Why the Boomers Are Smiling While Millennials Can’t Enter: The Great Canadian Housing Generational Divide
Dec 19, 2025
TWO CANADAS, ONE HOUSING MARKET
There are two entirely different countries operating inside Canada’s borders.
Canada A is a place where people bought homes for $120,000, refinanced three times, rented out the basement, rode 40 years of asset inflation, and now sit on $2.5M of tax-free home equity while complaining about “kids these days.”
Canada B is where everyone under 40 lives. In this version of Canada, rent is $2,800 for a one-bedroom, groceries cost more than a vacation, and you must pass a Hunger-Games-level mortgage stress test to buy a $750K teardown with knob-and-tube wiring and raccoons included.
These two Canadas do not speak the same language, understand the same economy, or operate under similar financial realities. And yet—they are competing for the same urban land.
The result?
A generational housing divide so wide that you could drive a Surrey McMansion through it.
This is not anecdotal. This is structural.
And it didn’t happen by accident.
This is the deep dive boomers don’t want to read, millennials are tired of explaining, and politicians refuse to touch unless it polls well in Mississauga.
SECTION 1: THE STARTING LINE WAS NEVER EQUAL
Boomers Began the Race at the 60-Metre Mark
Boomers entered adulthood in a Canada with:
Low home prices (average home price in 1986: $76,000)
Low debt loads
High income-to-housing affordability
Secure pensions
A job environment where “entry-level” did not require 3–5 years of experience
Mortgage rates that look high on paper but applied to extremely cheap homes
And, most importantly:
Government policy that actively promoted mass homeownership
Canada constructed more homes in the 1970s than we do now, despite having 15 million fewer people. The post-war consensus was simple:
“Housing is a social good, build a ton of it.”
Contrast that with the modern environment:
“Housing is an investment vehicle, and supply should be controlled to ‘protect neighbourhood character.’”
Millennials didn’t just have a later start.
They had a different start.
SECTION 2: HOME PRICES WENT TO SPACE WHILE WAGES STAYED ON EARTH
Boomers experienced a Canada where home prices were somewhat correlated with incomes. Millennials inherited a housing market decoupled from reality.
The Multipliers Tell the Entire Story
Generation | Avg. Home Price-to-Income Ratio When They Were ~30 |
|---|---|
Boomers | 2–3× income |
Gen X | 4–5× income |
Millennials | 8–12× income (20× in Vancouver, Toronto) |
Boomers bought homes when:
A single income could support a mortgage
A teacher could buy a detached home
Saving for a down payment took 2–4 years, not 25–30
Millennials are told to:
Side hustle
“Stop buying lattes”
Live with three roommates until 40
Move to the suburbs, then the exurbs, then the cornfields
The generational advice gap is staggering:
Boomer advice:
“Just work hard and buy a house.”
Millennial reality:
“To buy a house, you must earn $250K, save $200K, survive bidding wars, avoid renovictions, and pass mortgage stress tests designed for hedge funds.”
This is not a moral failing. It’s math.
SECTION 3: THE TAX SYSTEM IS BUILT LIKE A BOOMER RETIREMENT PLAN
Canada’s housing tax policies overwhelmingly reward older homeowners at the expense of everyone else.
1. Principal Residence Capital Gains Exemption (PRCGE)
The single most powerful wealth generator in the country. Boomers bought for $200K. House appreciated to $2M.
They walk away with $1.8M tax-free.
If a millennial earned $1.8M from labour?
They’d be paying 50% tax in Ontario or BC.
2. No Inheritance Tax
Boomers pass down multi-million-dollar real estate portfolios with zero tax friction.
3. Low Property Taxes
Cities keep property taxes artificially low to appease older voters.
A $3M Vancouver home may pay:
Less property tax than a Calgary condo.
This incentivizes:
Holding instead of selling
Using homes as wealth vaults instead of shelter
NIMBY resistance to new housing supply
All of this is designed to inflate boomer assets over time.
SECTION 4: “I PAID 12% MORTGAGE RATES SO I HAD IT HARDER” — THE MOST MISLEADING ARGUMENT IN CANADIAN REAL ESTATE
Boomers love to bring up 12–18% mortgage rates like they're pulling the trump card.
This argument is misleading because:
High Rates × Low Prices = Manageable Payments
In 1985:
18% rates
$80K home
Monthly payment: low enough that one income could handle it
In 2024:
5.5–6.5% rates
$1.2M home
Monthly payment: $6,000+, requiring two high incomes and a stress test on rates that haven’t existed in a decade.
A 5% mortgage on a $1.2M house is financially harder than an 18% mortgage on a $75K house.
Add to this:
student loans
gig economy wages
childcare that costs more than rent
inflation outpacing wages every year
And you get what millennials already know:
High rates didn’t break boomers.
High prices are breaking millennials.
SECTION 5: NIMBYISM — THE BOOMER HOUSING LOCK
This is where the divide gets political.
Boomers are the majority voting bloc. Politicians need them. Therefore:
Rezoning is blocked
Density is fought
Townhomes are called “neighbourhood character destruction”
High-rises are banned in huge chunks of cities
Every new housing policy must be “gentle,” “careful,” and “respect heritage character”
Boomers are:
overhoused (living in 4–5 bedroom homes)
under-occupied (1–2 people per dwelling)
organized (HOA groups, neighbourhood associations)
extremely politically active
Meanwhile, millennials:
Rent
Move frequently
Have no time for city council meetings
Are not consulted for zoning decisions
So who wins?
The people who already own the land.
The outcome is predictable:
Supply stays constrained
Urban cores stay exclusionary
Prices inflate
Millennials keep renting
NIMBYism is not just a planning debate.
It is a wealth-protection strategy.
SECTION 6: IMMIGRATION, FOREIGN CAPITAL, AND THE OPEN-DOOR POLICY THAT BENEFITED HOMEOWNERS
Millennials didn’t create this dynamic. They are simply drowning in it.
Canada dramatically increased population growth between 2015–2024:
International students
Temporary foreign workers
Non-permanent residents
High-skill immigrants
Plus interprovincial migration into BC and Ontario
Demand surged.
Supply did not.
Who benefited?
Boomers who already owned assets in supply-constrained markets.
This is not an anti-immigration argument.
This is a structural analysis of who gains when demand spikes and supply doesn’t.
The winners:
Homeowners
Landlords
Developers
Investors
The losers:
First-time buyers
Renters
Younger generations
The system redistributed wealth upward.
SECTION 7: “WHY DON’T MILLENNIALS JUST MOVE?” — THE WORST ARGUMENT IN THE BOOK
Boomers say this often.
Politicians repeat it with a straight face.
Moving:
doesn’t fix structural affordability
isn’t feasible when your job is in the city
doesn’t work when every surrounding suburb is also unaffordable
does not magically create more supply
Telling millennials to move is like telling a drowning person:
“Have you tried not drowning?”
SECTION 8: THE DOWN PAYMENT WALL
Boomers could save a down payment in a few years.
Today?
Saving $200K for a down payment is a decade-long project.
Even saving aggressively, millennials face:
rent inflation
childcare costs
stagnant wages
high cost of living
student loans
taxes that leave little residual income
Millennials are not bad savers.
They are saving in a system where the target moves faster than their income.
Every year they save $20K, the housing market jumps $60K.
This is not a race.
It’s a treadmill.
SECTION 9: INTERGENERATIONAL WEALTH TRANSFER — THE ONLY ESCAPE HATCH
Here is the truth nobody likes saying out loud:
The only millennials who are buying homes are those who get financial help from their parents.
Not some.
Not most.
Almost all.
The Bank of Mom and Dad is now a top-10 lender in Canada.
This is why inequality is worse within generations than between them.
A millennial with:
boomer parents
with paid-off homes
in expensive cities
receiving $150–$300K in help
…will be fine.
A millennial without that?
Zero chance.
Housing is no longer a wealth-building system.
It is a wealth-transmission system.
SECTION 10: THE PSYCHOLOGY OF THE DIVIDE — WHY BOOMERS DON’T “GET IT”
Boomers genuinely believe:
They struggled just as much
They earned their wealth solely through effort
They sacrificed and worked for their homes
They did work hard.
But they also benefited from:
structural tailwinds
cheaper education
cheaper housing
cheaper living costs
fewer barriers
government policies designed to help them
Boomers see high interest rates and think:
“We suffered too.”
Millennials see the numbers and think:
“You bought at the bottom of the graph, we’re at the top.”
Each generation thinks the other is out of touch.
Both are right.
SECTION 11: WHAT THIS MEANS FOR THE FUTURE OF CANADA
Canada cannot sustain:
record immigration
minimal housing supply growth
investor-driven demand
zoning bottlenecks
tax policies that inflate assets
It leads to:
falling birth rates
mass out-migration to cheaper provinces
declining productivity
aging population dependency
shrinking middle class
a two-tier society
social instability
Housing is not a “market issue.”
It is a nation-building issue.
And the nation is stalling.
SECTION 12: THE SOLUTIONS (NONE OF WHICH ARE POLITICALLY EASY)
Here is the real list—no fluff, no “build more homes” sound bites.
1. Break the zoning blockades
End single-family zoning.
Legalize density.
Everywhere.
2. Reform tax policy
Not to punish boomers—but to stop inflating home values artificially.
3. Build social housing at scale
Not 500 units.
Not pilot projects.
Tens of thousands annually.
4. Heavily regulate non-resident and speculative ownership
Housing should be for living, not parking global capital.
5. Support first-time buyers with equity programs, not debt programs
6. Create a national housing strategy that is actually enforceable
And not written to please the 65+ vote.
CONCLUSION: THE GENERATIONAL CONTRACT IS BROKEN
Boomers grew wealthy through a system built for them.
Millennials are being financially crushed by one that actively works against them.
This is not whining.
This is not entitlement.
This is not “kids these days.”
This is a structural generational imbalance created by policy.
Boomers are smiling not because they’re selfish—
but because the system rewarded them.
Millennials are struggling not because they’re irresponsible—
but because the system punishes them.
Unless Canada rewrites its housing rules, the future is clear:
More inequality
More political instability
More resentment
More generational divide
Housing determines everything:
Wealth
Stability
Family formation
Social cohesion
Economic output
National identity
Fix housing, and you fix the generational crisis.
Ignore it, and we end up with a Canada that works for one generation only:
The one that already owns the land.






















