Are detached homes more expensive to maintain?
Are detached homes draining your wallet? The honest answer may surprise you.
Quick answer up front
Yes — detached homes typically cost more to maintain than condos or townhouses. But “more” depends on size, age, lot, and local climate. With the right strategy you can predict, control, and minimize those costs.
Why detached homes cost more
Detached properties have more exterior and systems to care for. That means:
- More roof surface = higher roof repair/replacement cost.
- Full foundation and exterior walls = potential structural and siding costs.
- Larger yards = regular landscaping, tree care, irrigation, snow removal.
- Separate mechanical systems = full HVAC, septic or sewer line responsibility.
- Longer driveways and fences = additional upkeep and replacement expenses.
Rule of thumb: plan for 1%–4% of the home’s market value annually for maintenance. A $800,000 detached home often needs $8,000–$32,000 per year set aside. For condos that percentage frequently drops to 0.5%–1.5% because many exterior costs are covered by condo fees.

Real number examples (estimates)
- Roof replacement: $8,000–$25,000 depending on materials.
- Furnace/AC replacement: $3,000–$10,000.
- Driveway resurfacing: $2,000–$10,000.
- Window replacement (whole house): $8,000–$20,000.
- Annual landscaping/lawn care: $1,000–$6,000.
These are estimates. Age, local labor rates, and material choices change the final bill.
How to keep maintenance costs predictable
Actionable moves that cut surprise bills:
- Budget with precision: use the 1%–4% rule but tailor it to your property by factoring in age and systems.
- Create a 5-year schedule: prioritize roof, HVAC, water systems, and driveway repairs.
- Buy a home inspection and keep older reports. Track deferred issues before they compound.
- Invest in preventive maintenance: seasonal HVAC service, gutter cleaning, tree trimming.
- Use local tradespeople with good reviews. Repeat hires reduce bid costs.
When a detached home is worth the higher cost
Detached homes offer privacy, value appreciation, and control. If you want expansion options or a private yard, pay for more maintenance. Wealth-building homeowners treat upkeep as investment protection. Well-maintained detached homes typically outperform during resale.
Final verdict — who should buy detached
Buy a detached home if you can:
- Budget reliably for maintenance.
- Value outdoor space and privacy.
- Want flexibility to renovate or add living space.
If monthly predictability and low maintenance matter most, consider condos or townhomes.
For local market context and a personalized cost forecast, contact Tony Sousa. He’s a Toronto-based realtor who models maintenance costs into total ownership expense so you buy with confidence.
Contact: tony@sousasells.ca | 416-477-2620 | https://www.sousasells.ca



















