New Member Introductions
Market News & Data
General Info
Real Estate Strategies

Landlording & Rental Properties
Real Estate Professionals
Financial, Tax, & Legal



Real Estate Classifieds
Reviews & Feedback
Updated about 8 years ago on . Most recent reply

how to analyze rental properties in Montreal, Canada?
Good morning,
My name is Paulo Ascurra and live in Montreal. I am very interested in rental properties. I have been following bigger pockets webinars for 2 months. When I try to analyze properties applying the four quadrant method, it does not work in Montreal because most of the time I have negative cash flow and the return on investment (cash on cash) is very low around 1-2% or negative. Rentals properties in Montreal are expensive; however, the rent that tenants pay is very low. An example: I found a very nice triplex very well situated close to the subway with minimum repairs to be done. The value of the property was $485,000 and the rent for each apartment was $640/month. I think I am missing some important points about how to do calculations in Montreal. I understand US property values are cheaper and the rents are higher (depending on the area... I know). Could you give me any suggestion how to approach rental real estate in Montreal?
Best regards,
Paulo Ascurra
Most Popular Reply

Number are numbers. The results you are getting are correct and for that reason investing in the Montreal market does not work. You need to find a property where the numbers do work or as most investors do ...look else where to invest.
The investors buying in areas like yours most likely have way too much equity in those properties believing paying off, or down, a property increases cash flow. The opposite is actually true and every investor in Montreal is probably losing real money.
I would suggest to look east to New Brunswick or possibly out west if you can not find cash flow in Quebec outside Montreal. Try the Hull area across from Ottawa, plenty of government workers renting there.