To buy an average Calgary home — about $590,000 in 2026 — you need roughly $118,000 in household income, based on lender limits and the mortgage stress test.
You need about $118,000 in household income to buy an average Calgary home ($590,000) in 2026 — assuming 20% down, the 39% GDS limit, ~1% property tax and a stress-tested qualifying rate near 6.5%. Less down means a bigger mortgage and a higher income requirement. Illustrative estimate, not advice.
Lenders cap your housing costs at about 39% of gross income (the GDS ratio) and qualify you at the stress-test rate. Here is the illustrative math for an average Calgary home:
| Average home price | $590,000 |
| Down payment (20%) | $118,000 |
| Mortgage amount | $472,000 |
| Qualifying (stress) rate | ~6.5% |
| Payment + tax + heat / mo | $3,829 |
| Household income needed | $118,000 |
A smaller down payment raises the mortgage and the income needed; a Bank of Canada rate cut lowers the qualifying rate and the bar. Track the current rate on the rate tracker and see the next decision. A fast-growing, energy-linked market that swings with oil and interprovincial migration but stays far cheaper than the coasts.
About $118,000 for an average Calgary home, illustratively, with 20% down under the 39% GDS limit and the stress test.
Yes — more down means a smaller mortgage and payment, so the income required drops.
No. It is an illustrative estimate to show the ballpark — verify with a mortgage professional.