Rental Real Estate vs Other Investments

Objective comparison of advantages and risks versus financial investments

Decision invest3 min readFebruary 11, 2026
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Rental real estate and financial investments (stocks, bonds, mutual funds, ETFs) are two wealth-building vehicles with fundamentally different characteristics. Real estate offers significant leverage: with a 20% down payment, you control 100% of the asset and benefit from appreciation on its full value. Monthly rental income provides steady cashflow, and mortgage principal repayment constitutes forced savings. From a tax perspective, Canadian real estate investors can deduct mortgage interest, property taxes, insurance, maintenance, and capital cost allowance (CCA) from rental income. On the other hand, real estate is illiquid, requires active management, and carries geographic concentration risk. Financial investments offer immédiate liquidity, simple diversification, and low management fees with index ETFs. TFSAs and RRSPs provide significant tax advantages. In Quebec, investment income is taxed at the marginal rate, while capital gains benefit from a 50% inclusion rate. The decision between the two approaches depends on your personal situation, risk tolerance, and long-term goals. An AMF-certified mortgage broker can help evaluate the most advantageous financing option if you choose real estate.

Rental Real Estate vs Financial Investments: An Informed Comparison

Deciding where to invest your money deserves rigorous analysis. In Quebec and across Canada, the two major investment categories available to individuals are rental real estate and traditional financial investments (stocks, bonds, mutual funds, exchange-traded funds). Each has distinct advantages and disadvantages. An objective comparison is essential for making an informed choice based on your situation.

Leverage: The Unique Advantage of Real Estate

The most powerful advantage of real estate investing is mortgage leverage. With a 20% down payment, Canadian financial institutions regulated by OSFI lend you the remaining 80%. You thus control an asset worth five times your initial investment. If that property appreciates 5% in one year, your return on invested capital is 25% — a result impossible to replicate with unleveraged financial investments. This return comprises three components: net cashflow, mortgage principal repayment (paid by your tenants), and market value appreciation.

Liquidity and Accessibility

Financial investments shine in terms of liquidity. You can sell stocks or ETFs in seconds during market hours. Conversely, selling a property in Quebec is a process that takes several weeks or even months, involving a real estate broker, a notary, and legal timelines governed by the CCQ. Moreover, financial markets are accessible starting from just a few dollars through online brokerage platforms, while real estate demands substantial initial capital.

Tax Comparison in Quebec

Taxation plays a decisive role in any investment's net return. In Quebec, rental income is taxed at the combined fédéral-provincial marginal rate (up to 53.31% for the highest bracket), but numerous deductions significantly reduce taxable income: mortgage interest, property taxes, insurance, maintenance, management fees, and capital cost allowance (CCA). Financial investments benefit from specific advantages: TFSAs offer completely tax-free growth and withdrawals, RRSPs allow an immédiate deduction with tax deferred until withdrawal, and capital gains are taxed at only a 50% inclusion rate. Canadian dividends benefit from the dividend tax credit.

Active vs Passive Management

Rental real estate requires active management: finding and screening tenants, handling maintenance, complying with CCQ and Tribunal administratif du logement (TAL) obligations, and tracking market trends. Some investors appreciate this direct control, while others prefer the simplicity of a diversified index ETF portfolio that requires minimal annual rebalancing. Hiring a professional property manager reduces the workload but eats into returns by 5% to 10% of gross income.

  • Real estate: powerful leverage, steady cashflow, significant tax advantages, direct control, but illiquid and requires active management
  • Stocks and ETFs: immédiate liquidity, easy diversification, minimal fees, tax shelters (TFSA, RRSP), but no accessible leverage and short-term volatility
  • Bonds and GICs: guaranteed principal (GICs), predictable income, but historically lower returns and erosion by inflation
  • Combined approach: the most robust strategy pairs real estate for leverage and cashflow with financial investments for liquidity and diversification

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the historical return on rental real estate in Quebec?
Total return on rental real estate combines cashflow, mortgage principal repayment, and property appreciation. Historically in Quebec, residential real estate appreciation ranges from 3% to 5% per year. With mortgage leverage, the return on invested capital (down payment) can reach 10% to 20% or more annually.
Do stocks offer better returns than real estate?
The average annual return of the S&P/TSX composite index historically sits around 7% to 9% with dividends reinvested. Without leverage, stocks tend to offer higher gross returns than real estate. However, mortgage leverage allows real estate to outperform stock market returns on invested capital, provided cashflow is positive and the market does not decline.
What are the tax advantages of rental real estate in Canada?
Investors can deduct from rental income: mortgage interest, property taxes, insurance, maintenance and repair costs, management fees, legal and accounting fees, and capital cost allowance (CCA). These deductions reduce taxable rental income, sometimes to zero.
Can I combine real estate and financial investments?
Absolutely, and this is the strategy recommended by most financial planners. Real estate provides leverage and cashflow, while financial investments in a TFSA or RRSP ensure liquidity and diversification. The ideal balance depends on your personal situation.
What is leverage in real estate?
Leverage means using borrowed money (the mortgage) to amplify your return. With a 20% down payment, you control an asset worth 5 times your investment. If the property appreciates 5%, your return on the down payment is 25% (5% multiplied by 5). Keep in mind that leverage also amplifies losses if the market declines.

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Educational information only. This does not constitute financial advice under the Act Respecting the Distribution of Financial Products and Services (LDPSF). Consult an AMF-certified mortgage broker before making any financial decision.

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