March 20

Canadian Housing Affordability Crisis: Impact on Credit and Financial Health

Life Situations & Credit

Canadian Housing Affordability Crisis: Impact on Credit and Financial Health

Mar 20, 202623 min read

The Canadian housing affordability crisis has moved beyond a real estate problem — it’s become a full-blown financial health emergency affecting the credit scores, debt levels, and long-term financial stability of millions of Canadians from coast to coast. Whether you’re a renter watching your monthly payment consume an ever-larger share of your income, a homeowner struggling with mortgage renewals at dramatically higher rates, or a would-be buyer priced out entirely, the housing crisis is reshaping the financial landscape for an entire generation.

For Canadians already dealing with bad credit or rebuilding their financial lives, the housing crisis adds another layer of challenge. When shelter costs consume 40%, 50%, or even 60% of your income, everything else — debt payments, savings, investing, and basic financial stability — gets squeezed to the breaking point.

Canadian residential houses representing the housing affordability crisis
Housing costs now consume a larger share of Canadian household income than at any point in the past 40 years.

In this comprehensive guide, we’ll examine the full scope of how Canada’s housing crisis impacts your credit and financial health, explore practical strategies for coping, and provide actionable advice for protecting your financial future regardless of whether you rent or own.

Key Takeaways

  • Canadians now spend an average of 44% of pre-tax income on shelter costs — well above the recommended 30% threshold
  • Housing cost burden is the leading driver of increased credit card debt and reduced savings rates across all age groups
  • Mortgage renewal shock will affect over 3 million Canadian households through 2026, with average payment increases of $500-$900/month
  • Renters face unique credit risks as rising rents reduce ability to service other debts and build emergency funds
  • Strategic financial planning can help Canadians protect their credit even during the worst affordability conditions

The Scope of Canada’s Housing Affordability Crisis

To understand how housing affects your credit and financial health, you first need to grasp the sheer scale of the affordability problem. By virtually every measure, Canadian housing costs have reached historically unprecedented levels relative to income.

Average home price in Canada as of early 2026, according to CREA — over 8x the median household income

Key Affordability Metrics

Metric Current Level Historical Average Healthy Benchmark
Home price-to-income ratio (national) 8.2x 4.5x 3.0-4.0x
Price-to-income (Toronto) 12.1x 6.5x 3.0-5.0x
Price-to-income (Vancouver) 13.5x 7.8x 3.0-5.0x
Household debt-to-disposable income 176% 110% Below 150%
% of income needed for mortgage (typical home) 62% 39% Below 32%
Average rent (1-bedroom, national) $2,193/month $1,100/month (2019) 30% of gross income

These numbers tell a stark story: housing in Canada has fundamentally disconnected from incomes. A generation ago, a median-income household could comfortably purchase a median-priced home. Today, that same household would need to spend over 60% of their pre-tax income on mortgage payments alone — an unsustainable level by any financial standard.

Good to Know

The 30% Rule: Why It Matters

The widely cited “30% rule” suggests that housing costs should not exceed 30% of your gross (pre-tax) household income. This guideline exists because when housing consumes more than 30%, there isn’t enough remaining income to cover other essentials (food, transportation, healthcare), service existing debts, build savings, and handle unexpected expenses. Canadians spending more than 30% on housing are classified as experiencing “housing cost burden.” Those spending more than 50% are in “severe housing cost burden.” Currently, an estimated 1 in 4 Canadian households falls into one of these categories.

How Housing Costs Directly Impact Your Credit Score

Your rent or mortgage payment doesn’t appear on your credit report in the way that credit cards or loans do. In Canada, neither rent payments nor mortgage payments are routinely reported to Equifax or TransUnion. However, housing costs affect your credit through multiple indirect mechanisms that can be even more damaging.

The Credit Score Cascade Effect


  1. Housing Costs Consume Too Much Income

    When rent or mortgage payments take 40-60% of your income, the remaining money must cover everything else: food, transportation, utilities, minimum debt payments, childcare, and personal expenses. There simply isn’t enough to go around.


  2. Other Bills Get Paid with Credit Cards

    The shortfall between income and expenses gets covered by credit cards. A $200 grocery shop here, a $150 car repair there, a $300 utility bill that can’t be covered from cash — each one adds to your revolving balance.


  3. Credit Utilization Climbs

    As credit card balances grow, your utilization ratio — one of the most heavily weighted factors in credit scoring — increases. Moving from 30% to 60% utilization can drop your score by 50-100 points.


  4. Minimum Payments Become Unmanageable

    With higher balances come higher minimum payments. Combined with an already stretched budget, these increased minimums become difficult to maintain. Missing even one payment by 30 days can drop your score by 80-130 points.


  5. Credit Score Drops Trigger Higher Rates

    A lower credit score can trigger interest rate increases on existing credit products, higher insurance premiums, and difficulty accessing new credit — all of which worsen the financial pressure and create a vicious cycle.


Canadian households classified as experiencing housing cost burden — spending more than 30% of income on shelter

Renters vs. Homeowners: Different Credit Risks

While both renters and homeowners face credit risk from the housing crisis, the specific mechanisms differ:

Factor Renters Homeowners
Primary housing cost Monthly rent (increasing annually) Mortgage payments (may increase at renewal)
Cost predictability Low — landlords can increase rent annually Moderate — fixed during mortgage term
Equity building None — rent is pure expense Yes — each payment builds ownership equity
Credit risk mechanism Rising rent reduces ability to service other debts Mortgage renewal shock; HELOC rate increases
Missed payment impact Rent not reported to bureaus (usually) but can lead to eviction and collections Mortgage defaults reported; risk of foreclosure
Flexibility Can move to cheaper housing (theoretically) Less flexible — selling involves costs and time
Risk of housing loss Eviction for non-payment or landlord’s own use Power of sale (foreclosure) for mortgage default
CR
Credit Resources Team — Expert Note

The housing affordability crisis represents the single largest threat to the financial stability of Canadian households. When shelter costs absorb the majority of household income, the entire financial system becomes more fragile — families have no buffer against shocks, debt levels rise, and any economic downturn is amplified through the household balance sheet into the broader economy.

The Rent vs. Own Decision in Today’s Market

The traditional Canadian aspiration of homeownership is being fundamentally challenged by current market conditions. For many Canadians, particularly those with bad credit or limited savings, the question isn’t simply “should I buy a home?” but rather “is buying a home even possible, and would it improve or damage my financial health?”

The True Cost of Homeownership

Many first-time buyers focus exclusively on the mortgage payment when calculating affordability. The full cost of homeownership includes numerous additional expenses that can make the difference between comfortable ownership and financial distress:

Cost Category Typical Annual Cost Monthly Equivalent Notes
Mortgage payment (avg) $30,000-$42,000 $2,500-$3,500 Based on $500K at 5-6%, 25-year amortization
Property taxes $3,000-$6,000 $250-$500 Varies significantly by municipality
Home insurance $1,200-$2,400 $100-$200 Higher for older homes; rising annually
Utilities $3,600-$6,000 $300-$500 Heating, electricity, water, waste
Maintenance/repairs $5,000-$10,000 $415-$835 Rule of thumb: 1-2% of home value annually
Condo fees (if applicable) $4,800-$9,600 $400-$800 Increasing 5-10% annually in many buildings
TOTAL (without condo fees) $42,800-$66,400 $3,565-$5,535

When you add up all costs, a home with a $2,800/month mortgage actually costs $3,800-$5,500/month. Many first-time buyers are shocked by the gap between the mortgage payment and total ownership costs, leading to financial strain that ripples through their entire financial picture.

Warning

The Danger of Buying at the Edge of Affordability

Lenders will approve mortgages based on the mortgage stress test (currently qualifying at the contract rate plus 2%, or 5.25%, whichever is higher). But passing the stress test doesn’t mean you can comfortably afford the home. The stress test evaluates whether you can technically make payments — it doesn’t account for quality of life, emergency preparedness, or the ability to maintain other financial goals. Buying the maximum amount you’re approved for leaves zero margin for error: a job loss, major repair, illness, or interest rate increase could push you into financial crisis.

When Renting Makes Better Financial Sense

Despite the cultural pressure to own, renting can be the financially superior choice in many situations:

  • When the price-to-rent ratio exceeds 20: In markets where it costs more than 20 times annual rent to buy an equivalent property, renting and investing the difference typically builds more wealth. In Toronto and Vancouver, this ratio exceeds 25-30 in many neighbourhoods.
  • When your credit needs rebuilding: If your credit score is below 680, you’ll face higher mortgage rates and may require mortgage default insurance even with a larger down payment. Renting while rebuilding your credit can save you tens of thousands in interest costs when you do eventually buy.
  • When you don’t have a sufficient down payment: Buying with less than 20% down requires CMHC mortgage default insurance, which adds 2.8-4% of the mortgage amount to your costs. On a $500,000 mortgage, that’s $14,000-$20,000 in insurance premiums.
  • When you’re likely to move within 5 years: Transaction costs (land transfer tax, legal fees, realtor commissions, moving costs) typically total 7-10% of the home price. You need to own for at least 5-7 years for appreciation to offset these costs.

Owning a home you can’t afford damages your financial health far more than renting comfortably. The goal isn’t homeownership at any cost — it’s sustainable housing that leaves room for the rest of your financial life to function.

Mortgage Renewal Shock: Preparing for the Impact

Perhaps the most immediate housing-related credit threat facing Canadians is mortgage renewal shock. Millions of homeowners who locked in historically low rates during 2020-2022 are now renewing at rates 2-3 percentage points higher. The payment increases are substantial and, for many families, destabilizing.

Canadian mortgages up for renewal between 2024-2026, many facing significantly higher monthly payments

The Renewal Math

Mortgage Balance Old Rate Old Payment New Rate New Payment Monthly Increase
$300,000 2.5% $1,343 5.0% $1,745 +$402
$400,000 2.0% $1,693 4.5% $2,198 +$505
$500,000 2.5% $2,238 5.5% $3,035 +$797
$600,000 2.0% $2,540 5.0% $3,490 +$950
$700,000 2.5% $3,134 5.5% $4,249 +$1,115

An increase of $500-$1,100 per month is the equivalent of a significant pay cut. For families already living paycheque to paycheque, this increase can trigger a cascade of financial consequences including increased credit card use, missed payments, and credit score deterioration.

Strategies to Manage Mortgage Renewal Shock


  1. Start Preparing 12-18 Months Before Renewal

    Don’t wait until your renewal date to adjust your finances. Begin cutting expenses, paying down other debts, and building a cash buffer 12-18 months in advance. The earlier you start adjusting, the smoother the transition will be.


  2. Shop Around — Don't Auto-Renew

    Your current lender will send a renewal offer, but it’s rarely the best available rate. Get quotes from at least three lenders and a mortgage broker. The difference between your bank’s initial offer and the best available rate can be 0.25-0.50%, which translates to thousands of dollars over the term.


  3. Consider Extending Your Amortization

    If your new payment is unmanageable, extending your amortization period (if your equity allows it) can reduce monthly payments. Going from 20 years remaining to 25 years on a $400,000 mortgage at 5% reduces payments by approximately $250/month. You’ll pay more interest overall, but the short-term cash flow relief can prevent credit damage.


  4. Explore Variable vs. Fixed Rate Options

    If rates are expected to decline, a variable-rate mortgage may save you money as rates drop. If you need payment certainty to manage your budget, a fixed rate provides stability. Discuss the rate outlook with your mortgage broker to make an informed decision.


  5. Eliminate Other Debt Before Renewal

    Use the months before renewal to aggressively pay down credit cards, lines of credit, and other debts. Every dollar of monthly debt payment you eliminate before renewal creates room for the higher mortgage payment. Prioritize the debts with the highest minimum payments for maximum cash flow relief.


CR
Credit Resources Team — Expert Note

Mortgage renewal doesn’t have to be a crisis if you prepare. The single most valuable thing homeowners can do is get a renewal quote from a mortgage broker six months before their term ends. Brokers have access to dozens of lenders and can often beat your bank’s renewal offer by 20-50 basis points. On a $400,000 mortgage, that difference saves $4,000-$10,000 over a five-year term. It’s free to get quotes — there’s no reason not to shop around.

The Housing Crisis and Mental Health: The Credit Connection

The relationship between housing stress, mental health, and credit is well-documented but often overlooked in financial advice. Housing insecurity — whether from unaffordable rent, fear of eviction, or mortgage payment anxiety — creates chronic stress that impairs financial decision-making.

How Housing Stress Leads to Credit Damage

  • Decision fatigue: Constant financial stress depletes cognitive resources, leading to poor financial choices — impulse purchases, missed bill payments, avoidance of financial planning
  • Coping spending: Stress-driven spending on comfort items (takeout, entertainment, alcohol) increases credit card balances
  • Financial avoidance: Anxiety about finances leads some people to stop opening bills, checking accounts, or engaging with their financial situation — problems compound unnoticed
  • Relationship strain: Financial disagreements are a leading cause of relationship breakdown, and separation or divorce creates additional financial pressures and costs that can devastate credit
Percentage of Canadians who report losing sleep over housing costs, according to a 2025 Angus Reid survey

If housing stress is affecting your mental health, addressing the psychological impact is a legitimate financial strategy. Free and low-cost mental health resources in Canada include:

  • 211: Dial 2-1-1 for information on local social services, including financial counselling and mental health support
  • Wellness Together Canada: Free government-funded mental health and substance use resources
  • Provincial employee assistance programs: Many employers offer free counselling sessions
  • Credit Counselling Canada: Non-profit credit counsellors provide free financial guidance and can help with debt management plans

Provincial Perspectives: Housing Affordability Across Canada

The housing crisis affects different regions of Canada in dramatically different ways. Understanding your local market helps you make informed housing decisions.

Region Avg. Home Price Avg. 1-Bed Rent Median Household Income Price-to-Income Ratio
Greater Toronto Area $1,100,000 $2,500 $91,000 12.1x
Greater Vancouver $1,200,000 $2,700 $89,000 13.5x
Ottawa $650,000 $2,100 $99,000 6.6x
Montreal $545,000 $1,800 $72,000 7.6x
Calgary $590,000 $1,750 $98,000 6.0x
Edmonton $410,000 $1,400 $93,000 4.4x
Winnipeg $365,000 $1,300 $78,000 4.7x
Halifax $510,000 $2,000 $75,000 6.8x
Saskatchewan (avg) $315,000 $1,150 $80,000 3.9x

This table illustrates a critical point: housing affordability varies enormously across Canada. Edmonton and Saskatchewan remain relatively affordable by historical standards, while Toronto and Vancouver are among the least affordable cities in the world.

Pro Tip

Geographic Arbitrage: A Growing Canadian Trend

With the rise of remote work, an increasing number of Canadians are practicing “geographic arbitrage” — moving from expensive housing markets to more affordable ones while maintaining their higher salaries. A remote worker earning a Toronto salary in an Edmonton or Winnipeg housing market can save $1,000-$2,000/month on housing alone. This strategy requires employer flexibility and willingness to relocate, but for those who can do it, the financial impact is transformative.

Government Programs and Policies Addressing Housing

Both federal and provincial governments have introduced programs aimed at improving housing affordability. While no single program solves the crisis, several can meaningfully help individual Canadians:

Federal Programs

  • First Home Savings Account (FHSA): Allows first-time buyers to save up to $8,000/year (lifetime max $40,000) with tax-deductible contributions and tax-free withdrawals for home purchases. Combines the best features of RRSPs and TFSAs.
  • Home Buyers’ Plan (HBP): Withdraw up to $60,000 from your RRSP ($120,000 per couple) for a first home purchase, tax-free. Must repay over 15 years.
  • First-Time Home Buyers’ Tax Credit: $10,000 non-refundable tax credit (worth $1,500 in tax savings) for qualifying first-time buyers.
  • Canada Housing Benefit: Provincial/territorial programs providing rental assistance to low-income households.
  • GST/HST New Housing Rebate: Partial GST rebate on new homes priced under $450,000.

Provincial Programs (Selected)

Province Key Housing Programs Benefit
Ontario Land Transfer Tax Rebate (first-time buyers) Up to $4,000 refund
British Columbia First Time Home Buyers’ Program, BC Renter’s Tax Credit Property transfer tax exemption up to $500K; $400 renter credit
Alberta No land transfer tax Saves $5,000-$15,000+ vs. other provinces
Quebec Home Buyers’ Tax Credit Provincial tax credit for first-time buyers
Nova Scotia Down Payment Assistance Program 5% down payment assistance for eligible buyers
Manitoba Education Property Tax Credit Reduces property tax burden for homeowners and renters

Coping Strategies: Protecting Your Credit During the Housing Crisis

Regardless of whether you rent or own, the following strategies can help protect your credit and financial health during this challenging period:

For Renters


  1. Know Your Provincial Rent Control Rules

    In Ontario, rent increases for existing tenants in buildings occupied before November 2018 are limited to an annual guideline (2.5% for 2025). In BC, the maximum increase is tied to inflation. In Alberta, there’s no rent control. Knowing your rights prevents you from accepting illegal increases that strain your budget. Check your provincial tenancy board for current rules.


  2. Negotiate Your Lease

    If you’ve been a reliable tenant, you have negotiating power. Landlords face significant costs when tenants leave — cleaning, repairs, vacancy, advertising. Ask for a smaller rent increase in exchange for a longer lease commitment. Many landlords will accept 2-3% instead of the maximum allowable increase if it means keeping a good tenant.


  3. Consider Roommates or Shared Housing

    Sharing housing costs can reduce your shelter expenses by 30-50%. While this isn’t ideal for everyone, it’s a practical strategy for protecting your financial health during a period of extreme rental inflation. Even a temporary arrangement while you build savings can make a significant difference.


  4. Automate All Bill Payments

    When your budget is tight, the risk of accidentally missing a payment increases. Set up automatic payments for all credit obligations — credit cards (at least the minimum), loans, utilities. One missed payment can damage your credit score by 80-130 points and remain on your report for six years.


  5. Build an Emergency Fund — Even a Small One

    Without an emergency fund, any unexpected expense goes on credit cards. Aim for at least $1,000 as a starting buffer. Put it in a high-interest TFSA savings account where it earns interest tax-free and is instantly accessible. Even $25/week builds to $1,300 in a year.


For Homeowners


  1. Start Mortgage Renewal Preparation Early

    If your mortgage renews in the next 12-24 months, begin adjusting your budget now. Start living as if your payment is already $300-$500 higher — bank the difference. This builds a buffer and trains your budget for the new reality.


  2. Explore Income-Generating Options for Your Home

    Consider a legal basement suite, renting a room, or listing spare space on Airbnb (where permitted). Even $800-$1,500/month in rental income from a portion of your home can offset a significant portion of your mortgage increase. Check local bylaws and insurance requirements before proceeding.


  3. Address HELOC Exposure

    If you have a HELOC with a significant balance, its variable rate is directly affected by Bank of Canada rate changes. Consider converting some or all of the balance to a fixed-rate loan to eliminate rate uncertainty. At minimum, make more than interest-only payments to reduce the principal.


  4. Don't Over-Leverage Your Home Equity

    When housing values rise, it’s tempting to borrow against your increased equity for renovations, investments, or debt consolidation. But every dollar borrowed against your home increases your financial risk. In a potential market correction, you could find yourself underwater — owing more than your home is worth.


  5. Consider Whether Your Home Still Fits Your Financial Life

    This is the hardest conversation to have. If your housing costs are consistently above 40% of your income and compromising other financial goals, it may be time to consider downsizing, relocating to a more affordable area, or switching from ownership to renting in order to right-size your housing costs. Being house-poor helps no one.


The most dangerous financial position is being house-rich and cash-poor. A $700,000 home means nothing if you can’t afford to maintain it, can’t handle unexpected repairs, and can’t make your other debt payments. Housing is supposed to provide stability — when it creates financial fragility instead, it’s time to reassess.

Alternative Housing Strategies Gaining Traction in Canada

The severity of the housing crisis is driving Canadians toward creative housing solutions that were uncommon a decade ago:

Co-Ownership and Shared Equity

Programs like the CMHC’s Shared Equity Mortgage Providers Fund support shared-ownership models where multiple parties (friends, family, or organizations) co-purchase a property. This reduces individual financial burden while building equity. Legal agreements governing shared ownership are essential to protect all parties.

Laneway and Garden Suites

Many Canadian municipalities now permit laneway houses and garden suites — smaller secondary residences on existing properties. These provide additional rental income for homeowners and more affordable rental options for tenants. Cities including Toronto, Vancouver, Ottawa, and Edmonton have expanded permissions for these structures.

Housing Cooperatives

Co-op housing offers below-market rates in exchange for member participation in building governance and maintenance. While waitlists are long in most Canadian cities, co-ops provide genuinely affordable, stable housing with a strong community component. Check local co-op housing registries for availability.

Relocating to Affordable Markets

As remote work becomes permanently established, moving to more affordable regions is increasingly viable. Prairie cities (Edmonton, Regina, Saskatoon, Winnipeg), Atlantic Canada, and smaller Ontario and Quebec communities offer dramatically more affordable housing. The trade-offs include distance from family, different amenities, and potentially colder winters — but the financial impact can be life-changing.

CR
Credit Resources Team — Expert Note

Canada’s housing crisis won’t be solved overnight. It took decades to create and will take significant time, investment, and policy changes to resolve. In the meantime, Canadians need to make pragmatic decisions about where they live, how much they spend on housing, and how to protect their financial health in an environment where housing costs are fundamentally misaligned with incomes. The most important thing is to make conscious choices rather than defaulting to cultural expectations about what housing should look like.

The Long-Term Outlook: What’s Changing and What Isn’t

Understanding where the housing market is heading helps you plan your financial strategy. While no one can predict the future with certainty, several trends are likely to shape Canadian housing for years to come:

What’s Likely to Continue

  • Population growth through immigration: Canada’s ambitious immigration targets continue to drive housing demand, particularly in major urban centres
  • Supply shortages: Housing construction has consistently failed to keep pace with population growth. The CMHC estimates Canada needs 3.5 million additional homes by 2030 to restore affordability — a target that appears unlikely to be met
  • Interest rates above pandemic lows: The era of 2% mortgages appears to be over. Even as rates moderate, they’re unlikely to return to the ultra-low levels of 2020-2022
  • Rent increases in major cities: With low vacancy rates and growing demand, rents in Toronto, Vancouver, and other major cities will likely continue rising

What May Change

  • Government policy interventions: Increased focus on purpose-built rental housing, zoning reform, and density allowances may gradually increase supply
  • Remote work enabling geographic flexibility: As more employers accept permanent remote work, affordable regions may see increased demand while expensive cities see some pressure relief
  • Potential market corrections: Higher interest rates and stretched affordability make price corrections possible, though the extent and timing are unpredictable
  • New housing forms: Modular construction, 3D-printed homes, and alternative building methods may reduce construction costs over time
Additional homes CMHC estimates Canada needs by 2030 to restore housing affordability

Protecting Your Credit Score: A Specific Action Plan

Given the housing crisis’s impact on credit, here’s a focused action plan for protecting your credit score regardless of your housing situation:

Action Impact on Credit Difficulty Time to See Results
Never miss minimum payments Prevents 80-130 point drops Medium Immediate
Keep utilization below 30% Can improve score 20-50 points Medium 1-2 months
Request credit limit increases Lowers utilization ratio Easy 1-2 months
Avoid new credit applications Prevents hard inquiry hits (5-10 points each) Easy Immediate
Check credit reports for errors Can recover 20-100+ points if errors found Easy 30-90 days
Reduce total debt balances Improves debt-to-credit ratio Hard 3-12 months
Keep old accounts open Maintains credit age and available credit Easy Ongoing
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Frequently Asked Questions

Currently, most landlords in Canada do not report rent payments to Equifax or TransUnion. However, this is slowly changing. Some services like FrontLobby and Borrowell Rent Advantage now allow tenants to have rent payments reported to credit bureaus. If your landlord participates (or you subscribe to one of these services), consistent rent payments can help build your credit history. That said, missed rent payments can still damage your credit if they go to collections — so the downside risk exists even if the upside isn’t automatic. Check with your landlord about rent reporting options.

While no one can predict market movements with certainty, a widespread “crash” (prices dropping 30%+ nationally) is considered unlikely by most economists due to persistent supply shortages, continued population growth, and the fact that most Canadian homeowners have significant equity buffers. However, localized corrections of 10-20% are possible, particularly in markets that saw the largest pandemic-era price increases. For financial planning purposes, it’s prudent to prepare for a range of scenarios rather than betting on a specific outcome.

The traditional guideline of 30% of gross income remains a useful benchmark. For a household earning $80,000/year ($6,667/month), that means housing costs (rent or mortgage plus taxes, insurance, and utilities) should ideally stay below $2,000/month. In many Canadian markets, this is difficult to achieve — which is precisely why the affordability crisis causes so much financial stress. If you’re spending above 30%, it’s not a failure — but it does mean you need to be more disciplined and strategic about all other spending to protect your financial health.

Generally, it’s better to rebuild your credit before buying. A credit score below 680 will result in higher mortgage rates, and below 620, you may struggle to get approved at all through traditional lenders. The higher interest rate alone could cost you $50,000-$100,000+ over the life of the mortgage. Spend 12-24 months focused on credit improvement — paying down credit cards, making all payments on time, and correcting any errors on your credit report. The savings from qualifying for a lower mortgage rate will far exceed any benefit from buying sooner at a higher rate.

The FHSA is a registered savings account that lets first-time home buyers save up to $8,000/year (lifetime maximum $40,000) with tax-deductible contributions (like an RRSP) and tax-free withdrawals for home purchases (like a TFSA). It’s essentially the best features of both accounts combined. If you’re planning to buy a first home within the next 15 years, opening an FHSA is almost always a smart move — even if you’re not sure about the timeline. You can contribute annually, get the tax deduction now, invest the funds for growth, and use the accumulated amount toward your down payment when you’re ready. If you never buy, the funds can be transferred to your RRSP.

This is the central paradox of the housing crisis. Some strategies include: 1) Reduce housing costs by sharing with roommates, moving to a cheaper unit or area, or temporarily living with family if possible. 2) Use the FHSA for tax-deductible savings. 3) Boost income through side work or career advancement. 4) Set up automatic savings of even small amounts — $200/month into an FHSA invested in a growth ETF grows to approximately $30,000 in 10 years. 5) Explore shared equity or co-ownership arrangements. The truth is that saving for a down payment takes longer than it used to, and may require trade-offs — but it’s still achievable with a committed plan.

Conclusion: Navigating the Crisis with Eyes Open

Canada’s housing affordability crisis is real, it’s severe, and it’s not going to resolve quickly. But understanding how it affects your credit and financial health — and taking proactive steps to mitigate those effects — puts you in a stronger position than the millions of Canadians who are simply reacting to each financial blow as it lands.

Whether you’re a renter dealing with rising costs, a homeowner facing mortgage renewal shock, or someone trying to figure out if and when to buy, the principles remain the same: protect your credit by never missing payments, keep your utilization low, build whatever emergency fund you can, and make housing decisions based on financial reality rather than cultural expectation or emotion.

The housing crisis will eventually moderate — supply will increase, policies will evolve, and markets will adjust. In the meantime, your job is to make the best possible decisions with the situation as it exists, protect your credit for the future, and build the financial resilience to weather whatever comes next.

You cannot control the housing market. But you can control your response to it. Every proactive step you take — every budget adjustment, every debt payment, every credit-protecting decision — is an investment in a future where housing is not a crisis but a foundation for your financial life.

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Credit Resources Editorial Team
Canadian Credit Education Experts
Our team of certified financial educators and credit specialists helps Canadians understand and improve their credit. All content is reviewed for accuracy and updated regularly.

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