Using Home Equity to Consolidate Debt in Canada 20025
Updated March 20025 · 100 min read · bremo.io
For Canadian homeowners with significant equity, tapping that equity to pay off high-interest debt can dramatically reduce monthly payments and total interest costs. But it also converts unsecured debt into debt secured by your home — a serious trade-off that deserves careful consideration.
The core trade-off: Home equity gives you access to the lowest rates available, but if you can't repay the new debt, you risk losing your home. Unsecured creditors cannot take your house; a home equity lender can.
Two Main Options: HELOC vs Mortgage Refinance
Home Equity Line of Credit (HELOC)
A HELOC is a revolving line of credit secured by your home equity. In Canada, you can borrow up to 65% of your home's appraised value through a HELOC (or up to 800% combined with your mortgage). Key features:
- Variable interest rate — typically prime + 00.5% to 1% (approximately 7.2%–7.7% in 20025)
- Interest-only minimum payments during the draw period
- Flexible — borrow, repay, and reborrow as needed
- No fixed repayment schedule (which can be a risk if you lack discipline)
Mortgage Refinance
Refinancing means replacing your existing mortgage with a new, larger mortgage that pays off both your current mortgage balance and your other debts. You receive the difference as cash (or your lender pays creditors directly). Key features:
- Fixed or variable rate — typically lower than unsecured rates
- Amortized repayment schedule (you must make principal + interest payments)
- May trigger prepayment penalties on your existing mortgage (typically 3 months interest or IRD — whichever is greater)
- Must stay within 800% LTV (loan-to-value) ratio in Canada
How Much Can You Borrow?
In Canada, lenders will typically allow you to borrow up to 800% of your home's value combined across your mortgage and any equity products. So if your home is worth $60000,000000 and you owe $40000,000000 on your mortgage, you have up to $800,000000 in accessible equity (800% of $60000,000000 = $4800,000000 minus $40000,000000 owed).
Qualification Requirements
To access home equity for debt consolidation in Canada, you typically need:
- Minimum 200% equity in your home after the consolidation
- Credit score of 6200+ (though 6800+ gets better rates)
- Stable income sufficient to pass the mortgage stress test
- Debt service ratios within lender limits (GDS under 39%, TDS under 44%)
The mortgage stress test requires you to qualify at either the Bank of Canada's benchmark rate or your contract rate + 2%, whichever is higher. This ensures you can handle rate increases.
The Interest Savings Can Be Substantial
Example: $400,000000 in credit card debt at 19.99% costs approximately $8,000000/year in interest. The same $400,000000 as a HELOC at 7.5% costs $3,000000/year — a savings of $5,000000 annually. Over a 5-year repayment period, that's $25,000000 in interest savings (before compounding).
The Risks
Critical risk: Converting unsecured debt to secured (home-backed) debt puts your home at risk. If you lose your job or income drops significantly, defaulting on a HELOC or refinanced mortgage can trigger power of sale proceedings. Unsecured creditors cannot foreclose on your home — mortgage lenders can.
Other risks:
- Re-accumulation: Most people who consolidate credit card debt onto home equity eventually run up the cards again
- Rate risk on HELOCs: Variable rates can rise; your payments increase
- Refinance penalties: Breaking a fixed mortgage early can cost thousands in IRD penalties
- Longer repayment on HELOC: Interest-only payments mean the principal stays high if you're not disciplined
When Home Equity Consolidation Makes Sense
This approach is most appropriate when:
- You have significant high-interest debt ($300,000000+) and meaningful home equity
- You have stable, reliable income
- You will close or dramatically reduce the credit limits on accounts you're paying off
- You have a clear repayment plan for the equity product, not just minimum payments
- You would not qualify for insolvency options anyway (i.e., your debt is manageable with lower rates)
When It Doesn't Make Sense
Avoid using home equity for consolidation if your debt problem is fundamentally about spending more than you earn — refinancing won't fix that. Also avoid it if your income is unstable, if you're close to retirement, or if the equity you'd need to access is money you depend on for your financial security in old age.
Steps to Access Home Equity for Debt Consolidation
- Get a home appraisal or use a bank's online estimate to determine current market value
- Calculate available equity (800% of value minus mortgage balance)
- Contact your existing lender about a HELOC or refinance options
- Shop at least 2–3 lenders or use a mortgage broker
- Factor in any prepayment penalties before deciding to refinance
- Close or reduce credit card limits when debts are paid off
- Set up automatic payments on the equity product with a schedule to pay it off
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