Why Toronto CMA Is an MLI Select Market Worth Underwriting
Toronto CMA represents one of the more compelling Ontario markets for MLI Select-financed multi-family acquisition in 2026. The demand fundamentals — Largest rental market in Canada, post-secondary institutions, immigration gateway — create durable rental demand independent of GTA pricing cycles. Combined with cap rates in the 4.0–5.25% range and a vacancy rate of approximately 3.0%, the going-in economics support an MLI Select financing structure when the deal is underwritten correctly.
The sub-markets within Toronto CMA that attract the most advisory activity are: East York, Etobicoke, North York, Scarborough. Each presents a different risk-return profile — older stock in core areas typically offers deeper affordability point eligibility, while suburban corridors may require more deliberate energy and accessibility investment to build a competitive point stack.
The MLI Select Affordability Threshold for Toronto CMA
CMHC defines an affordable unit as one rented at or below 30% of the median renter household income for the subject CMA — before tax. For Toronto CMA, this threshold sits at $1,348/mon, based on the 2019 Census median renter income of $53,900 published in CMHC's MLI Select XLSX. This means any unit renting at or below $1,348/mon counts toward your affordability point total. In Toronto CMA's older vintage stock — particularly 1960s and 1970s-era walk-ups — a significant share of in-place rents naturally sit at or below this figure, making affordability points achievable without any rent reduction commitment.
What this means in practice for acquisition underwriting:
- Step 1: Pull the current rent roll and compare every unit's in-place rent against the CMHC threshold for this CMA
- Step 2: Count the percentage of units at or below the threshold
- Step 3: Map that percentage to the affordability point tier: 40% of units = 50 pts, 60% = 70 pts, 80% = 100 pts
- Step 4: If affordability points alone get you to 50 or 70 points, no energy or accessibility investment is needed to qualify — the deal's existing rent roll carries the point stack
This is the single most important due diligence step for Toronto CMA acquisition underwriting, and the most commonly skipped.
Modelling the Point Stack for Toronto CMA Acquisitions
The three pillars of MLI Select points remain the same in Toronto CMA as anywhere in Ontario — but the weighting of each category shifts based on local stock characteristics.
Affordability Points (up to 100 pts)
In Toronto CMA's older vintage stock, affordability points are often the lowest-cost path. Before budgeting energy or accessibility upgrades, run the rent roll analysis. If the existing rents already clear the threshold at 40%+ of units, 50 affordability points are essentially embedded in the asset at zero additional cost.
| Existing Property — % of Units at/below Threshold | Points |
|---|---|
| 40% of units | 50 pts |
| 60% of units | 70 pts |
| 80% of units | 100 pts |
| New construction — 40% of units (10-yr commitment) | 50 pts |
| New construction — 60% of units (10-yr commitment) | 70 pts |
| 20+ year affordability commitment (bonus) | +30 pts |
Energy Efficiency Points (up to 50 pts)
Energy efficiency is the most capital-intensive point category. A preliminary energy audit for a Toronto CMA property runs approximately $2,500 — a nominal due diligence cost every serious buyer should commission. The actual upgrade cost to achieve a 15–25% efficiency improvement ranges from $100,000 to well into the millions, depending on building size and vintage. A 12-unit 1970s walk-up and a 60-unit mid-rise are fundamentally different scopes of work. Budget this as a hard capital line item, not a footnote.
| Level | Efficiency Improvement | Points |
|---|---|---|
| Level 1 | 15% improvement over baseline | 20 pts |
| Level 2 | 25% improvement | 35 pts |
| Level 3 | 40% improvement | 50 pts |
Critical deadline: CMHC's energy scoring baseline shifts from 2015/2017 codes to the 2020 NBC/NECB on September 30, 2026. If your Toronto CMA deal timeline extends past that date, rebuild your energy model against the 2020 standard before committing to energy points in the application.
Accessibility Points (up to 30 pts)
Accessibility is typically the most capital-efficient points category. Universal-design features — grab bars, wider doorways, accessible building entry, lever-style hardware — can deliver 20–30 points at relatively modest per-unit cost. For older Toronto CMA stock undergoing any level of renovation, accessibility features should be scoped into the upgrade budget during acquisition underwriting, not retrofitted after the fact.
Underwriting DSCR for a Toronto CMA Multi-Family Asset
MLI Select underwrites the building — not the borrower's income or debt load. The operative constraint is DSCR, with CMHC's published floor at 1.10x for rental housing.
Practical note: Be prepared for the approved CMHC lender underwriting your file to stress the DSCR to 1.12x internally. This is a standard lender overlay above the CMHC minimum. A pro forma built to exactly 1.10x will not pass that lender review. Advisory standard is to build to 1.20x+ — this absorbs the lender overlay and leaves an operational buffer for vacancy variance, unexpected maintenance, or property tax reassessment post-sale.
Conservative assumptions for Toronto CMA vintage stock:
| Metric | Conservative Assumption |
|---|---|
| Vacancy & credit loss | 5–8% of GPR |
| Property management (outsourced) | 5–8% of EGI |
| Maintenance / R&M | $800–$1,200/unit/year |
| Insurance | Verify from current declaration |
| Property tax | Verify with municipality; flag reassessment risk post-sale |
| Minimum DSCR (MLI Select) | 1.10x |
| Target DSCR (advisory standard) | 1.20x+ |
Toronto CMA Market Snapshot
| Metric | Toronto CMA |
|---|---|
| Cap rate range (stabilized multi-family) | 4.0–5.25% |
| Vacancy rate (purpose-built) | 3.0% |
| Affordability threshold (CMHC 2019 Census) | $1,348/mon |
| Primary rental demand drivers | Largest rental market in Canada, post-secondary institutions, immigration gateway |
| Sub-markets with highest advisory activity | East York, Etobicoke, North York, Scarborough |
What to Bring to Your Advisory Session for a Toronto CMA Deal
To get maximum value from an Ontario Multiplex advisory session on a Toronto CMA acquisition, come prepared with:
On the asset: - Current rent roll (within 30 days) with in-place rents compared against the CMHC affordability threshold - Trailing 12-month operating statement (T12) - Property tax bills and most recent insurance declaration - Building condition assessment (if available) or a preliminary scope of deferred maintenance - Any existing leases, particularly below-market or fixed-term commitments
On your MLI Select strategy: - Target point tier (50 / 70 / 100) and the basis for earning those points - Energy efficiency scope — even a preliminary position is valuable (full energy model comes later) - Affordability commitment: percentage of units, threshold level, and duration
On your deal economics: - Purchase price and proposed structure - Target DSCR and IRR - Equity available and LP/JV structure (if applicable)
Book your advisory session through the Ontario Multiplex Members Portal. The mortgage side of any Toronto CMA file routes through cornellmortgages.ca.
Frequently Asked Questions: MLI Select in Toronto CMA
Does the CMHC affordability threshold change by city?
Yes. CMHC publishes a separate threshold for each Census Metropolitan Area, based on 30% of the 2019 median renter household income for that CMA. For Toronto CMA, the applicable threshold is $1,348/mon. Always verify against the current CMHC XLSX — not third-party tools — before committing units to an affordability schedule.
Can I qualify for MLI Select on a Toronto CMA property if my rents are already at market?
It depends on where market rents sit relative to the CMHC threshold. In Toronto CMA's older stock, market rents and the affordability threshold may be closely aligned or the threshold may already be met by in-place rents. Run the rent roll analysis first. If market rents exceed the threshold, you can still access MLI Select through energy or accessibility points — the affordability category is not mandatory.
What is the minimum number of units for MLI Select?
MLI Select applies to properties with 5 or more units. Properties with fewer than 5 units do not qualify for CMHC multi-unit mortgage loan insurance under this program.
What amortization can I achieve in Toronto CMA with MLI Select?
Amortization depends on your point total. 50 points = up to 40 years, 70 points = up to 45 years, 100 points = up to 50 years. The 100-point tier also unlocks limited recourse — a material structural benefit for Toronto CMA acquisitions at scale.
How does the lender stress test affect a Toronto CMA deal?
CMHC's minimum DSCR is 1.10x. However, approved CMHC lenders typically apply an internal stress test of 1.12x. Build your Toronto CMA pro forma to 1.20x+ to clear both hurdles and maintain a cash-flow buffer.
Disclaimer
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, or financial advice. CRE advisory and underwriting services are provided through Perseverance Asset Management (1000339497 Ontario Inc.). For mortgage advisory and origination services, visit cornellmortgages.ca. Always consult a qualified lawyer and accountant before implementing any corporate structure or investment strategy.
For the complete MLI Select underwriting framework — point tier table, premium structure, amortization table, and deal experience — see the Ontario Multiplex pillar guide: How to Underwrite and Structure an Ontario Multiplex Deal Using MLI Select