Down payment 5–10–15% or 20%: what real impact does it have on your mortgage in Quebec?
5–10–15% or 20% Down Payment: What’s the Real Impact on Your Mortgage in Quebec?
You’ve found the ideal home, an interesting plex, or a rental property for your first investment… but how much should you put down?
5%? 10%? 15%? Or wait until you have 20%?
In Quebec, this choice directly impacts:
- your qualification ability;
- the cost of your Mortgage (interest + insurance premium);
- your future flexibility (refinancing, projects, investments);
- your risk level as a first-time buyer.
Let’s concretely see what each down payment level changes for your first-time buyer mortgage… and for your rental property, multiplex, or even commercial real estate projects.
1. Reminder of basic rules in Canada / Quebec
a) Minimum down payment for a Owner-occupied Home
For a primary residence (house, condo, 2–4 unit plex with owner occupation):
- Price up to $500,000:
- Minimum down payment: 5%
- Mortgage must be insured (CMHC, Sagen, Canada Guaranty)
- Portion between $500,000 and $1,000,000:
- 5% on the first $500,000
- 10% on the portion above $500,000
- Beyond (up to ~$1.5M according to recent rules):
- Possibility of having an insured loan up to this ceiling, with required minimum down payment and compliance with the stress test.
- 20% down payment or more:
- Mortgage uninsured (conventional), no CMHC premium, amortization often possible up to 30 years.
For a first-time buyer, there are now programs allowing a 30-year amortization even with less than 20% down, but with a premium of about 0.2% on the mortgage loan insurance premium.
b) Rental property, plex, and rental investments
- Plex / Rental property 2–4 units occupied by owner:
- Minimum down payment possible starting from 5% (depending on income, type of building, insurer’s conditions).
- 100% rental (pure investment):
- Minimum down payment 20% (often more, 20–25%), uninsured mortgage.
- Multiplex 5+ units and Commercial building (Retail, offices, industrial, mixed):
- “Commercial” financing
- Down payment typically 25%+ (sometimes 35% depending on risk, location, revenue quality).
The Down payment Mortgage therefore does not have the same reality whether you’re buying your home, a Plex occupied by you, or a Commercial income property.
2. 5% Down Payment: the First-Time Buyer’s Springboard
Advantages
- Rapid access to ownership: ideal for a first-time buyer who wants to stop paying rent.
- Allows you to benefit earlier from the potential appreciation in value of the home or plex.
- Possibility to choose a amortization up to 30 years for a first-time buyer mortgage, which reduces monthly payments (but increases total interest cost).
Disadvantages
- Obligatory mortgage insurance (CMHC / Sagen / Canada Guaranty):
- Premium may exceed 4% of the loan amount (added to the Mortgage).
- Premium if amortization is 30 years with 5% down payment.
- Higher total interest cost (you’re financing a larger amount, premium included).
- Less equity in the property:
- More vulnerable if value falls.
- Less room for future refinancing or another Investment (rental, second home, etc.).
In summary: 5% down payment on a home = you enter the market faster, but at the cost of a heavier Mortgage and expensive insurance.
3. 10–15% Down Payment: the “balance” zone
With 10% or 15% down, you’re still in the insured mortgage world, but with lower insurance premiums.
Advantages
- Lower CMHC premium:
- The higher the down payment, the lower the insurance premium percentage.
- Lower monthly payment than with 5% down for the same home.
- Reduced risk:
- You start with more equity in the property (home or plex).
- Better protection if the market corrects.
Concrete impact on the Mortgage
For the same income:
- It’s often easier for a first-time buyer to qualify with 10–15% down, because:
- The loan amount is lower;
- The monthly payment (or biweekly) is lighter;
- Debt ratios are better respected.
In summary: 10–15% down mortgage is often the best compromise between access and safety for a first-time buyer.
4. 20% and up: the classic down payment threshold
At 20% down payment:
- Your Mortgage becomes conventional (uninsured).
- No mortgage insurance premium is added to the financed amount.
- Most institutions accept an amortization up to 30 years (though many buyers choose 25 years).
Advantages
- Lower total interest cost in the long term since you’re no longer financing the premium.
- More refinancing flexibility:
- Possibility to release equity for future investments (rental property, multiplex, countryside home, etc.).
- Better position to negotiate terms at renewal.
- Greater resilience:
- If property value declines, you generally remain in positive territory.
Limitations
- The challenge is to assemble 20% of down payment in a market where prices have risen.
- Waiting too long to accumulate 20% carries an opportunity cost:
- Possible price increases;
- Potential rise in interest rates;
- Additional years spent renting.
In summary: 20% down payment is the healthiest long-term solution, but not always realistic in the short term for a first-time buyer.
5. And for a rental property, multiplex, or commercial building?
a) Rental property (2–4 units)
- With owner occupancy (you live in one unit):
- Minimum down payment sometimes starting from 5–10%, subject to insurer’s rules.
- Possible insured mortgage, with a premium similar to a home.
- 100% rental (pure investment):
- Rental property down payment minimum 20%, sometimes 25% depending on the situation.
- No mortgage insurance, mortgage purely conventional.
b) Multiplex 5+ units and Commercial building
For a 5+ unit multiplex or a Commercial building (retail, office, industrial, mixed):
- Switch to commercial financing:
- Detailed analysis of building income and expenses;
- Down payment commonly 25–35%;
- Different terms and rates, higher fees;
- Depreciation and terms specified on a case-by-case basis.
Investment conclusion:
The more "complex" the building (number of units, commercial use, ground-floor retail, etc.), the higher the down payment required. Leverage is powerful, but so is risk; a clear strategy is essential.
6. How your Down Payment REALLY influences your future finances
Regardless of property type (home, plex, rental building, Commercial), your down payment level affects:
- Mortgage cost
- Less down payment = more borrowed capital + insurance premium.
- More down payment = less interest paid over time.
- Your future borrowing capacity
- A first purchase with a “tight” mortgage (little equity, high payments) makes it harder:
- to refinance;
- to buy another property;
- to consolidate debts.
- Your risk tolerance
- With 5% down, a market correction can wipe out your equity.
- With 15–20%, you have a cushion.
- Your management flexibility
- A lighter mortgage allows you to absorb rate increases, temporary income loss, or major renovations more easily.
7. So, 5–10–15% or 20%: which to choose?
- Are you a first-time buyer and the market is rising quickly?
- A 5–10% down mortgage can be a good springboard, especially if you’re disciplined to pay down faster or refinance intelligently later.
- Do you already have savings or a good RESP (RRSP) available?
- Target 10–15% to reduce the insurance premium and improve your security without getting blocked in renting too long.
- Do you already have substantial capital or aim quickly for investment (rental property, plex, Commercial)?
- Reaching 20% down payment on your first home puts you in an excellent position to build a real estate portfolio (plex, multiplex, commercial building, etc.) with better leverage and less stress.
Conclusion: the best down payment is the one that supports your strategy
The real question isn’t just “how much down payment minimum can I make?”, but:
“What down payment level best aligns my Mortgage, my investment plans, and my risk tolerance?”
- 5%: quick access, higher cost, more risk.
- 10–15%: excellent cost/security balance for a first-time mortgage.
- 20%+: lower long-term cost, more flexibility for the future (rental property, multiplex, Commercial).
If you’re unsure between several scenarios (Home down payment 5% vs 10% vs 20%, rental property down payment 20%, etc.), the next step is to calculate your payments and the total cost of each option.
A mortgage broker in Quebec can simulate different Financing structures (residential, plex, Commercial) to help you choose the down payment strategy that best serves your life plan… not just today’s purchase.