How Much Do You Really Need to Buy a Home in Toronto in 2026?
Everyone knows Toronto is expensive. But most buyers don't know their actual numbers until they're sitting with a mortgage professional — often after falling in love with a property they can't qualify for. This guide gives you the real figures upfront.
The Numbers Most People Don't Know
Buying a home in Toronto requires significantly more than most first-time buyers expect. There are four distinct financial requirements that must all be met simultaneously: the minimum down payment, the cash needed for closing costs, the qualifying income to pass the stress test, and the ongoing monthly carrying costs.
Getting one right but missing another is where most first-time buyers get tripped up. Let's break down each one with real numbers for 2026.
What's the Average Home Price in Toronto Right Now?
Toronto's housing market entered 2026 in a period of relative softness. National home sales declined 8.1% year-over-year in early 2026, with the GTA experiencing some of the sharpest corrections. Benchmark prices as of early 2026:
These are approximate all-property averages. Condos are significantly lower and detached homes significantly higher than these benchmarks. A Toronto condo can be found for $550,000-$700,000; a detached home in Toronto proper typically starts at $1.2 million+.
5% down payment, 25-year amortization, $500/month in existing debt, $4,800/year property tax, $150/month heating — at the current stress test qualifying rate of approximately 6.59%. Your actual qualifying income depends on your specific debt profile and property costs.
Minimum Down Payment — What the Rules Actually Require
Canada's minimum down payment rules are tiered based on purchase price:
- Up to $500,000: Minimum 5%
- $500,001 to $999,999: 5% on the first $500,000 + 10% on the remainder
- $1,000,000 to $1,499,999: Minimum 10% (CMHC insurable since December 2024)
- $1,500,000 and above: Minimum 20% — not CMHC insurable
Minimum Down Payment by Price Point
CMHC Insurance — The Hidden Cost of a Small Down Payment
If your down payment is under 20%, you must pay CMHC mortgage insurance. This is added to your mortgage balance — not paid upfront — but it increases both your total debt and your monthly payment.
On an $820,000 home with 10% down ($82,000), the CMHC premium is 3.10% of the insured mortgage ($738,000 × 3.10% = $22,878). Your actual mortgage becomes $760,878 — $22,878 more than the purchase price minus your down payment.
This is why putting 20% down, while requiring significantly more upfront, can save you tens of thousands over the life of your mortgage. Use ClearKey's CMHC calculator to see your exact premium at different down payment levels.
The Income You Need to Qualify
This is where most GTA buyers are shocked. The stress test qualifying rate of approximately 6.59% dramatically reduces what lenders will approve. Here's what you realistically need to earn to qualify for different price points, assuming minimal existing debt and a 25-year amortization:
| Purchase Price | Down Payment | Min Household Income | Monthly Payment |
|---|---|---|---|
| $600,000 | $35,000 (5%+) | ~$112,000 | ~$3,050/mo |
| $750,000 | $50,000 (5%+) | ~$140,000 | ~$3,790/mo |
| $850,000 | $60,000 (5%+) | ~$158,000 | ~$4,290/mo |
| $1,000,000 | $100,000 (10%) | ~$184,000 | ~$4,980/mo |
| $1,200,000 | $240,000 (20%) | ~$192,000 | ~$5,200/mo |
These are household incomes — meaning combined if you're buying with a partner. Adding a co-applicant is one of the most powerful ways to increase your qualifying amount. A couple each earning $80,000 ($160,000 combined) can qualify for significantly more than a single earner at $100,000. Run your own stress test on ClearKey to see exactly what you qualify for.
Closing Costs — The Cash Most Buyers Forget
On top of your down payment, you need cash for closing costs. These can't be rolled into your mortgage on a CMHC-insured deal and must be paid in cash on closing day.
Closing Costs on an $850,000 Home — City of Toronto, First-Time Buyer
For a buyer in Mississauga or Brampton, there's no Toronto Municipal LTT — so closing costs drop to approximately $9,400 net on the same price point. This is one reason many GTA buyers choose 905 over 416.
Your Total Cash Needed on Day One
Total Cash Required — $850,000 Toronto Home, First-Time Buyer, 5%+ Down
What Different Budgets Get You in the GTA in 2026
Not everyone is targeting a $1M+ detached home. Here's a realistic picture of what different household incomes and savings levels can access across the GTA right now:
Household Income ~$100,000 — Max Purchase ~$530,000
This range gets you a 1-bedroom or smaller 2-bedroom condo in Scarborough, Etobicoke, or North York. Downtown Toronto condos at this price point exist but are limited to smaller units. The 905 offers more options — Hamilton, Kitchener, or Oshawa become viable at this income level.
Household Income ~$140,000 — Max Purchase ~$750,000
This opens up 2-bedroom condos in the GTA, some townhomes in Brampton, Oshawa, or Ajax, and detached homes in outer 905 communities. This is the most common income range for first-time buyers currently entering the Toronto market.
Household Income ~$180,000 — Max Purchase ~$950,000
Semi-detached homes in Scarborough and North York, townhomes in Mississauga and Markham, and 2-3 bedroom condos across the GTA become accessible. Some entry-level detached homes in outer 416 communities are within range.
Household Income ~$220,000+ — Max Purchase ~$1,200,000+
Detached homes in the 416 and inner 905 communities become accessible. This income level represents approximately the top 10% of Toronto households — which illustrates why detached home ownership has moved beyond the reach of most first-time buyers in the city proper.
Strategies to Stretch Your Budget
Add a co-applicant. This is the single most effective way to increase your qualifying amount. A partner, parent, or sibling as co-borrower dramatically improves your GDS/TDS ratios. Note that all co-applicants are on the title and have legal ownership of the property.
Extend to 30 years. First-time buyers purchasing new builds can access 30-year insured amortizations. This reduces your monthly payment at the qualifying rate, which can push borderline GDS/TDS ratios below the limit. The tradeoff is significantly more total interest paid over the life of the mortgage.
Pay off high-payment debts. A $500/month car payment can reduce your qualifying mortgage by $60,000-$80,000. If you're close to your target price, eliminating car payments or student loan payments before applying can make a significant difference.
Consider the 905. Brampton ($780K), Ajax ($740K), and Kitchener-Waterloo ($550K) offer significantly more buying power for the same income. The commute trade-off is real but so is the financial one.
Want to see exactly what you qualify for in your target GTA neighbourhood? ClearKey's free calculator runs all three down payment scenarios instantly — with the stress test, income requirements, and closing costs all calculated for you.
Run Your Numbers →Key Takeaways
- A typical Toronto home requires a household income of $140,000–$200,000+ to qualify under the current stress test
- Total cash needed on day one (down payment + closing costs) is typically $75,000–$130,000 depending on price and location
- Toronto's double land transfer tax adds $13,000+ in closing costs compared to the 905 — a major reason many buyers choose Mississauga, Brampton, or Markham
- Adding a co-applicant is the single most effective way to increase qualifying power
- Condos remain accessible at income levels where detached homes are out of reach — the GTA condo market still has entry points below $650,000
- Always consult a licensed mortgage professional for numbers specific to your situation