Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Majority Of First-Time Buyers Maxed Out Budgets To Buy A Home: CMHC

The Canadian Press, 19 Oct, 2018 01:38 PM
  • Majority Of First-Time Buyers Maxed Out Budgets To Buy A Home: CMHC
TORONTO — The country's real estate market may be taking a breather, but a new survey suggests the vast majority of recent homebuyers are maxing out their budgets to purchase their first homes.
 
 
In its annual mortgage consumer study, Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. found that 85 per cent of first-time buyers reported spending the most they could afford on their property.
 
 
Despite this, 76 per cent say they were still confident that they would be able to make their monthly mortgage payments.
 
 
Sixty per cent of first-timers and 69 per cent of repeat buyers reported having "sufficient assets" such as investments or other properties to help them if they were to run into financial trouble with their mortgage.
 
 
The federal housing agency, which has been conducting the survey since 1999, says housing affordability continues to be the most important factor cited among first-time and repeat homebuyers, when compared to other factors such as a property's neighbourhood, proximoty to work and condition.
 
 
More than half of those concerned say their top worries included unforeseen costs, paying too much for their home and rising interest rates.
 
 
The Bank of Canada has raised its key interest rate target four times to 1.5 per cent since July 2017. It is widely anticipated that the central bank will announce another hike at its next meeting on Oct. 24.
 
 
Some housing markets across the country have already been feeling the cooling effects of higher interest rates coupled with some recently introduced measures like the new mortgage stress test and a 15 per cent foreign buyer tax in Ontario.
 
 
Earlier this week, the Canadian Real Estate Association reported that national home sales fell for the first time in five months in September amid weakening markets in Vancouver and Toronto.
 
 
Despite prices also flattening, the outlook on the national real estate market remains positive.   
 
 
The CMHC survey found that 80 per cent of homebuyers polled still believe that buying property is a good long-term financial investment. Sixty-six per cent believed their home value would increase within the next 12 months.
 
 
The online survey, which was conducted in April, polled more than 4,000 Canadians who became mortgage consumers in the last year.
 
 
The polling industry's professional body, the Marketing Research and Intelligence Association, says online surveys cannot be assigned a margin of error as they are not a random sample and therefore are not necessarily representative of the whole population.

MORE National ARTICLES

28-Yr-Old Surrey Man Charged After North Delta Road Rage With Bear Spray

28-Yr-Old Surrey Man Charged After North Delta Road Rage With Bear Spray
A Surrey man has been charged after an altercation on the 11200 block of 72nd Avenue in Delta.

28-Yr-Old Surrey Man Charged After North Delta Road Rage With Bear Spray

Police Say Money With Anti-Semitic Messages Lead To Inciting Hate Charge

Police Say Money With Anti-Semitic Messages Lead To Inciting Hate Charge
Police in Medicine Hat say that when the business called them last week about the money, they arrested the man and searched his backpack.

Police Say Money With Anti-Semitic Messages Lead To Inciting Hate Charge

Close Call For Two Men In Flooded Elevator During Heavy Rain In Toronto

Close Call For Two Men In Flooded Elevator During Heavy Rain In Toronto
Two men rescued from rapidly rising waters in an elevator that flooded during an intense rainstorm in Toronto said focusing on family and faith kept them going as they grappled with the fact that they could be moments away from death.

Close Call For Two Men In Flooded Elevator During Heavy Rain In Toronto

Firefighters Brace For Intense Lightning, Minimal Rain, More Wildfires In B.C.

Firefighters Brace For Intense Lightning, Minimal Rain, More Wildfires In B.C.
BURNS LAKE, B.C. — The latest weather forecast in British Columbia calls for a cooling trend, but provincial firefighting officials say they are bracing for the cold front to bring intense lightning capable of igniting more forest fires.

Firefighters Brace For Intense Lightning, Minimal Rain, More Wildfires In B.C.

Saudi Arabia: Justin Trudeau Says Canada Will Continue To Be Firm

Saudi Arabia: Justin Trudeau Says Canada Will Continue To Be Firm
The kingdom has also cancelled new trading with Canada, rescinded student scholarships and recalled thousands of Saudi students studying in Canada and barred Canadian wheat imports.

Saudi Arabia: Justin Trudeau Says Canada Will Continue To Be Firm

N.B. Man Dies After Single Wasp Sting, Had No Idea He Was Allergic

N.B. Man Dies After Single Wasp Sting, Had No Idea He Was Allergic
 A 43-year-old New Brunswick man has died after being stung by a wasp, although his family says he had not previously displayed signs of an allergy.

N.B. Man Dies After Single Wasp Sting, Had No Idea He Was Allergic