GTA families spend over 110 per cent of income on mortgages

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Ontario families earning a median income now spend more than 50 per cent of their

after-tax earnings on monthly mortgage payments, and more than 110 per cent if they reside in the Greater Toronto Area.

According to a new report from economic think tank the Fraser Institute, monthly mortgage payments range between 50.4 per cent (Ottawa-Gatineau) and 110.2 per cent (Toronto) of the local median after-tax family income when purchasing a typical house.

“There is a perception that housing outside of the GTA is still somewhat affordable, but that’s not true. Even in cities like Windsor and Kingston, buying a typical home would require a family earning the local median income to spend more than half of its after-tax earnings on mortgage payments,” said the report’s co-author, senior policy analyst Austin Thompson, on Monday.

Additionally, the study found mortgage affordability has significantly deteriorated since 2014, when the share of median after-tax family income needed for the mortgage payment on a typical home ranged from 21.1 per cent (Windsor) to 56 per cent (Toronto).

Over that time period, house prices have skyrocketed across the province while Ontario worker salaries have largely remained stagnant.

“Housing affordability is a function of both home prices and incomes, and as wages and incomes have flatlined across Ontario in recent years, the housing unaffordability crisis has worsened,” said study co-author Steven Globerman.

Meanwhile, the cost of a typical home in British Columbia will require local median-income families to spend more than 60 per cent of their after-tax earnings to keep up with monthly mortgage payments.

That figure is true across the province’s six largest cities, with Vancouver reaching over 110 per cent. Meanwhile, Vancouver’s rate was only 73.9 per cent a decade earlier.

“In order to make housing more affordable for British Columbian families, policymakers should focus on increasing wages and incomes as part of the solution,” said Globerman.

In Atlantic Canada, mortgage payments required to buy a typical home varied between 27.2 per cent (Fredericton, NB) and 52 per cent (Halifax) for a median-earning family.

“Halifax has experienced a sharp decline in housing affordability that has put ordinary homes beyond the reach of many families. For a Halifax family earning the local median income, a mortgage payment on a typical home now costs more than half of their after-tax earnings,” said Thompson.

These monthly payments don’t include the 20 per cent down payment on the initial purchase, which in 2014, cost roughly the equivalent of 14.1 months of median after-tax family income as an average across all cities.

However, by 2023, it rose to 22 months, an increase of 56 per cent, while mortgage payments also climbed from 29.9 per cent to 56.6 per cent.

“By 2023, no Canadian city had typical homes on the market that were affordable for families earning the local median after-tax income, absent an unusually large downpayment or external financial support,” reads the report.

“Rent affordability also declined in nearly every city: median all-unit rent rose from 19.8 per cent to 23.5 per cent of median after-tax family income between 2014 and 2023 (on average across cities)—an increase of 3.7 percentage points.”
Sorry, how does that math work?
 
Upvote 18


Sorry, how does that math work?
border_humper
Pay the Visa with the MasterCard and the MasterCard with the Visa and hope you're dead before you're bankrupt.
 


Sorry, how does that math work?
border_humperBy having 250% of the normal amount of people living in a home of that size
 
According to a new report from economic think tank the Fraser Institute, monthly mortgage payments range between 50.4 per cent (Ottawa-Gatineau) and 110.2 per cent (Toronto) of the local median after-tax family income when purchasing a typical house.

Math in the article checks out but a smooth brain wrote the headline. The after-tax median family income includes income of families and individuals who can’t afford a home and therefore don’t pay a mortgage.

GTA families spend over 110 per cent of area’s median after-tax family income on mortgages​


Maybe an AI wrote the headline, they like to play fast and loose with the facts.

Besides this there’s multi-family dwellings, unreported earnings, and overseas “investment“ (laundering) properties purchased by students.
 
60% of the time this math is correct 110% of the time or something something like that

This is why i never took the chance to move to Toronto when it was offered to me.

Hey @Jack Layton you tell your wife to stop the shenanigans and rid the city of those shit illegals she loves so much and help the good people out in Toronto. Times up at the rub and tug.
 
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I'm surprised the G.T.A hasn't kicked off the collapse yet. Housing prices are stalled or dropping and everyone is holding these 110% mortgages on a property they were promised would go up in value for ever and ever. New builds are being constructed at about 10% of the levels in 2018. It's a sad state out there if you swing a hammer for a living.
 
If they don't report the collapse, is it really happening?

Have heard, through the grapevine only, that house prices collapsed up here too, 4 hrs away from downtown Trawna.
 
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I'm hours away from the big smoke as well. Prices are holding but nothing is moving. I don't think people want to admit they have to drop prices. Especially not builders that are going to take huge loss. They even bulldozed areas around every small town, cut down all the trees and now it lays barren because the bonanza is over. At least for now.
 
@Chobes Niagara Falls is the same.

My place is in a desirable neighourhood with large 1950's suburb 1/4 acre size lots.

6 houses for sale in the last 4 months. The only 2 that have sold, went for well under market because they were vacant....the owners aged out to nursing homes or died, and their adult kids were just looking to unload for cash.
 
@Jack Layton The south end of town (where my house is) looks like India. The north end where my shop is looks like Nigeria.

There is a fair bit of white flight outwards to the rural areas of the region along Lake Erie. Also people with money are fucking off to the US and Mexico. There are a lot of frustrated small business owners here. Those that have the means to leave, are doing so.
 
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