The cottage decision is behind me. If you followed along, you know how that analysis went — cottage vs. upsizing the primary residence, two mortgages vs. one, lifestyle purchase vs. an asset with optionality. The cottage won. And after one month of Airbnb hosting on Lake Huron, the numbers are pointing in the right direction — not cash-flow positive yet, not in shoulder season, but close enough that a full-season run (next year( should cover the carrying costs. That part of the thesis is holding.
So now what?
The cottage isn’t the end of the capital deployment question. It’s the beginning of it. You build one real estate asset and you immediately start looking at the next chess move — not because you’re greedy, but because the picture gets clearer once you’re in the game. You understand what you’re building toward. You understand what the gaps are.
For me, the gap is this: I have the summer side of the retirement equation figured out. Cottage country, Lake Huron, summers that belong to us and pay for themselves. What I don’t have is the other half. The winter side. The snowbird half. And I don’t necessarily have the income engine that funds the gap years between now and when any of this pays off cleanly.
There are four moves on the board. I’ve been running them against each other.
The Four Options
Before I get into the comparison, let me tell you what’s off the table first.
Upsizing the primary residence is already closed. I wrote that post. The argument doesn’t change just because the cottage is performing. You take a $500k increase in lifestyle debt, get a better kitchen, and end up with no second title, no income offset, no exit optionality. Great quality of life. Zero financial architecture. I’ve already made that call. Moving on, but reluctantly. I just don’t want to handcuff myself and not be able to move to a business or other job.
What’s left:
- Offshore property — buy in Spain, Portugal, Mexico, or somewhere else that serves the snowbird half of the retirement plan. This closes the geographic gap in the strategy.
- Small apartment building — a 4–8 unit building, probably within an hour of London. Conventional Canadian real estate investing. Known model. Significant capital and complexity.
- Digital side hustle — a content brand, an acquisition, an online income source that generates cash without tying up another $500k into hard assets.
Here’s the honest tension I’m sitting with: my gut ranks them digital hustle first, offshore second, apartment building third. But the financing math may force a different sequence — offshore first, then apartment building, then digital. Because putting together the capital and leverage for hard assets is easier while your income and credit profile are at their peak. Digital income, by contrast, doesn’t usually require financing outside of your HELOC — but it also doesn’t produce the structural retirement assets I’m building toward.
So I’m not just asking which is best. I’m asking which comes next, and whether the order the balance sheet prefers is actually the order I should follow.
Option 1: Offshore Property (Snowbird Completion Play)
This is the move that completes the retirement picture. The cottage handles summer. An offshore property — Spain, Portugal, southern Mexico — handles winter. You’re not booking hotels at 65. You own the place. You know the neighbourhood. Ideally you rent it out during the years you’re not snowbirding yet, which offsets the carry.
The strategic case is clean. If the retirement thesis is cottage summers plus snowbird winters plus Urabn Canadian base in between, this is the second leg of a three-legged stool. And buying it while you’re still earning, still creditworthy in Canada, and still making deliberate decisions — rather than scrambling at retirement age — is the right time to do it.
The practical complications are real though. Financing offshore property as a Canadian is not the same as financing domestic real estate. Most major Canadian banks won’t touch a foreign mortgage. You’re typically looking at local financing (harder to access, higher rates, different underwriting standards), pulling equity from Canadian assets, or buying with cash. In a lot of offshore markets — Mexico with fideicomiso structures, Portugal with NHR tax regime considerations — there are legal and tax layers that add friction.
And then there’s the currency question. Buying in euros or pesos means your asset is denominated in a currency you don’t earn. That’s either a hedge or a risk depending on what the Canadian dollar does between now and when you sell.
This is the move financing may prefer me to do first — while I can still lever Canadian equity cleanly. That logic is probably right. It doesn’t mean it’s the move I should make blindly.
Bottom line: Completes the retirement architecture. Harder to finance than it looks. Doable — but needs serious structure before pulling the trigger, not just enthusiasm about Lisbon.
Option 2: Small Apartment Building (The Cash Flow Engine)
A 4–8 unit apartment building near a secondary Ontario market — think something within an hour of London, sized so a single vacancy doesn’t crater you — is the most conventional of the four options. It’s also the one with the most established playbook.
The appeal is real. Multi-unit residential produces actual monthly cash flow, not seasonal STR income. Rents in Ontario have been supported by fundamentals — population growth, affordability pressure filtering renters out of ownership — and a well-managed small building runs largely on systems once you’re past the setup phase. You can hold it, lever it, and eventually sell into a market that values income-producing assets.
But the capital requirement is substantial. A small apartment building in Ontario — even in a secondary market — is a $1.5M to $3M+ acquisition. That’s not cottage money. Down payment requirements on multi-unit residential investment properties are steep (typically 20–25%), and you’re now stacking a third mortgage on a personal balance sheet that already carries a primary residence and a cottage. The financing math works if your income supports the debt service. It gets uncomfortable if anything wobbles.
There’s also operational complexity at a different scale than the cottage. A short-term rental is work, but it’s contained work. Multi-unit residential means tenants, turnover, rent rolls, maintenance calls, potential tribunal proceedings. If you’re self-managing, that’s a part-time job. If you’re hiring out, you’re paying for it — and the cash-flow case on a modern-priced Ontario building is already thin.
This is a strong third move, not a first or second one. You want more dry powder, cleaner balance sheet room, and ideally some established cash flow from one of the other plays before you take this on.
Bottom line: The most conventional path and the most proven Canadian real estate model. But it’s a heavy lift as the next move — this is a “third investment” play, not a second one.
Option 3: Building a Digital Side Hustle (The Always-On Play)
This one doesn’t belong in the same column as the other options — because it doesn’t compete with them for capital.
Building a digital income stream organically — a content brand, a newsletter, a niche site, a productized service — requires time, not dollars. There’s no title. No mortgage. No financing window to hit while your debt ratios are clean. You start it, you work it in the margins, and it compounds on its own timeline regardless of what your balance sheet is doing.
That changes everything about how it fits into the sequence. It’s not “option 3” in a ranked list of capital deployment choices. It’s a parallel track that runs alongside whichever hard asset move comes next. The opportunity cost isn’t capital — it’s attention. And unlike the property options, there’s no urgency date. No market window. No financing cliff. You just start.
The compounding reality is worth stating plainly: digital income built organically takes 12–24 months to become meaningful. Which means the best time to start was last year, and the second best time is now — independent of whether you’re also buying offshore property or evaluating apartment buildings.
Bottom line: No capital required. Runs in parallel with everything else. Start now and don’t wait for the other decisions to resolve.
Option 4: Acquiring a Digital Asset (A Different Animal Entirely)
Acquiring an existing online business — a content site, a SaaS tool, a newsletter with an established audience — is not the same decision as building one. It belongs in a completely different column.
At a 2–3x annual revenue multiple, a digital acquisition is a capital event. A business generating $50,000 a year costs $100,000–$150,000 to acquire. One doing $150,000 costs $300,000–$450,000. That capital competes directly with the offshore property down payment and the apartment building equity requirement. It’s not a “start it in the margins” move — it’s a write-a-cheque move, with all the due diligence, operational transition, and execution risk that comes with it.
The return profile is genuinely different from real estate, though, and that’s worth understanding before dismissing it. Real estate in Canada — especially income-producing property at today’s prices — trades at 15–20x annual net income when you do the cap rate math. A digital acquisition at 2–3x revenue (call it 3–5x net income for a well-run asset) is entering the same capital stack at a fraction of the multiple. You’re buying more income per dollar deployed, with lower leverage, no tenants, and no maintenance calls at 11pm.
The risk profile reflects that. Digital assets can lose traffic, lose revenue, or become obsolete in ways a Lake Huron building lot simply won’t. They require operational competence that’s different from property management. And the market for buying and selling online businesses — while maturing — is less liquid and less standardized than real estate.
But as a capital deployment option sitting alongside offshore property and a small apartment building, a digital acquisition deserves a serious look. You’re comparing entry multiples that are genuinely asymmetric.
Bottom line: Competes directly with the other capital options. Lower entry multiple than real estate, higher execution risk. Worth modelling seriously as an alternative to the apartment building — especially as a second capital move rather than a third.
The Order Question
Here’s where I actually land — and the build vs. acquire distinction changes the whole picture.
Organic digital building starts now. Full stop. No capital required, no financing window to time, no competing priority that justifies waiting. The compounding clock on a content brand or niche site is already running. This isn’t a sequencing decision — it’s a decision to start regardless of sequence.
That leaves three capital deployment options that actually compete with each other: offshore property, a digital acquisition, and a small apartment building. And here the financing logic is real and worth respecting.
My income and borrowing capacity aren’t permanent. The window to finance hard assets cleanly — with strong debt ratios, stable employment income, and equity to lever — is finite. That argues for sequencing the offshore property while the financing is cleaner, before the debt stack gets heavier. The snowbird half of the retirement architecture doesn’t get easier to buy if I wait.
So the honest sequence looks something like this:
- Now: Organic digital building starts, runs in parallel with everything
- 12–24 months: Offshore property research, structure, and acquisition — completes the retirement architecture while the financing window is clean
- Parallel or following: A digital acquisition, sized so the capital deployment sits below the offshore threshold and the multiple math works — potentially funded partly by what the organic content building is already generating by then
- Further out: Small apartment building as the third act, when the balance sheet has more room and the income stack is stronger
The apartment building isn’t off the table. It’s third. And the digital acquisition, at a 2–3x multiple versus the 15–20x effective multiple you’re paying for real estate income, is a genuinely interesting second capital move — if the right asset surfaces and the due diligence holds up.
What I’m not doing: rushing any of it. The lesson from the cottage isn’t that leverage is good and you should stack more as fast as possible. The lesson is that one well-structured move, financed right, run properly, performs at exactly the level you expected. Then you build from a stronger position, not a desperate one.
What This Means for the Reader
If you’re at a similar crossroads — you have a primary residence and one additional real estate asset, some equity, a dual income household, and you’re asking what the next move is — here’s the honest framing:
Know what you’re building. Not just “wealth” generically, but the specific retirement and lifestyle picture you’re trying to construct. The cottage made sense because it fit a defined thesis. The next move has to fit the same thesis, not just be “another investment.”
Respect the sequencing. More debt isn’t automatically better. Each layer of leverage you add constrains the next decision. The order matters as much as the options.
Don’t wait on income generation. The digital side hustle logic applies to you even if your specific path doesn’t look like mine. Whatever your version of an income stream that doesn’t require another mortgage looks like — get it started earlier than feels necessary. That income makes every future asset acquisition calmer, smarter, and less dependent on everything going right.
More of this coming as the analysis continues. I’ll be writing specifically on the offshore property research process — what we’re looking at, what the legal and financing structure actually looks like for Canadians, and whether the numbers work — as we get deeper into it.
Not financial advice. These are my real decisions in real time. Run your own numbers and talk to a professional who knows your full picture before acting on anything here.