Buying Your First Home Solo vs. With a Partner: What's Different?

Buying a home on your own means covering every cost and decision yourself,  but it has real upsides too, some you might not expect.

Getting Approved for a Mortgage

The biggest practical difference is borrowing power. Two combined incomes usually mean lenders approve a bigger loan. But a co-buyer’s debt, credit history, and job stability factor in too; if they carry risk, it can lower what you qualify for together or raise your rate.

Solo, the real question isn’t whether you buy alone, but whether your own income, credit, and debt support the mortgage you want. A mortgage broker can run the numbers and give you a realistic budget.

Saving for a Down Payment

Two people saving toward one goal usually means more combined income, shared rent, and built-in accountability.

Saving alone just takes longer. Automating transfers so money moves out before you can spend it helps a lot, and there’s real satisfaction in hitting a goal you set for yourself.

Choosing the Property

Buying with someone else means compromise: affordability versus lifestyle, whose job you live near, whose family is close by.

Alone, every decision is yours, the layout, the location, the renovations, the timeline. You move when it’s right for you, not when two opinions finally line up.

How You Hold Title

Unmarried co-buyers must choose between joint tenancy (equal ownership, automatic transfer to the survivor) or tenants in common (split however you agree, with each share going to that person’s estate).

Buying solo skips this decision, though a will is still wise. If a partner moves in later, you will need to revisit ownership together, ideally with a real estate lawyer.

Programs for First-Time Buyers, Solo or Not

A few government programs apply either way:

  • First Home Savings Account (FHSA): Up to $8,000/year, tax-sheltered, $40,000 lifetime max.
  • Home Buyers’ Plan: Withdraw up to $35,000 from your RRSP for a down payment.
  • First-Time Home Buyers’ GST/HST Rebate: Recoup GST/HST on a new or substantially renovated home.

Provincial and city programs change often, so check what’s current where you are buying.

Can You Really Buy a House Alone?

Yes. You may need something smaller or in a more affordable area than a combined income would allow, but a modest starter home still builds equity and gets you on the property ladder.

The process is straightforward: talk to a lender or financial planner to nail down your numbers, get pre-approved, then find an agent who understands your goals and can show you homes that fit your budget and needs.