XEQT vs Rental Property: The Honest Numbers for Canadian Investors
This is the most contested question in Canadian personal finance. On every Reddit thread, YouTube comment section, and dinner table conversation about money, the debate is the same: should you buy a rental property or invest in XEQT? Both paths have made Canadians wealthy. Both have also destroyed wealth when chosen for the wrong reasons or executed poorly. This article models the real numbers for both options, corrects the myths that dominate the popular debate, and helps you understand which choice is actually right for your specific situation.
- The core question: why this comparison is harder than it looks
- Rental property: the true return after all costs
- XEQT: historical performance and what to expect
- Head-to-head: $150,000 invested, 20 years, five scenarios
- The leverage argument: rental property's most powerful advantage
- The hidden costs most rental property analyses ignore
- Tax treatment: where XEQT and rental property are worlds apart
- Time, labour, and the value of your hours
- Risk: how the two assets fail and how often
- Who should choose rental property. Who should choose XEQT.
- The verdict
The Core Question: Why This Comparison Is Harder Than It Looks
Most comparisons between rental property and stock market investing are flawed from the start because they compare the wrong things. The common mistake is to compare gross house price appreciation to stock market returns and declare a winner. This comparison is close to meaningless because it ignores three critical differences between the two assets.
First, leverage. A rental property is typically purchased with 20 to 25 percent down, meaning the investor controls a $750,000 asset with $150,000 in cash. XEQT is typically purchased with no leverage at all. Comparing the return on the full property value to the return on the invested cash treats them as equivalent when they are structurally different. Leverage amplifies both gains and losses.
Second, total return vs. price appreciation. A Canadian house price might appreciate 5% per year, but that figure does not account for property taxes, maintenance, insurance, management fees, vacancy periods, mortgage interest, or the capital improvements required to keep the property rentable. XEQT's published return already includes dividends reinvested. To compare the two honestly, you need the net-of-costs return on equity invested for the rental property, not the gross appreciation on the property's full market value.
Third, time and labour. XEQT takes approximately fifteen minutes per year to manage. A rental property is a business. Even with a property manager, you are making decisions, fielding calls, filing taxes, dealing with vacancies, and responding to unexpected repairs. That labour has a real value that most analyses never assign a dollar figure to.
This article corrects all three of these measurement errors and models the comparison as honestly as the available data allows.
Canadian real estate returns vary enormously by city and neighbourhood. A condo in downtown Calgary and a detached house in Vancouver are not the same investment and should not be modelled as one. Where this article uses national averages, it notes the data source and the range of regional variation. The model scenarios in Section 4 use both national average and Toronto-specific assumptions to illustrate the range of outcomes.
Rental Property: The True Return After All Costs
To understand what a rental property actually returns, you need to work through four layers of cost that sit between the gross rental income and your actual return on equity.
Layer 1: Gross rental yield
The average gross rental yield in Canada stood at 5.72% in Q1 2026, up from 5.55% in Q3 2025, according to Global Property Guide's biannual analysis of one-, two-, and three-bedroom properties across Canada's major cities.[1] Gross yield is calculated as annual rent divided by purchase price. It is the starting point, not the endpoint.
Gross yield varies considerably by city and property type. Calgary and Edmonton have historically shown higher gross yields than Toronto and Vancouver because purchase prices are lower relative to rents. A $400,000 Calgary townhouse generating $2,200 per month in rent produces a 6.6% gross yield. A $900,000 Toronto condo generating $2,800 per month produces a 3.7% gross yield. The same investment logic, very different starting economics.[2]
Layer 2: Operating expenses
The gap between gross yield and net operating income is where most optimistic projections break down. Property investors consistently underestimate ongoing operating expenses. A realistic Canadian rental property operating cost structure looks like this:
| Expense Category | Typical Annual Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Property tax | 1.0% to 1.5% of assessed value | Varies significantly by municipality; not deductible from rental income directly but deductible as an operating expense |
| Insurance (landlord policy) | 0.5% to 0.8% of property value | Higher than primary residence insurance; includes liability coverage |
| Maintenance and repairs | 1.0% to 2.0% of property value | The 1% rule is the industry standard; older properties trend higher |
| Property management | 8% to 12% of gross rent | If self-managed, this is not a cash cost but it is a time cost |
| Vacancy allowance | 5% to 8% of gross rent | National vacancy rate for purpose-built rentals rose to 3.1% in late 2025 per CMHC; budget conservatively |
| Capital improvements | 0.5% to 1.0% of property value | Kitchens, bathrooms, flooring replaced over the ownership cycle |
| Accounting and legal | $500 to $1,500/year | Rental income is taxable; T776 reporting requires professional preparation for most investors |
Sources: CMHC 2025 Rental Market Report; Global Property Guide Q1 2026; industry standard 1% maintenance rule; WOWA.ca rental property calculator methodology.
Taken together, operating expenses on a Canadian rental property typically consume 35% to 50% of gross rental income. An Investors Group analysis of Toronto and Winnipeg condos illustrates the gap: a Toronto condo purchased for $549,900 at $2,400/month gross rent produces only $7,860 in annual net income after property taxes and condo fees alone, before accounting for management fees, maintenance, or vacancy.[3]
Layer 3: Mortgage financing
Investment properties in Canada require a minimum 20% down payment and are subject to higher mortgage rates than primary residences. As of early 2026, investment property mortgage rates are typically 0.5 to 1.0 percentage points higher than primary residence rates. On a $600,000 investment property with 20% down ($120,000) and a $480,000 mortgage at 5.5%, the annual interest-only cost in year one is approximately $26,400. This does not include principal repayment, which is a return of equity rather than a cost, but does represent cash flow that cannot be used for other purposes.
The cash flow reality for many Canadian rental properties, particularly in high-cost markets like Toronto and Vancouver, is negative. The property does not pay for itself from rental income alone. The investor is betting on appreciation to generate their return, which is a fundamentally different risk profile from a cash-flow-positive rental investment.
Layer 4: Transaction costs on entry and exit
Rental property has high friction at both the purchase and sale stage. On entry: land transfer tax (which in Toronto involves both provincial and municipal tax, adding 1.5% to 3% of the purchase price for non-first-time buyers), legal fees ($1,500 to $2,500), home inspection ($500), and potential realtor commission on new construction or private resale. On exit: realtor commissions of 4% to 5% of the sale price and capital gains tax on the appreciation above the adjusted cost base.
The capital gains inclusion rate is currently 50% as of March 2026. The 2024 federal government proposed increasing it to two-thirds for gains above $250,000, but Prime Minister Mark Carney cancelled that increase in March 2025, leaving the rate at 50%.[4] Capital gains are taxed at your marginal rate on 50% of the gain, meaning the effective capital gains tax rate is approximately 13% to 27% depending on your income level and province.
XEQT held in a TFSA generates zero capital gains tax. XEQT held in an RRSP generates zero capital gains tax during accumulation. XEQT in a non-registered account generates capital gains tax, but only when sold. This asymmetry is one of the most significant structural advantages of XEQT in registered accounts versus rental property, which has no equivalent tax shelter.
After operating expenses and before financing costs, a typical Canadian rental property net yield is 2.5% to 4.0%, not the gross 5.72% headline figure. In Toronto's expensive condo market, net yields before financing often fall below 2%. The leverage from the mortgage can amplify these returns significantly on the equity invested, but it also amplifies the risk.
XEQT: Historical Performance and What to Expect
XEQT launched on the TSX on August 7, 2019. Since inception through early 2026, the fund has delivered an average annual return of approximately 12.86% including dividends reinvested, according to stock analysis platforms tracking dividend-adjusted total return since inception.[5] Over the past 12 months to early 2026, total return was approximately 20.65%. These are exceptional results, partly because they include the strong bull market of 2023 through 2025.
XEQT's inception date is recent enough that it does not capture a full market cycle including a prolonged bear market. The fund's maximum drawdown since inception was 36.14%, occurring on March 23, 2020. Recovery from that drawdown took approximately 113 trading sessions, or roughly five months. This is shorter than historical equity bear market recovery periods, partly because the COVID-19 crash was uniquely swift in both direction and recovery.
For planning purposes, the most credible long-term expected return for a globally diversified all-equity portfolio is 6% to 8% per year in real (inflation-adjusted) terms, and 8% to 10% in nominal terms. This is the range most Canadian financial planners use for retirement projections with equity-heavy portfolios. The TSX Composite has delivered approximately 7.9% annualised over the 34-year period from 1990 to 2024, including reinvested dividends.[6] XEQT is more globally diversified than the TSX alone, with approximately 45% US equities, 25% Canadian, 25% international developed, and 5% emerging markets as of the most recent holdings data.
XEQT's MER is 0.20% per year. This is the total annual cost of ownership. There are no other fees if purchased on a commission-free platform such as Wealthsimple. The fund holds over $6 billion in assets as of early 2026 and trades more than 700,000 units per day, making liquidity risk negligible. You can sell your entire position during market hours and receive the funds within two settlement days.
Head-to-Head: $150,000 Invested, 20 Years, Five Scenarios
To make the comparison concrete, the following five models assume an investor with $150,000 in available capital and a 20-year investment horizon. All scenarios use Canadian market conditions and data. These are projections, not guarantees.
These models are illustrative. They use conservative assumptions where ranges exist. Actual returns will differ. The purpose is to show how the structural differences between the two assets affect outcomes, not to predict a specific number. Always consult a qualified financial planner before making major investment decisions.
The Leverage Argument: Rental Property's Most Powerful Advantage
The strongest genuine case for rental property over XEQT is leverage. No mainstream financial product lets an ordinary Canadian control a $750,000 asset with $150,000 in cash while the income from the asset partially services the debt used to buy it. A 4% annual appreciation on a $750,000 property grows the investment by $30,000 in year one. A 4% return on $150,000 of XEQT grows it by $6,000 in year one. The leverage ratio is five to one at the point of purchase.
This leverage effect is the legitimate engine of the large wealth outcomes some Canadian real estate investors have achieved. A person who bought a Toronto duplex for $400,000 in 2009 with $80,000 down and sold it in 2022 for $1.8 million did not simply achieve a 4.5x return on their investment. They achieved a 17.5x return on their $80,000 equity, because four dollars of borrowed money amplified every dollar of theirs.
The risk of leverage works symmetrically. If that same Toronto duplex had been purchased in 2022 near the peak and the investor needed to sell in late 2023 after values fell 15% to 20%, the outcome on their equity would have been catastrophic, not merely disappointing. A 15% price decline on a 20%-down property does not produce a 15% loss for the investor. It produces the elimination of 75% of their equity if they needed to sell quickly.
Leverage amplifies the return of whatever asset it is applied to. It is not a property of real estate itself. An investor who borrows money to buy XEQT on margin achieves the same mechanical leverage. The difference is that XEQT margin is callable. A rental property mortgage is not. This is a genuine structural advantage of real estate leverage that deserves acknowledgment. But it cuts both ways: the mortgage payment is also not callable downward when your income drops.
The Hidden Costs Most Rental Property Analyses Ignore
Beyond the operating expenses in Section 2, several costs commonly appear in investor experiences but rarely appear in pro-forma analyses.
Tenant disputes and legal costs
Canada's provincial tenancy legislation generally favours tenants over landlords. In Ontario, the Landlord and Tenant Board (LTB) has faced persistent backlogs. As of 2025, hearing wait times for contested evictions regularly exceeded 12 to 18 months. During this period, a landlord may be unable to evict a non-paying tenant and cannot rent the unit to a paying tenant. The financial impact of a 12-month contested tenancy dispute can exceed $30,000 in lost rent alone, plus legal costs. This risk is not zero and is not captured in vacancy rate assumptions, which model normal tenant turnover.
Rental income taxation
Rental income is fully taxable as ordinary income in Canada. Unlike capital gains, which receive the 50% inclusion benefit, every dollar of net rental income is added directly to your other income and taxed at your marginal rate. At a 43% combined federal/provincial marginal rate in Ontario, a $15,000 net rental income becomes $8,550 after tax. By contrast, XEQT distributions in a TFSA are received tax-free in their entirety. This is one of the most significant and underappreciated structural disadvantages of rental income relative to TFSA investing.
The opportunity cost of your time
Property management companies charge 8% to 12% of gross monthly rent. On a $2,800/month unit, this is $224 to $336 per month, or $2,688 to $4,032 per year. Many investors self-manage to capture this cost. If you value your time at $50 per hour and self-management requires 6 to 10 hours per month on average across finding tenants, handling maintenance calls, conducting property visits, filing taxes, and dealing with disputes, the annual time cost is $3,600 to $6,000. This is not a cash expense, but it is a real economic cost that belongs in any honest comparison.
Capital calls and large repairs
The 1% annual maintenance rule is an average, not a ceiling. In any given year, a furnace ($4,000 to $6,000), a roof ($10,000 to $18,000), or a major plumbing issue ($5,000 to $12,000) can absorb multiple years of net income in a single event. XEQT never has a capital call. It has never asked its investors for additional cash to deal with an unexpected expense. Rental property can and does.
Tax Treatment: Where XEQT and Rental Property Are Worlds Apart
The tax treatment of the two investments is one of the most significant analytical differences in this comparison, and it consistently favours XEQT for investors who use registered accounts strategically.
| Tax Category | Rental Property | XEQT in TFSA | XEQT in RRSP | XEQT Non-Registered |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Annual income taxation | Rental income taxed at marginal rate (up to 53% in ON) | None | None during accumulation | Distributions taxed as dividends |
| Capital gains on appreciation | 50% inclusion rate; taxable in year of sale | None ever | Deferred; taxed as income on withdrawal | 50% inclusion rate |
| Capital cost allowance | Depreciates building at 4%; reduces current income | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Recapture on sale | CCA claimed is recaptured as ordinary income | None | None | None |
| Foreign withholding tax | N/A | US withholding tax on dividends (15%) | Exempt on US dividends under treaty | 15% US withholding tax |
| Complexity of filing | T776 required; complex depreciation and recapture rules | No additional forms | T4RSP on withdrawal only | T5 or T3 forms required |
Source: Canada Revenue Agency guidelines; Moneysense capital gains tax analysis (March 2025); TurboTax Canada capital gains rate guidance. Note: capital gains inclusion rate increase proposed in 2024 was cancelled by the Carney government in March 2025. The 50% inclusion rate remains in effect.
The RRSP deserves special mention for an investor choosing between XEQT and rental property. An RRSP contribution generates an immediate tax deduction at your marginal rate. A $25,000 RRSP contribution at a 40% marginal rate generates a $10,000 tax refund. If that refund is reinvested in XEQT, the effective cost of the original $25,000 invested is $15,000. No rental property produces an immediate tax refund proportional to the amount invested.
Time, Labour, and the Value of Your Hours
Every hour you spend managing a rental property is an hour you could spend earning income in your primary career, spending time with family, or doing something that improves your quality of life. This is not an argument against rental property. It is an argument for pricing it correctly.
A 2025 survey of Canadian landlords by liv.rent found that 31% were making moderate profit on their rental property and only 2% were making significant profit.[7] When rental income is taxed, operating expenses are accounted for, and the hours invested in management are assigned even a modest dollar value, the actual hourly rate of return for many small-scale landlords is lower than it appears.
XEQT's time requirement is approximately 15 minutes per year for a disciplined investor. You fund your account, set up automatic contributions, and ignore the noise. The cognitive overhead is negligible. The emotional overhead, particularly during market downturns, is real but is not a time cost in the conventional sense.
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Risk: How the Two Assets Fail and How Often
Both XEQT and rental property can generate negative outcomes. Understanding how each fails helps you assess which risks you can actually tolerate.
How XEQT fails
XEQT holds over 8,400 global equities across Canada, the US, international developed markets, and emerging markets. For XEQT to permanently lose a large portion of its value, the global economy as a whole would need to suffer an irreversible collapse. Every significant market decline in history has been followed by a full recovery and new highs. This does not guarantee future recoveries, but the diversification inherent in a global index fund is the most robust form of investment risk management available to retail investors.
XEQT's maximum drawdown since inception was 36.14%, occurring at the nadir of the COVID-19 crash in March 2020. Recovery took approximately five months. An investor who held through this period lost nothing and gained everything. An investor who sold at the bottom locked in permanent losses.
The primary failure mode for XEQT investors is behavioural, not structural: selling during a panic. The asset itself does not create liquidity crises, capital calls, or tenant disputes. Its risk is the risk of temporary paper losses that become permanent if you sell.
How rental property fails
Rental property in Canada has historically been a strong-performing asset. But its failure modes are more varied and some are genuinely catastrophic:
- Negative cash flow spiral: Rising mortgage rates, unexpected capital expenditures, and extended vacancies can create a situation where the property drains savings rather than building them. Several Toronto condo investors who purchased with variable-rate mortgages in 2021 to 2022 and faced rising rates in 2023 experienced exactly this.
- Illiquidity at the wrong time: Selling a property takes 30 to 90 days under normal conditions, and longer in a slow market. If you need capital quickly (job loss, medical emergency, divorce) you cannot liquidate a portion of your rental property. XEQT settles in two business days.
- Concentration risk: A single rental property represents a single asset in a single location in a single asset class. XEQT represents 8,400 companies across 50 countries. If the property develops a structural problem, if the neighbourhood deteriorates, or if a single bad tenant causes $25,000 in damage, the impact is total and direct.
- Regulatory risk: Canadian provincial governments have increased landlord regulation materially over the past decade. Rent control, extended eviction timelines, mandatory maintenance standards, and short-term rental restrictions have all been tightened. XEQT does not carry this regulatory risk.
Who Should Choose Rental Property. Who Should Choose XEQT.
Based on the evidence, here is a direct answer to the question most people actually want answered.
Rental property is the better choice if:
- You have identified a genuinely cash-flow-positive property in a market with strong appreciation fundamentals. Cash-flow-positive means positive net operating income after all operating expenses before mortgage payments, with a mortgage you can service even if the property sits vacant for three months.
- You have the temperament and genuine interest to be a good landlord. The investors who do well with rental property are not passive. They screen tenants rigorously, maintain properties proactively, understand their provincial tenancy legislation, and treat ownership as a business.
- You have already maximised your TFSA and RRSP contribution room and you are looking for additional tax-advantaged investment vehicles. Capital cost allowance on rental properties provides a form of tax deferral that can be meaningful for high-income investors in non-registered accounts.
- You are comfortable with illiquidity and you have a large enough emergency fund that a major capital call would not destabilise your overall financial situation.
- You are buying in a market you know deeply and where your local knowledge gives you a genuine advantage in identifying undervalued properties or strong rental demand neighbourhoods.
XEQT is the better choice if:
- You have not yet maximised your TFSA contribution room. Every dollar of XEQT gain in a TFSA is permanently and completely sheltered from tax. No rental property can replicate this.
- You value your time and you are honest about the fact that rental property management is not passive. The Canadian Finance community on Reddit is full of investors who discovered after the fact that their rental "income" was actually below minimum wage on an hourly basis when management time is properly accounted for.
- You want diversification. A single rental property concentrates your non-housing wealth in a single asset in a single city. For most Canadians, their primary residence is already their largest asset. Adding a second property deepens concentration in the same asset class in the same country. XEQT diversifies into 8,400 companies across global markets.
- You are in the earlier stages of wealth accumulation and the minimum viable rental investment would require most or all of your investable assets. Concentration risk at this stage can set you back years.
- You want to be able to sleep through a crisis. XEQT's worst month was down approximately 15.9%. It recovered completely. Rental property crises (bad tenants, structural problems, market downturns during forced sales) can be prolonged, expensive, and psychologically draining in ways that market volatility simply is not.
The Verdict
XEQT is not always the better investment than rental property. Rental property is not always the better investment than XEQT. The correct answer depends entirely on five factors that are specific to you: the property you are considering, the market you are buying in, your existing asset allocation, your tolerance for complexity and illiquidity, and whether you have maximised your registered account contribution room.
What the data does show clearly is this: the popular assumption that real estate always beats the stock market for Canadian investors is not supported by a rigorous full-cost comparison. When you account for operating expenses, financing costs, management time, transaction friction, and tax treatment, the net return advantage of real estate over XEQT in a TFSA shrinks dramatically, and in many scenarios it disappears or reverses.
The leverage advantage of rental property is real. A leveraged real estate investment in a strong appreciation market can generate outcomes that no TFSA XEQT position can match. This is the legitimate case for real estate investment and it should not be dismissed. But leverage amplifies losses as readily as it amplifies gains, and the cash flow drag, time requirement, and regulatory risk of Canadian rental property are costs that belong in the analysis alongside the appreciation potential.
The most honest synthesis: For most Canadians who have not yet maximised their TFSA and RRSP room, XEQT in registered accounts is the mathematically superior choice on a risk-adjusted, after-tax, after-cost basis. For investors who have maximised their registered accounts, who have found a genuinely cash-flow-positive property, and who approach landlording as a business rather than a side hustle, rental property is a legitimate and potentially superior wealth-building vehicle. The two options are not mutually exclusive, and many of Canada's most successful personal-finance outcomes involve both.
For informational purposes only. Not financial or real estate investment advice. All financial projections are illustrative models using published historical data and reasonable assumptions; actual returns will differ. Always consult a qualified financial planner, tax advisor, and licensed real estate professional before making investment decisions. This page contains affiliate links to Wealthsimple; we may receive a referral fee if you open an account.