Condo or house: understanding the mortgage differences
For a first-time buyer in Quebec, the choice between a condo and a house is often dictated by available budget and desired location. But beyond the purchase price, these two property types carry very different financial and legal obligations that directly affect mortgage qualification and long-term total cost of ownership.
Divided co-ownership in Quebec: legal framework
Divided co-ownership is governed by articles 1038 to 1109 of the Civil Code of Quebec. When you buy a condo, you become the owner of your fraction (private unit) and co-owner of the common areas (land, lobby, elevator, shared parking). The syndicate of co-owners, composed of all co-owners, is responsible for administering the common areas. Each co-owner must pay monthly charges, commonly called condo fees, which cover routine maintenance, building insurance, administrative management, and contributions to the contingency fund.
- Contingency fund
- A mandatory financial reserve established by the syndicate of co-owners to finance major repairs and replacements of common components. Since Bill 16, adopted in 2019 and progressively implemented from 2020, the fund must receive at least 5% of the syndicate's annual budget and be subject to a professional study.
Impact of condo fees on mortgage qualification
Lenders and mortgage insurers (CMHC, Sagen, Canada Guaranty) include the full monthly condo fees in the gross debt service (GDS) ratio calculation. Concretely, if your condo fees are $350 per month, this amount is added to your mortgage payment, property taxes, and heating costs to déterminé your GDS. Consequently, at equal income, a condo buyer will often qualify for a lower loan amount than a house buyer, where this expense item does not exist. This is a factor that first-time buyers frequently underestimate.
Single-family home: autonomy and responsibilities
A single-family home offers complete freedom in terms of renovations, exterior landscaping, and maintenance decisions, without needing syndicate approval. From a mortgage standpoint, the absence of condo fees generally allows greater borrowing capacity. However, the owner must budget all maintenance costs themselves: roofing, foundations, heating systems, plumbing, landscaping. The general rule suggests setting aside between 1% and 3% of the property value annually for maintenance. For a $400,000 property, this represents $4,000 to $12,000 per year.
Comparing total cost of ownership
- Condo: mortgage payment + monthly condo fees + property taxes (often lower) + co-owner home insurance
- House: mortgage payment + property taxes (often higher) + full home insurance + routine maintenance and reserves for major work
- The monthly cost of a condo and house can be similar once all items are accounted for
- Land appreciation is generally stronger for a house, as land gains value independently of the building