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Co-operative Housing in Canada

Modern apartment buildings in Richmond, British Columbia, Canada.

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A rental housing co-operative (co-op) is a non-profit corporation in which each member-resident owns one share. A form of community housing, rental co-ops are democratically governed by their members, who may also participate in management and operational functions. Shares do not appreciate and cannot be sold, and rents are generally set to break even with operating costs such that no profit accumulates. Any surpluses are saved in a reserve fund. Canada’s rental co-ops follow a non-equity model that offers security of tenure and permanent affordability, making them an affordable housing option for low-income households and an alternative to homeownership generally.

The federal government offered targeted co-op housing development programs from 1973 to 1993. These created over 67,000 units, over 33,000 of which remained under federal responsibility as of December 2022. Canada currently has over 92,000 co-op housing units, representing about 0.7% of occupied dwellings (see Figure 1).

Figure 1 – Number of Co-op Housing Units by Province: Total and per 1,000 Occupied Dwellings, 2024

Note: Quebec data reflects 2018 co-op housing stocks. Data for other provinces is current as of April 2024.
Sources: Figure prepared by the Library of Parliament using data obtained upon request from the Co-operative Housing Federation of Canada; and Statistics Canada, “Table: 98-10-0038-01: Dwellings occupied by usual residents and population in dwellings: Canada, provinces and territories, census metropolitan areas and census agglomerations with parts,” Database, accessed 15 May 2024.

Governance and Current Initiatives

Federal co-op programs are delivered by the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC). Since 2005, CMHC has contracted certain functions to the Agency for Co-operative Housing (ACH), an arms-length body created by CMHC and the Co-operative Housing Federation of Canada (CHF). The CHF is a national non-profit organization that supports co-op advocacy and capacity-building.

Figure 2 illustrates the relationships between key actors in the co-op space.

Figure 2 – Key Actors Supporting Federally Assisted Housing Co-ops

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Sources: Figure prepared by the Library of Parliament using data obtained from Community Housing Transformation Centre, Our Grants; Co-operative Housing Federation of Canada, Community Housing Transformation Centre launched – will distribute millions in grants to housing providers (including co-ops!), 8 January 2020; The Agency for Co‑operative Housing (ACH), Our Governance; ACH, Our Accountability; Government of Canada, “1.1 Building Affordable Homes: A New Generation of Co-Operative Housing Development,” A Plan to Grow Our Economy and Make Life More Affordable, Budget 2022; Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation, 2023 Annual Report; and Government of Canada, Minister of Housing, Infrastructure and Communities Transition Book 1 (2023): Department and Portfolio Overview.

Past federal co-op housing programs have required co-ops to allocate a portion of their units to “rent-geared-to-income” (RGI) tenants. These comprise about one third of co-op households. Where provinces and territories agreed to share the cost, federal rent supplements have been provided to bridge the gap between RGI rents and operating costs.

On 6 June 2024, the federal government announced the launch of a new Co-operative Housing Development Program (CHDP). Co-designed with the CHF and other partners, the CHDP will see CMHC deliver $1 billion in loans and $500 million in grants to create up to 3,200 co-op units. The 2023 Fall Economic Statement committed $309.3 million to fund this initiative and also announced that a measure waiving the Goods and Services Tax on new purpose-built rental housing would include co-ops.

Co-ops are also eligible for certain other National Housing Strategy initiatives, including the Affordable Housing Fund, the Apartment Construction Loan Program and the forthcoming Canada Rental Protection Fund. Qualifying co-ops with expired or soon-to-expire operating agreements can receive rent supplements and transitional operating funding through CMHC’s Federal Community Housing Initiative (FCHI).

Co-op Characteristics

A mature co-op with a paid-off mortgage has the potential to sustain itself at below-market rents. Moreover, co-op rents tend to become increasingly affordable relative to market rents over time. A 2022 CHF report entitled The Co-op Difference: Comparing co-op and market rents in five Canadian cities found that federally assisted co-ops were 25% more affordable than comparable market rentals in 2006, and the gap had increased to 33% by 2021. Depending on the program design, this implies potential savings on rent subsidies for co-op units as compared to market rentals.

Guided by principles like self-help and member participation, some co-ops require members to participate in co-op administration or maintenance. CMHC’s 1992 Evaluation of the Federal Co-operative Housing Program found that “the dollar value of self-help resident participation [was] substantial,” and its 2003 Co-operative Housing Programs Evaluation estimated that co-ops’ capital and operating costs were 11% lower than other non-profit rentals. However, it also found that co-ops were three times more likely than non-profit projects to experience financial difficulty. In recent years, federal co-ops have increasingly contracted some functions to property management companies, with only 2% being volunteer managed according to the ACH’s 2022 Biannual Portfolio Performance Review.

As with other forms of social housing, the groups that benefit most from co-op housing are those experiencing housing affordability challenges. CHDP funding will prioritize projects focused on housing those in greatest need, including Indigenous groups, women and children, and persons with disabilities. Indeed, the Budget 2022 Impacts Report suggested that these groups, along with as racialized groups and female single parents may benefit most from the CHDP. CMHC’s 2003 evaluation and recent analyses by co-op federations in British Columbia and Quebec support these assertions. Notably, sources such as a 2020 report entitled Indigenizing the Co-operative Model and remarks by the Native Inter-tribal Housing Co-operative suggest that the co-op model is especially conducive to Indigenous community development, self-determination and traditional lifestyles and values.

History of Federal Involvement

The first full-scale federal co-op housing program was launched in 1973. The Section 61 Co-operative Housing Program offered 50-year mortgages directly from CMHC for 100% of development costs – with 10% conditionally forgivable – at an effective 8% interest rate. Standard rents were set to break even with operating costs, while RGI rents for up to 25% of units were set at 25% of household income. Whereas previous public housing projects had been criticized for creating stigmatized, concentrated areas of poverty, this program made creating mixed-income communities a principal objective.

A more market-based approach was taken in 1979, with the creation of the Section 95 Co-operative Housing Program, in which CMHC insured 100% of 35-year mortgages from private lenders while subsidizing payments to create an effective 2% interest rate for the first three years. Subsidies gradually decreased thereafter, with excess subsidy going to RGI rent supplements. At least 15% of units had to be RGI, and other rents were set at the “low end of market.” During this time, the Rural and Native Housing Program, established in 1974, and the Urban Native Non-Profit Housing Program, which began in 1982, also helped develop co-op and other non-profit housing for Indigenous people.

In 1986, the federal government announced changes to its housing policies with the publication of A National Direction for Housing Solutions. Largely in response to criticisms that resources should be targeted to those in greatest need, co-op housing funds would now be split into two distinct programs:

Figure 3 provides a breakdown of co-op housing units created under these four federal programs.

Figure 3 – Federal Co-op Housing Portfolio, Number of Units by Province and Program, 2000

Note: The figure depicts the number of units under portfolio administration by CMHC or provincial housing agencies in 2000, which includes projects with continuing mortgages in 2000 or projects receiving financial assistance. These numbers exclude co-operative projects for which mortgages had been paid in full or projects that had been sold, totalling 2,163 co-operative units.
Source: Figure prepared by the Library of Parliament using data obtained from Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation, Co-operative Housing Programs Evaluation, September 2003.

Noting that federal spending on social housing had reached $2 billion annually, and seeking to reduce spending generally, Budget 1993 ended funding for new social housing except on reserve. Beginning in 1996, responsibility for federal co-ops was devolved to most provinces and territories, resulting in an abrupt decline in co-op housing development. Only Quebec, British Columbia and – until 1995 – Ontario continued developing co-op housing unilaterally. While co-ops were eligible for funding under the Affordable Housing Initiative, which ran between 2001 and 2011 and the Investments in Affordable Housing Program, which lasted from 2011 to 2019, the development of new co-ops was limited outside Quebec, where the provincial government offered strong support (see Figure 4).

Figure 4 – Co-op Housing Starts in Centres of 10,000 and over, by Province, 1989–2023

Notes: According to the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation, “[h]ousing starts are an economic indicator that reflect the number of residential housing projects that have been started over a specific length of time.” Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation, Monthly Housing Starts and Other Construction Data Tables, Dataset, 15 May 2024.
Source: Figure prepared by the Library of Parliament using data obtained from Statistics Canada, “Table 34-10-0137-01: Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation, housing starts, by type of dwelling unit and market type in all centres of 10,000 and over for Canada and provinces,” Database, accessed 8 May 2024.

For most co-ops, RGI rents are unviable without government funding. Consequently, in April 2018, the federal government committed $38 million in FCHI Phase 1 funding to extend rent supplements for federal co-ops with agreements expiring between 1 April 2016 and 28 February 2020. Co-ops with agreements that expired before this date could receive 12 months of Temporary Rental Assistance for low-income households starting in April 2021. FCHI Phase 2 committed $580.2 million in rental assistance – and for the most vulnerable groups, transitional operating funding – to housing providers with agreements expiring by 31 March 2028.

Figure 5 illustrates the timeline of key federal co-op housing initiatives.

Figure 5 – Federal Support for Co-op Housing: Key Programs and Events

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Sources: Figure prepared by the Library of Parliament using data obtained from Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC), Evaluation of the Community Housing Transformation Centre, May 2023; CMHC, Co-operative Housing Programs Evaluation, September 2003; CMHC, Evaluation of the Federal Co-operative Housing Programs: Summary Report, February 1992; CMHC, “The Evolution of Social Housing in Canada,” Canadian Housing Observer, 2011; The Agency for Co-operative Housing, The Open Road: 2022 Annual Report; Steve Pomeroy, Background Primer on Canada’s Housing System, Report prepared for the Office of the Federal Housing Advocate, April 2021; and CMHC, Investment in affordable housing (IAH).

Related Resources

Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation. Co-operative housing guide.

Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation. Selected Models of Co-operative Housing. December 2018.

Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation. Social and Affordable Housing Survey Results for Rental Structures. 7 March 2023.

Confédération québécoise des coopératives d’habitation. Enquête sur le profil socioéconomique des résidents de coopératives d’habitation – 2017 [in French].

Cooperative Housing International. Principles and Values.

Ketilson, Lou Hammond and Ian MacPherson. A Report on Aboriginal Co-operatives in Canada: Current Situation and Potential for Growth. Centre for the Study of Co-operatives, University of Saskatchewan. March 2001.

Pomeroy, Steve. Background Primer on Canada’s Housing System. Report prepared for the Office of the Federal Housing Advocate. April 2021.

By Jaquelin Coulson, Library of Parliament

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