Buying your first home in the GTA, without losing your nerve.
The Toronto starter-home math is its own animal. Here's the walkthrough I give every first-time buyer before we run a single number.
Buying your first home in the GTA is a different math problem than buying your first home in most of Canada. Sticker prices are higher, the down-payment math hits different thresholds, parent co-signing is more common, and the difference between a starter condo and a starter detached can be $500,000+. Here's a walkthrough that respects all of that: how the process actually works in Toronto and across Ontario, what you'll need, and how to avoid the pitfalls I see most.
The four boxes a lender ticks before saying yes
Every lender, A-tier or B-tier, runs the same four checks. The bar shifts a bit between lenders, but the categories don't. Here's what they're looking for, with the GTA reality of each.
- Credit. A-lenders typically want 680 or higher. 720+ unlocks the best rates. If you're under 680, options narrow to alt-A or B-lender pricing, which is real but more expensive. We can almost always find a path; the question is the rate.
- Income. Lenders want it stable and verifiable. Salaried T4 income is the cleanest. Self-employed, contract, or commission income still works in the GTA (a sizeable share of my clients), but the documentation is heavier and we need two years of NOAs.
- Down payment. The federal minimum is 5 percent on the first $500,000 of the purchase price, then 10 percent on the portion between $500K and $1.5M. In Toronto, where many starter homes cross the $500K threshold by a wide margin, that second tier matters more than buyers expect.
- Debt-service ratios. Your total monthly housing costs plus other debt servicing has to fit within lender thresholds (typically 39 percent and 44 percent of gross income, respectively). Car loans, lines of credit, and student loans all eat into your maximum mortgage. The fix when ratios are tight: pay down or extend the highest-rate debt before we apply.
Walking the open-house circuit before pre-approval is how Toronto first-time buyers fall in love with a $1.1M house and discover they qualify for $850K. Reverse the order. Get the pre-approval, learn the actual ceiling (with all-in closing costs already netted out), then look at listings within that window. The pre-approval also locks in a rate for 120 days, which can save you real money in a moving-rate environment.
The real number you need saved (a Toronto example)
Most first-time buyers underestimate the all-in cost because they fixate on the down payment. Take a $750,000 condo in downtown Toronto, which is the most common starter purchase I write in the GTA. Here's what actually leaves your bank account on or before closing:
- Down payment: $50,000 (5 percent on the first $500k plus 10 percent on the next $250k)
- Toronto land transfer tax (provincial + municipal, before first-time rebates): roughly $22,000
- First-time buyer rebates (Ontario + Toronto combined): minus up to $8,475
- Legal fees: $1,500 to $2,500
- Status certificate review (condos) or home inspection (freeholds): $400 to $600
- Title insurance: $250 to $500
- Moving costs and immediate move-in essentials: $2,000 to $5,000
The Toronto-specific gotcha: the municipal land transfer tax effectively doubles your provincial LTT bill. Buyers moving from outside the city are routinely surprised by that line. We map your true all-in budget at pre-approval, not at closing, so it's never a surprise.
The CMHC premium, and why it isn't always worth avoiding
Below 20 percent down, your mortgage is "high-ratio" and requires default insurance, written by CMHC, Sagen, or Canada Guaranty. The premium gets folded into your mortgage so it doesn't come out of pocket on closing day, but it does get amortized over the life of the loan, so it's worth understanding what you're paying for it. The premium scales with how little you put down:
- 5 to 9.99 percent down: 4.00 percent premium on the mortgage amount
- 10 to 14.99 percent down: 3.10 percent premium
- 15 to 19.99 percent down: 2.80 percent premium
- 20 percent or more down: no insurance required
The Toronto-specific consideration: stretching to hit 20 percent on a $900,000 GTA home means having $180,000 saved before you can buy, which often means waiting another two to three years and competing with rising prices in the meantime. For many first-time buyers in this market, the premium is the price of getting in earlier, and the math frequently works in favour of going in at 5 to 10 percent and refinancing out of insurance later. We model both scenarios so you can decide on numbers, not vibes.
The step-by-step process, GTA edition
- Get pre-approved. We'll pull your credit, verify your income, and confirm your maximum purchase price, including how the Toronto land-transfer tax shifts your true budget.
- House shop with confidence. Your realtor now knows your price ceiling and can focus you on the right listings, whether that's a Lakeshore condo, an East York semi, or a starter detached out toward Pickering.
- Make an offer. In a competitive GTA market this often means waiving conditions; I'll have you fully underwritten beforehand so the financing condition isn't what loses you the home.
- Submit the file. Once your offer is accepted, I package the deal and submit it to the lender alongside the final pieces (appraisal order, lawyer info, default insurance application if applicable). I stay on top of the lender so deadlines don't slip in the financing window.
- Close. Your lawyer handles the transfer of funds and title. You get the keys, plus a broker who'll be there at renewal, refinance, and every step after.
Between pre-approval and closing, your file is in a holding pattern but it's not frozen. Lenders re-pull credit and re-verify employment in the final week, often without warning. If you've taken a new car loan, signed a furniture financing plan, switched jobs, or run up cards on closing-prep purchases, the deal can fall apart on closing day. I've seen it happen in the GTA more than once. Tell me before you sign anything new during this window. Even an "interest-free for 18 months" couch plan counts as new debt to a lender.
Questions first-time buyers ask me
Should we go condo or detached for a first home?
My parents want to help. What are the actual options?
Do I need to remove my financing condition in this market?
What's my actual ceiling, in dollars?
The first 24 hours
Pre-approval is free, non-binding, and turns around in roughly 24 hours once I have your basics. We figure out the real ceiling, lock in a rate for 120 days, and you walk into your first open house knowing exactly what you can offer. Let's start there.
Tell me where you are and we'll start there.
Just-curious to seriously-house-hunting. Every conversation starts the same way: your situation, the GTA reality, your real ceiling.