what-every-first-time-home-buyer-should-know
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What Every First-Time Home Buyer Should Know

The Recipe You Need to Succeed Attend our seminar where we’ll give you real answers, home-buying strategies, and a recipe for success proven by our clients. We will provide you with a step-by-step guide with everything you need to know when it comes to buying your first home. Even if you are not a first-time buyer, all buyers are welcome! Our First-Time Home Buyer Seminar will offer you the perfect roadmap for your buying journey, where you can expect: In-depth insight into market trends A comprehensive understanding of the buying process, including where to start Clarity on what you can afford and how to prepare your finances At the end of the seminar, you will also connect one-on-one with our award-winning agents. With your dedicated guide, you can ask all your questions and receive valuable tips that reflect your unique circumstances. Whether you are looking to buy a pre-construction or a resale property, our GTA-Homes agents are prepared to walk with you while connecting you with other reliable real estate professionals you will need to have on your team. Decision to Rent or Buy Although buying a home may seem out of reach, most renters don’t realize how much money they’re actually spending each year on someone else’s mortgage and profit. Owning a home almost always comes out ahead because your monthly rental payments could have been helping you build equity in your own home instead! It also helps to factor in tax benefits, property appreciation, and other incentives when you buy. Let’s compare the numbers to give you a clear picture. If you are currently renting at $2,500 per month, plus about $130 in utilities, you’re paying $2,630 monthly or $31,560 a year. This money will only cover your cost of living and won’t do much else for you. It primarily goes toward paying off your landlord’s mortgage. Now let’s look at the monthly carrying costs of owning your own home. Let’s say you purchased a $500,000 home with a 20% down payment to avoid additional mortgage insurance fees and took on a fixed 30-year mortgage at 4% interest. Your monthly payments will need to include your mortgage payments, property taxes (1% of the property’s value annually), home insurance, and utilities.

buying-with-5%-down:-what-you-gain-(and-what-you-give-up)
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Buying with 5% Down: What You Gain (and What You Give Up)

You’ve got two choices: Save for years to hit 20% down. Buy with 5% down and get in the market now. Both come with baggage. One delays your wealth. The other costs more to build it. If you’re staring down today’s home prices thinking “I’ll never save enough”—you’re not alone. But before you jump into a 5% down mortgage, understand this: Getting in early isn’t free. It just feels like it. Let’s break down exactly how low-down payment mortgages work, where they help, and where they bite you. ⚙️ The Mechanics: How 5% Down Works in Canada Here’s what CMHC and the other insurers allow: Under $500,000? Minimum 5% down. $500K to $999K? 5% on the first $500K + 10% on the rest. Up to $1.5 million? As of December 15, 2024, you can now qualify for an insured mortgage—with the same down payment structure: 5% on the first $500K and 10% on the portion between $500K and $1.5 million. This new $1.5M cap opens the door for more buyers in high-cost markets to enter the game with a smaller upfront investment. And if you put down less than 20%, you’re taking on default insurance—a premium tacked onto your mortgage. That cost? Between 2.8% and 4% of the loan, depending on your down payment. And yes, it’s usually rolled in, which means you pay interest on the insurance too. ✅ What You Gain by Putting Down Less 1. Faster Market Access Waiting to save 20% while home prices climb is like trying to fill a leaky bucket. A 5% down payment gets you in the game now, not 3 years from now when prices are higher and you’re still behind. 2. Insured Mortgage = Lower Rates Lenders love insured mortgages. The risk’s off their books. That means they’ll often give you better interest rates than someone with 20% down and no insurance. 3. Optionality Buying with 5% down doesn’t lock up your liquidity. You keep cash in the bank. And if life happens—job change, relationship shift, whatever—you’re not deep underwater. ❌ What You Sacrifice (and It’s Not Small) 1. Higher Monthly Payments You’re borrowing more. And adding insurance to your loan. That’s a double whammy. The monthly hit is higher—no way around it. 2. More Interest Over Time Bigger mortgage = more interest. Even if your rate is sharper, the total interest paid is higher because your loan balance is bloated. 3. Slower Equity Buildup In the first few years, you’re barely touching principal. Most of your payment feeds the bank. Add that to the higher balance and you’re building wealth at a crawl. 4. Less Refinance Flexibility Insured mortgages restrict your options. Want to pull equity out later? Refinance with a different lender? Good luck. Your flexibility is capped unless you re-qualify and re-insure (if even allowed). 📈 The Power of Leverage: Turning 5% into 20% With 5% down, you’re getting 20x leverage on your money. That means for every 1% the property value increases, you get a 20% return on your initial investment. Let’s break it down: Purchase Price: $300,000 Down Payment (5%): $15,000 If the property value rises 1% to $303,000, that’s a $3,000 gain. Return on your $15,000 down payment? 20% ($3,000 ÷ $15,000) This is one of the reasons homeownership often outpaces renting in the long run. Even modest price increases can significantly boost your equity when you’re highly leveraged. Think about it: If you had to save 100% of the cash to buy the property, do you realistically believe you would ever be able to own a home? Depending on market conditions, the longer you wait, the more ground you could lose. Most people think mortgage default insurance only protects the lender. But it can also protect you. Some insurers offer support programs to help homeowners through temporary financial troubles—like a job loss, illness, divorce, or natural disaster. These programs typically work by: Offering payment deferrals during a tough period Extending amortization periods to lower payments Setting up shared payment plans (where the insurer covers part of the mortgage payment) Adding missed payments to the loan balance (capitalizing arrears) Restructuring mortgage terms to fit a new financial reality For example, Sagen’s Homeowner Assistance Program (HOAP) has helped over 63,000 Canadian families avoid losing their homes, with a success rate of over 90% . Knowing that your default insurance can act as a safety net if unexpected hardships arise can provide extra peace of mind. 🎯 The Real Question Do you want in now—knowing the trade-offs—or do you want to wait, save more, and potentially miss out? There’s no right answer. If your income is stable, you’re staying put for 5+ years, and you’ve stress-tested your budget? 5% down might be a smart move. But if you’re stretching, or banking on appreciation to bail you out? Be careful. A hot market can cool. And higher payments don’t feel so hot when rates jump or life gets messy. Final Take Buying with 5% down is like using a credit card to grab a seat at the wealth table. You’ll pay for it—but you’ll own something. It’s not free. It’s not cheap. But it might be smarter than waiting—depending on your market, your goals, and your risk tolerance. So don’t ask, “Can I buy with 5%?” Ask: “What will it cost me if I don’t?” Then run the numbers. Talk to a real mortgage strategist. And make

High Ratio Mortgage
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What Is a High Ratio Mortgage?

What Is a Ratio Mortgage? In the context of conventional and high ratio mortgages, the ratio mortgage refers to the relationship between the size of the mortgage loan and the amount of the down payment the investor is willing to place when purchasing a property. It is also known as the loan-to-value ratio. The down payment is…

Vancouver View Properties
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Listings of Metro Vancouver View Properties updated by the hour

Stan Direct: 604-202-1412E-mail: ssteam3000@gmail.com Click the first two links below to view the hottest Vancouver View Properties MLS Listings, constantly updated every 1-2 hours. Play with the searches. Sort the listings by clicking the description at the top of each column. Click on the SOLD properties to see their actual selling price. Click on each property…

Vancouver Fixer-Uppers and Renovation Projects
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Listings of Metro Vancouver Fixer-Uppers and Renovation Projects updated by the hour

Stan Direct: 604-202-1412E-mail: ssteam3000@gmail.com Click the four highlighted links below to view the MLS® listings of Vancouver Fixer Uppers and Renovation Projects, constantly updated every 1-2 hours. Play with the searches. Sort the listings by clicking the description at the top of each column. Click on the SOLD properties to see their actual selling price. Click…

Buying a New Home: 10 Mistakes to Avoid
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Buying a New Home: 10 Mistakes to Avoid

WARNING: Buying a new house or a condo from the developer’s sales office is always very exciting, but if you are not very familiar with the whole process, it might cost you THOUSANDS of $$$ and many legal problems. Remember that the new development sale offices are established by the developer, and the agents working there are…

Down Payment Optimization
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Down Payment Optimization: How to Enhance Your Purchasing Power and Improve Your Lifestyle

When it comes to buying a home, most buyers instinctively think the bigger the down payment, the better. It seems logical—reduce your mortgage and pay less interest over time. But what if there’s a smarter way to allocate your down payment? One that enhances your purchasing power and even improves your lifestyle, without costing more…

Can’t Buy Alone
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Can’t Buy Alone: Why Today’s Homebuyers Are Leaning on Family to Enter the Market

In today’s Canadian housing market, the dream of homeownership remains alive—but for a growing number of first-time buyers, that dream is only possible with a family safety net. According to the 2025 CMHC Mortgage Consumer Survey, more Canadians are entering the market for the first time, but they’re not doing it alone. From gifted down payments…