Ratios are tight
GDS is about 39.0% and TDS is about 44.0%. The closer those ratios get to common lender limits, the less room remains for repairs, job changes, or renewal-rate pressure.
Use this page to estimate a realistic home-price ceiling after debt ratios, property taxes, condo fees, and the mortgage stress test all have their say.
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Estimated max home price
$712,889
Estimated mortgage room: $592,889
Stress-tested payment room
$4,113
Qualifying rate used: 6.89%
GDS / TDS
39.0% / 44.0%
A quick way to see whether the scenario is already brushing up against common underwriting limits.
Cash to close estimate
$133,833
Closing costs only: $13,833
Affordability source check
Debt-service, stress-test, and insured-mortgage context should be checked against official mortgage guidance and lender criteria.
Decision support
Limitations
Scenario discipline
This shows how quickly approval range can change when rates move, even if income stays the same.
Plain-English interpretation
This scenario is already close to common underwriting limits. Even if approval is possible, a small rate move or condo-fee change can make the budget feel much tighter than the headline result suggests.
GDS limit view
About $4,113 of the monthly budget is available for principal and interest after taxes, heating, and 50% of condo fees.
TDS limit view
Existing debt payments reduce the room further. In this case, the TDS-based payment cap is $4,117.
Result interpretation
This scenario estimates a maximum home price near $712,889 using a qualifying payment of $4,113 at 6.89%. Treat it as a planning boundary, not a spending target.
Ratios are tight
GDS is about 39.0% and TDS is about 44.0%. The closer those ratios get to common lender limits, the less room remains for repairs, job changes, or renewal-rate pressure.
Debt affects approval
Existing monthly debt of $600 directly reduces the mortgage payment room in this model.
Cash after closing
Cash needed for down payment plus estimated closing costs is about $133,833. Keep a repair and emergency buffer outside the down payment.
Result quality check
Treat the output as a planning estimate. The sections below show the assumptions used, Canadian caveats, official source checks, and safer next steps.
Calculator guidance
This result may help you compare an estimated approval ceiling with a safer household budget before treating $712,889 as a realistic purchase target.
Related content
Use these next if the maximum price looks possible but you still need to check payment pressure, cash to close, or rent-vs-buy tradeoffs.
Translate an estimated purchase price into payment, insurance, interest, and closing-cost pressure.
guideSeparate lender approval from a safer household budget.
guideCompare ownership cost, flexibility, and opportunity cost before buying.
Important warnings
A lender-style affordability estimate can still be too aggressive for a real household budget.
Continue planning
Mortgage payment calculator
Translate the approval range into monthly payment, interest, and amortization pressure.
FHSA Calculator
Strengthen the down-payment path if cash to close is the constraint.
Mortgage prepayments vs investing
Compare mortgage decisions against investing tradeoffs after affordability is clear.
Next step links
The next move depends on whether the result is limited by debt ratios, cash to close, or the stress test.
Translate approval into payment
Test the monthly payment, interest, amortization, and prepayment pressure at the estimated price range.
Compare buying against renting
A qualifying price is not automatically the better choice if rent remains competitive.
Strengthen the down-payment path
If cash to close is the bottleneck, revisit FHSA or TFSA planning before moving the target price.
2026 affordability checklist
The planner starts from gross household income, subtracts taxes, heat, condo-fee treatment, and existing debt, then backs into a mortgage size using the stress-test rate.
Use it before you shop listings too aggressively. It is especially helpful when you already know your income and debt profile but need a saner purchase range.
People often confuse approval range with a safe long-term budget, understate condo fees and property taxes, or ignore how much other debt compresses the mortgage size.
Last updated: April 22, 2026
The tool estimates available mortgage payment room by applying common GDS and TDS-style thresholds to gross income, then converts that payment into a mortgage amount using the stress-test rate and the selected amortization.
Self-reviewed by: Gourav Kumar
Checked against official Canadian source material where applicable; not reviewed by a licensed financial advisor, accountant, mortgage broker, or tax professional unless explicitly stated.
Educational planning estimate only. Actual lender approval depends on credit, product choice, documentation, and institution-specific underwriting.
Real Canadian scenario
Assume a household earning $120,000, carrying $450/month of non-mortgage debt, and saving a $75,000 down payment wants to know whether the listing price or the stress test is the real constraint.
The planner estimates a maximum home-price range and shows how that range changes as the tested rate rises.
If the stress-test line is meaningfully lower than the quoted-rate line, the buyer should treat the result as an approval ceiling, not a comfortable monthly budget.
Limitation: Actual approval depends on lender underwriting, credit, documentation, property type, insurance rules, and exact debt treatment.
Official sources
Use these Canadian references to check mortgage qualification, insurance, and consumer guidance before treating an affordability estimate as a purchase budget.
References
Use these checkpoints when you want to turn the estimate into a real pre-approval conversation or a production content update.
OSFI and lender qualification guidance
Use these sources to confirm stress-test treatment, debt-ratio thresholds, and underwriting language.
Open sourceProperty-tax and condo-fee reality check
Before trusting a listing budget, verify the actual tax bill, heating profile, and recurring condo obligations for the specific property type.
Closing-cost breakdown
Provincial and municipal transfer taxes, legal fees, inspection, and title insurance can materially change the amount of cash you need beyond the down payment.
Pre-approval or broker worksheet
This is the practical check for whether your document set, credit profile, and chosen product support the planning scenario.
Educational information only
Easy Finance Tools provides educational calculators and general information only. Results are estimates and are not financial, investment, tax, legal, or mortgage advice. Always verify details with official sources or a qualified professional.