Alberta Mortgage Guide · Updated June 2026
How Much Income Do You Need to Buy a $1 Million House in Alberta?
Stress test numbers, down payment rules, monthly costs, and everything you need to know — in plain English.
By Guriqbal Chahal, MBA, PMP · Licensed Mortgage Broker · Dreamhouse Mortgage
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To buy a $1 million home in Alberta, you need roughly $200,000–$225,000 in gross household income.
This assumes a 20% down payment ($200,000), a 5-year fixed rate near 4.15%, 25-year amortization, and passing the federal stress test at ~6.15%. Alberta’s no-land-transfer-tax advantage, low property taxes, and no provincial sales tax make this more achievable here than in Ontario or BC. Two incomes can be combined to reach the threshold. Full breakdown below.
A $1 million home purchase in Alberta is no longer out of reach for many dual-income households — but the qualification bar is significant, and understanding the numbers in advance can save you months of frustration. Whether you’re eyeing an estate in Mount Royal, a luxury new-build in Aspen Woods, or an acreage outside Cochrane, the mortgage rules are the same: federal stress test, strict debt ratios, and a mandatory 20% down payment.
In this guide, Guriqbal Chahal, a licensed Alberta mortgage broker with Dreamhouse Mortgage, walks you through every number you need to know — using real 2026 rates and current Alberta-specific costs — so you can approach your purchase with confidence.
1. Down Payment Requirements for a $1 Million Home in Alberta
Canada’s down payment rules changed significantly in December 2024, and they directly affect $1 million purchases.
For homes priced between $500,001 and $1,500,000, the minimum is 5% on the first $500,000 + 10% on the remaining amount — totalling $75,000 on a $1 million home. However, homes above $1 million are not eligible for CMHC mortgage insurance, so most lenders require a full 20% down payment in practice.
| Down Payment | Amount | Mortgage Required | CMHC Insured? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Minimum (7.5%) | $75,000 | $925,000 | No — over $1M threshold |
| Standard (20%) | $200,000 | $800,000 | No (conventional) |
| Strong (25%) | $250,000 | $750,000 | No (conventional) |
| Large (35%) | $350,000 | $650,000 | No (conventional) |
* All figures based on a $1,000,000 purchase price. Illustrative only.
Because homes over $1 million are conventional (uninsured) mortgages, lenders apply stricter underwriting. The most common scenario is 20% down ($200,000), leaving an $800,000 mortgage.
2. The Federal Mortgage Stress Test Explained
The mortgage stress test is the single most important hurdle between you and a $1 million home. It requires every borrower at a federally regulated lender to prove they can afford their mortgage at a rate higher than their actual contract rate — a safety buffer against future rate increases.
How the Stress Test Works in 2026
With a typical 5-year fixed contract rate of around 4.15%, lenders qualify you at 6.15%. Your required income is calculated using the stress-tested rate, not the rate you’ll actually pay — so the income bar is meaningfully higher than your real monthly payment would suggest.
Many buyers assume that putting 20% or more down eliminates the stress test. It does not. The stress test applies to all new mortgages at federally regulated lenders regardless of down payment size. Some provincial credit unions have more flexibility — ask your broker.
3. Income Required: Scenario Breakdown (2026)
The following scenarios use real 2026 numbers for Alberta on a $1,000,000 purchase. The GDS ceiling for conventional mortgages is 39%. Assumptions: property tax ~$7,200/year; heating $200/month; no condo fees; minimal other debts; qualifying rate = contract rate + 2%.
| Scenario | Down Payment | Contract Rate | Amort. | Stress Test Rate | Income Needed |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Conservative, 20% down | $200,000 | 4.15% | 25 yr | 6.15% | ~$215,000 |
| Typical buyer, 20% down | $200,000 | 4.15% | 30 yr | 6.15% | ~$200,000 |
| Larger down, 25% | $250,000 | 4.15% | 25 yr | 6.15% | ~$200,000 |
| Lower rate scenario | $200,000 | 3.75% | 25 yr | 5.75% | ~$200,000 |
| Variable rate buyer | $200,000 | 3.65% | 25 yr | 5.65% | ~$195,000 |
| With car loan / existing debt | $200,000 | 4.15% | 25 yr | 6.15% | ~$235,000+ |
* Estimates only. Actual qualification depends on debts, credit, property tax, lender policy, and income type.
For most Alberta buyers with 20% down and a 25-year amortization at 2026 rates, you need $200,000–$225,000 gross household income. At 30-year amortization the floor drops to $195,000–$210,000. Existing debt can push this significantly higher.
4. Monthly Costs of Owning a $1 Million Home in Alberta
Qualifying is one thing; knowing what you’ll actually spend every month is another. Here’s a realistic monthly snapshot for a $1 million Calgary-area home.
| Cost Item | Monthly Estimate | Annual Estimate | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mortgage (25-yr, 4.15%) | ~$4,310 | ~$51,720 | $800K mortgage, P+I |
| Property Tax (Calgary) | ~$600–$650 | ~$7,200–$7,800 | Est. ~0.72% effective rate on $1M |
| Home Heating | ~$200 | ~$2,400 | Alberta winters; varies by home size |
| Home Insurance | ~$175–$225 | ~$2,100–$2,700 | Higher for larger/luxury properties |
| Maintenance Reserve | ~$500–$800 | ~$6,000–$9,600 | Recommended 1% of home value/yr |
| Total Carrying Cost | ~$5,285–$5,385 | ~$63,420–$64,620 | Excl. maintenance reserve |
* Estimates based on 2026 Calgary rates, $1M purchase, 20% down. Maintenance not included in GDS/TDS.
At 30-year amortization, the monthly mortgage drops to ~$3,875, bringing total carrying costs to approximately $4,850–$4,950/month.
5. GDS and TDS Ratios: How Lenders Qualify You
Lenders use two debt-service ratios to evaluate affordability, calculated using the stress-tested rate — not your actual contract rate.
| Ratio | What It Includes | Maximum Allowed |
|---|---|---|
| GDS (Gross Debt Service) | Mortgage P&I + Property Tax + Heating + 50% of condo fees | 39% of gross income |
| TDS (Total Debt Service) | Everything in GDS + all other monthly debt (car, student loans, credit cards) | 44% of gross income |
A Practical GDS Calculation
Stress-tested at 6.15%, an $800,000 mortgage over 25 years yields a qualifying payment of ~$5,280/month. Adding property tax ($625/mo) and heating ($200/mo), total housing costs are ~$6,105/month. To stay within the 39% GDS limit: $6,105 ÷ 0.39 = ~$15,654/month, or ~$187,850/year in GDS alone. Any existing debts push the required income to the $210,000–$225,000+ range to keep TDS under 44%.
Alberta households commonly carry truck or SUV payments of $700–$1,200/month. This single factor can push required qualifying income up by $20,000–$35,000. Paying down or eliminating a vehicle loan before applying can make the difference between qualifying and not.
6. Alberta’s Unique Financial Advantages
Alberta is one of the best provinces in Canada to purchase a luxury home. The math works more favourably here than almost anywhere else.
| Advantage | Alberta | Ontario (Toronto) | British Columbia |
|---|---|---|---|
| Land Transfer Tax on $1M | $0 | ~$16,475 (+ $4,475 Toronto) | ~$18,000 |
| Provincial Income Tax (top bracket) | 10% | 13.16% | 16.80% |
| Property Tax on $1M Home (est.) | ~$7,200–$7,800/yr | ~$8,500–$11,000/yr | ~$4,000–$6,500/yr |
| Provincial Sales Tax | None (GST only) | HST 13% | PST 7% |
* Tax figures approximate. Consult a tax advisor for your specific situation.
7. First-Time Buyer Programs and a $1 Million Home
Even at the $1 million price point, first-time buyers in Alberta can access meaningful government programs to help with the down payment.
First Home Savings Account (FHSA)
The FHSA allows contributions of up to $8,000/year (lifetime max $40,000 per person). Contributions are tax-deductible, and qualifying withdrawals are completely tax-free. A couple can each hold an FHSA, combining up to $80,000 toward the down payment.
RRSP Home Buyers’ Plan (HBP)
The HBP allows first-time buyers to withdraw up to $60,000 each from their RRSP, tax-free, for a qualifying home purchase. A couple can access up to $120,000 combined, repayable over 15 years.
A couple combining the FHSA ($80,000) and HBP ($120,000) can access up to $200,000 — exactly the 20% down payment required on a $1 million home — while receiving significant tax savings. The FHSA must be open for at least one calendar year before withdrawal.
First-Time Home Buyers’ Tax Credit (HBTC)
The federal HBTC provides a $1,500 tax credit in the year of purchase, helping offset closing costs.
8. Credit Score and Other Qualifying Factors
At the $1 million price point, lenders are underwriting a large conventional mortgage. Your financial profile needs to be strong across all dimensions.
| Factor | Minimum to Qualify | Ideal for Best Rates |
|---|---|---|
| Credit Score | 680 | 720+ |
| Employment History | 2+ years (same field) | Salaried, 3+ years |
| Down Payment Source | Verified, 90-day history | Own savings or gifted (documented) |
| GDS Ratio | ≤ 39% | ≤ 32% |
| TDS Ratio | ≤ 44% | ≤ 38% |
| No Collections / Bankruptcies | Yes | Clean 7-year history |
Self-Employed Income Considerations
Self-employed buyers typically need 2 years of T1 General tax returns and Notices of Assessment. Many Alberta business owners and contractors find their taxable income differs significantly from gross revenue, which can complicate qualification. A broker with access to alternative lenders and stated-income products is essential in these situations.
9. Strategies to Qualify for a $1 Million Mortgage in Alberta
If you’re not yet at the qualifying income threshold, here are proven strategies to improve your position:
- Pay down revolving debt. Eliminating credit card balances and lines of credit directly improves your TDS ratio and credit score.
- Add a co-borrower. A second income — spouse, partner, or family member — can bridge the qualification gap. Both credit profiles will be assessed.
- Increase your down payment. Going from 20% to 25% or 30% reduces the mortgage amount and lowers the required qualifying income.
- Extend amortization to 30 years. Lower monthly payments reduce the income threshold. Confirm eligibility with your broker for your specific situation.
- Pay off vehicle financing. A $700/month truck payment adds ~$20,000 to required qualifying income. Eliminating it before applying can be the deciding factor.
- Declare rental income. If a secondary suite is planned or present, lenders may count 50–80% of market rent toward qualifying income.
- Choose the right lender. Banks, mono-line lenders, and credit unions have different underwriting policies. A broker matches you to the best fit.
- Get a pre-approval first. Locks in your rate for up to 120 days and identifies gaps before you’re under contract.
Ready to Know Your Number?
Get a personalized income and mortgage qualification assessment from a licensed Alberta mortgage broker — no obligation, no guessing.
📞 Call 403-966-6072Guriqbal Chahal, MBA, PMP · Dreamhouse Mortgage · Calgary, Alberta
10. Frequently Asked Questions
Most buyers need a gross household income of approximately $200,000–$225,000/year. This assumes 20% down ($200,000), a 5-year fixed rate of ~4.15%, 25-year amortization, and stress test qualification at ~6.15%. With 30-year amortization and minimal other debts, some buyers can qualify closer to $195,000. Existing debt obligations significantly increase the requirement.
The technical minimum is 7.5% ($75,000): 5% on the first $500,000 and 10% on the remaining $500,000. However, homes above $1 million are not CMHC-insurable, so most lenders require at least 20% down ($200,000) to approve a conventional mortgage.
The federal stress test qualifies you at the higher of your contract rate + 2%, or 5.25%. With a June 2026 contract rate of ~4.15%, the qualifying rate is 6.15%. This applies regardless of down payment size at federally regulated lenders.
No. Alberta has no provincial land transfer tax or property transfer tax, saving buyers over $15,000 compared to Ontario. Only a small title transfer fee and mortgage registration fee apply — roughly $1,800–$2,000 total on a $1 million purchase.
Yes. Lenders combine the incomes of co-applicants. Two earners each making $100,000–$115,000 can reach the $200,000–$225,000 qualifying threshold together for a $1 million home in Alberta.
Yes. Both the FHSA (up to $40,000/person, tax-free) and RRSP HBP (up to $60,000/person) can be applied toward a $1 million home purchase. A couple combining both programs can access up to $200,000 — exactly the 20% threshold. The FHSA must be open for at least one calendar year before withdrawal.
With 20% down, 4.15% rate, 25-year amortization: mortgage ~$4,310/month. Adding property taxes (~$625/mo), heating (~$200/mo), and insurance (~$175/mo), total monthly carrying cost is ~$5,310. At 30-year amortization, the mortgage drops to ~$3,875/month, bringing total to ~$4,875/month.
Most A-lenders require a minimum credit score of 680. To access the best rates on a $1 million home, aim for 720 or higher. Below 680, B-lenders may still be an option at higher rates.
Talk to an Alberta Mortgage Broker Today
Whether you’re just starting to plan or ready to make an offer, Guriqbal Chahal helps buyers across Calgary, Airdrie, Cochrane, Chestermere, Red Deer, and Okotoks navigate the mortgage process with confidence.
📞 403-966-6072 — Free ConsultationNo cost. No obligation. Licensed Alberta Mortgage Broker.
Guriqbal Chahal is a licensed mortgage broker serving buyers across Calgary, Airdrie, Cochrane, Chestermere, Red Deer, and Okotoks. With an MBA and PMP designation, he combines financial expertise with hands-on mortgage guidance. Call 403-966-6072 to get started.





