the best approach if you ask me. This is where an AI comes into the picture. I barely have time to trade myself as my job swallows up most of my time. Bridget Mary Turow, a licensed fiduciary whom has made me over 5 figures in profit in less than seven months, handles my investments. I could leave you a lead if you need help...

    • @Susanne-zuku
      @Susanne-zuku Год назад +1

      @rachealhubert74 Bridget Mary Turow

    • @Susanne-zuku
      @Susanne-zuku Год назад +1

      Lookup with her name on the webpage

    • @Amelia-Elizabeth
      @Amelia-Elizabeth Год назад +1

      @rachealhubert74 Bridget Mary Turow her trading strategies is working for me for more than a year now and I’m making good profit from the stock market and she's 100% honest, reputable and trustworthy

    • @menguardingtheirownwallets6791
      @menguardingtheirownwallets6791 Год назад +1

      You went from $120k to $275k in just 2 months? Wow, that's good. I can only average a monthly gain of 12% per month on my investments. I've been doing this for the past 2 years and I though 'I' was doing good ???

  • @Leo-xb2ng
    @Leo-xb2ng Год назад

    *promo sm*