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More Canadians opting for home co-ownership amid affordability crunch: Royal LePage

Home prices and interest rates with higher thresholds for mortgages are making Canadians pool their resources to buy a property
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More Canadians are co-owning homes with family members or friends, a recent Royal LePage survey shows. | Chung Chow, BIV

A recent Royal LePage survey shows that more Canadians are co-owning homes with family members or friends.

The online survey, conducted by Leger between Aug. 10 and Aug. 21, shows six per cent of respondents co-own homes with someone other than their spouse.

Eighty-nine per cent of respondents bought the home with a family member, seven per cent with friends and eight per cent with someone who is not a friend or family. 

Karen Yolevski of Royal LePage Real Estate Services Ltd. says that multi-generational households are now the fastest-growing household type in Canada and the decision is increasingly made for financial reasons, with 76 per cent of co-owners saying affordability was a driving factor.

She says increasing home prices and interest rates with higher thresholds for mortgages are making Canadians pool their resources to buy a property.

Yolevski says co-owning a property with friends or family is not simple, as it comes with meaningful lifestyle changes and in-depth conversations over financial, legal and personal obligations. 

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 31, 2023.

The Canadian Press