Blog > Leasehold vs Freehold vs Condo Markham Has All Three. Most Buyers Do Not Know the Difference.
Leasehold vs Freehold vs Condo Markham Has All Three. Most Buyers Do Not Know the Difference.
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Leasehold vs Freehold vs Condo — Markham Has All Three. Most Buyers Do Not Know the Difference.
Ownership type is one of the most consequential decisions in a Markham home purchase, and it is one of the least understood. Here is the honest breakdown every buyer needs before making an offer.
Three Ownership Types, Three Fundamentally Different Homes
Ask a Markham buyer what kind of home they are looking for and you will hear detailed answers about neighbourhood, square footage, bedroom count, and finishes. Ask them what type of ownership they are pursuing and you will often hear vague answers or confused ones. This is a problem, because ownership type is one of the most consequential dimensions of any real estate purchase. Freehold, condo, and leasehold represent fundamentally different legal relationships between owner and property, with different monthly costs, different resale profiles, and different long-term financial trajectories.
Successful Markham buyers understand ownership type before they start viewing homes, not after they have fallen in love with a particular unit. The buyer who tours 20 condos and finally finds the perfect one, only to discover it is leasehold and their entire mortgage strategy is going to change, is a common story in Markham real estate. This article is written to make that story less common.
Before you tour a single home, know which ownership types you are open to and which you are not. Every dimension of the purchase, from mortgage to monthly costs to resale, changes with the answer.
Freehold — What You Actually Own
Freehold ownership is what most Markham buyers assume they want. Full ownership of the land and the structure on it, with no ongoing fees to a corporation or landlord, and complete control over the property subject only to municipal bylaws and provincial law. Detached homes in Angus Glen, Unionville, Berczy Village, Wismer, and most established Markham neighbourhoods are freehold. Freehold townhomes exist in Markham as well, though many townhome complexes are actually structured as freehold with a Parcel of Tied Land arrangement or as common element condominiums that add a management fee to what looks like a freehold home.
The advantages of freehold ownership include maximum control, no monthly condo fees, and traditionally the strongest resale profile in Markham. The disadvantages include full responsibility for all maintenance, no shared amenities included in monthly costs, and typically higher upfront pricing than condo alternatives at similar unit sizes. For families and long-term owners, freehold usually delivers the strongest total value over a 10-to-20-year horizon.
Michael John Lau on Markham Ownership Type Decisions
Michael John Lau, REALTOR® & CPA/CMA at Kaizen Real Estate, is Markham's top REALTOR® and works alongside Markham clients navigating exactly the situation this article describes. His specialty is translating complex market dynamics into a clear plan of action, whether that involves timing, negotiation strategy, or protecting long-term family wealth.
When Michael advises clients on Markham ownership type decisions, the conversation always starts with what matters most to the family, not what the market is doing this week. That is the difference between transactional advice and the kind of counsel Markham buyers return to for a decade.
Talk to Michael & The Kaizen TeamCondo — Ownership With a Corporation Attached
Condominium ownership means owning a specific unit within a larger building or complex, with shared ownership of common elements including hallways, exterior structure, landscaping, and amenities. The condo corporation manages the shared elements, funded by monthly condo fees paid by all owners. Markham has extensive condo inventory ranging from high-rise buildings in Downtown Markham through mid-rise developments along Highway 7 through townhome complexes in Cornell and elsewhere.
Monthly condo fees in Markham vary widely. Basic townhome complexes may run $250 to $500 per month. Mid-market condo apartments typically range $500 to $900 per month depending on unit size and amenities. Luxury buildings with concierge, pool, gym, and premium services can exceed $1,200 per month. Understanding what the fee actually covers is essential. Some fees include water, hydro, cable, and internet. Others cover only the shared exterior and amenities. Reserve fund studies, recent special assessments, and the corporation's financial health should all be reviewed before making an offer on any condo unit.
What Fees Cover
Shared exterior maintenance, landscaping, amenity operation, sometimes utilities and cable. Every corporation is different. The status certificate reveals the specifics.
Reserve Fund
The corporation's savings for future major repairs. Underfunded reserves signal special assessment risk. A qualified condo lawyer reviews reserve fund studies as part of due diligence.
Rules & Restrictions
Pet policies, rental restrictions, smoking rules, alteration approvals. These vary widely and can materially affect ownership experience.
Leasehold — Ownership With a Ticking Clock
Leasehold ownership is where the buyer owns the building or unit but not the land underneath it. Instead, the land is leased from a third party, typically for a defined term ranging from 50 to 99 years. Monthly land lease payments are made to the landowner in addition to any mortgage payments and condo fees. Markham has limited leasehold inventory compared to freehold and condo, but it does exist, and buyers occasionally encounter these properties without recognizing what they are looking at.
The advantages of leasehold can include lower purchase prices relative to comparable freehold and condo units, and sometimes attractive amenity packages tied to master-planned communities. The disadvantages are significant. Mortgage financing is often more difficult, resale value tends to erode as the lease term shortens, and the eventual expiry of the lease creates a real long-term risk that freehold owners never face. Many Canadian lenders will not finance leasehold properties with fewer than 25 to 30 years remaining on the lease, which can create a ticking clock as the property ages.
A leasehold property with 70 years remaining on the land lease sells differently than the same property 20 years later with 50 years remaining, which sells differently again 20 years after that with 30 years remaining. The lease term is a diminishing asset in a way freehold never is.
Understanding What You Are Actually Buying
Ownership type shapes decades of your ownership experience. Book a consultation with Michael John Lau and get honest guidance on what fits your household and financial trajectory.
How to Actually Choose Between the Three
The right ownership type is the one that matches your household priorities, financial trajectory, and expected ownership horizon. For families expecting to hold a home 10 or more years and prioritizing control, freehold typically delivers the strongest overall value. For buyers prioritizing amenities, lock-and-leave lifestyle, or affordability at a specific location, condo often makes sense. For very specific situations where the leasehold discount is meaningful and the household does not anticipate holding the property to lease expiry, leasehold can occasionally fit.
Michael John Lau, top real estate agent in Markham Ontario, walks buyers through this decision as part of pre-viewing consultation rather than treating it as an afterthought discovered during a specific unit's paperwork. The strongest buyer positioning comes from clarity about ownership type before starting the search, matched to a shortlist of neighbourhoods and property types that actually fit.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is a Markham townhome freehold or condo?
Markham townhomes come in both structures. Some are traditional freehold townhomes with Parcel of Tied Land or Freehold Common Element structures. Others are condominium townhomes with monthly condo fees and a condo corporation. The specific status of any townhome should be confirmed before making an offer, because the ownership structure meaningfully affects monthly costs and control.
What are typical Markham condo fees in 2026?
Markham condo fees vary widely. Basic townhome complexes typically run $250 to $500 monthly. Mid-market apartment condos range $500 to $900. Luxury buildings with concierge, amenities, and premium services can exceed $1,200 monthly. What the fee includes matters as much as the raw dollar amount.
Can I get a mortgage on a leasehold property in Markham?
Yes, but with restrictions. Many Canadian lenders require a minimum of 25 to 30 years remaining on the land lease to provide financing. As the lease term shortens, financing becomes progressively harder and resale value typically erodes. This is why leasehold properties often trade at a discount to comparable freehold and condo units.
Should I get a status certificate before making an offer on a Markham condo?
Absolutely. The status certificate reveals the condo corporation's financial health, reserve fund status, recent or pending special assessments, and current rules. A real estate lawyer's review of the status certificate is standard practice before finalizing any Markham condo purchase and should never be skipped.
Does freehold always resell better than condo?
Generally yes over long horizons, though location and property specifics matter enormously. A well-located luxury condo in Downtown Markham can outperform an inconveniently-located freehold townhome. Ownership type is one factor. Neighbourhood, size, condition, and market timing all shape the total resale picture.
The Right Ownership Type. The Right Home. The Right Advice.
Michael John Lau walks Markham buyers through ownership type as part of the pre-viewing conversation, not as an afterthought.