Income Needed to Buy a Home in Yukon (2026)

Verdict: severely unaffordable — requires C$183,580/year (#6 least affordable of 13 Canadian provinces)

Avg. home price
C$592,276
Required income
C$183,580
Median income
C$84,500
Monthly cost
C$4,895

Yukon ranks #6 of 13 Canadian provinces for housing unaffordability in 2026. Buying the average home at C$592,276 requires a household income of about C$183,580. That's C$99,080 more than the median household actually earns (C$84,500) — a shortfall of 117% of typical income.

Yukon's affordability ratio of 2.17 (required income ÷ actual median income) is 2.4% worse than the median across all 13 Canadian provinces (2.12). Home prices here sit 13.6% above the cross-province median of C$521,364.

The Canadian math is stricter than the sticker price suggests. Buyers in Yukon must qualify at the OSFI B-20 stress rate of 7.24% — a full 2 points above the 5.24% contract rate — over a 25-year amortization. With a minimum-style down payment of 5.8% (C$34,228), CMHC insurance adds C$22,322 to the loan, and land transfer tax typically costs another C$650 in closing costs. The result: a stress-tested monthly payment of C$4,191 before property tax and heat.

Yukon monthly cost breakdown (2026)

Average home priceC$592,276
Down payment (5.8%)C$34,228
CMHC insurance premiumC$22,322
Total insured loanC$580,370
Monthly P&I @ 7.24% stress rateC$4,191
Monthly property taxC$554
Monthly heat allowanceC$150
Total monthly housing cost (GDS)C$4,895
Required household incomeC$183,580
Median household incomeC$84,500

Run your own numbers

These figures model the average buyer. Your rate, down payment, and debts change the answer — check your personal maximum with the Home Affordability Analyzer or build a full payment schedule in the Advanced Mortgage Calculator — and remember Canadian lenders qualify you at the stress rate, not your contract rate.

How Yukon compares

  • Prince Edward Island — similar affordability (ratio 2.12, requires C$137,055)
  • Nunavut — similar affordability (ratio 2.27, requires C$205,727)
  • Nova Scotia — similar affordability (ratio 2.42, requires C$152,008)
  • Saskatchewan — among the most affordable Canadian provinces (requires C$110,157)
  • Northwest Territories — among the most affordable Canadian provinces (requires C$159,652)

See every state and province ranked in the 2026 Mortgage Affordability Index.

Frequently asked questions

How much income do you need to buy a house in Yukon in 2026?

About C$183,580 per year to afford the average-priced home of C$592,276, assuming the OSFI stress test at 7.24% and a 32% GDS ratio. The median Yukon household earns C$84,500.

What is the monthly cost of owning a average home in Yukon?

Roughly C$4,895 per month, including principal and interest at the stress-test rate, property tax, and a heating allowance.

Is Yukon affordable at the median income?

No. The required income exceeds the median household income by C$99,080 (117%), ranking Yukon #6 least affordable of 13 Canadian provinces.

Methodology & sources

Calculated under OSFI B-20: qualifying at the contract rate + 200 bps, 32% gross debt service ratio, 25-year amortization, CMHC premium per the National Housing Act schedule. Home prices from CREA-based averages; incomes from Statistics Canada's Canadian Income Survey. Figures model the average scenario and are not financial advice. Full sources on the affordability index.