If you've spent any time on real estate TikTok in the last few years, you've probably seen the house hacking pitch. Buy a property, rent part of it out, let your tenants cover the mortgage. Live for free. Build wealth while you sleep.
It sounds like the kind of thing that works great in a YouTube thumbnail and falls apart in real life. And honestly? Sometimes it does.
But here's what those videos usually get right even when they oversell the outcome: housing costs have outpaced wage growth by a wide margin, and for the right buyer, generating income from a property can make ownership viable when it otherwise wouldn't be. The strategy is real. The "living for free" part is just the clickbait version of it.
In 2026, the smarter question isn't whether house hacking works — it's whether it's the right fit for you, your market, and your numbers.
Here's what that actually looks like.
What House Hacking Actually Means
House hacking is straightforward in concept: buy a primary residence and generate income from it to help offset the cost of owning it. The definition is that simple. The execution has a lot of range.
The term got a lot of breathless social media attention a few years ago — often paired with promises of "living for free" or "having your tenants pay your mortgage." That framing wasn't entirely wrong, but it oversimplified things in ways that set some buyers up for disappointment. In 2026, the more useful way to think about house hacking isn't about eliminating a housing payment. It's about engineering a more manageable one.
If a secondary suite generates $1,600 a month and the mortgage is $3,800, that $2,200 net payment might be very achievable where $3,800 wasn't. That's the real value — not a free house, but a door that was otherwise closed, now open.
The Most Common Ways Buyers Are Doing It
The Secondary Suite Boom
Secondary suites — basement apartments, laneway houses, garden suites, in-law suites — have become the gold standard of modern house hacking in Canada.
Secondary...