Mortgage default is one of the most stressful financial situations a Canadian homeowner can face — but it is more nuanced than many people realize. There are stages, processes, and options available between a missed payment and losing your home. Understanding what happens at each stage, what your rights are, and how to get help can make an enormous difference in the outcome.
Mortgage default technically occurs when you breach the terms of your mortgage contract. The most common breach is missing one or more mortgage payments. However, default can also be triggered by:
Missing a single payment technically constitutes default but rarely triggers immediate legal action. Lenders begin escalating processes after 3+ months of missed payments.
Most lenders apply a late fee after your payment is missed and will contact you within days. A single missed payment is treated as an administrative issue in most cases. Contact your lender proactively — do not wait for them to call you. Lenders generally want to resolve the situation rather than initiate costly legal proceedings.
After 30–60 days of missed payments, the lender sends formal written notice of default. This letter outlines the amount owed and may give you a specified period to cure the default by making the missed payments plus late fees. Your credit bureau is reported as delinquent.
After approximately 90 days of non-payment (timelines vary by lender and province), the lender may begin formal legal proceedings to recover the property.
Canada uses two distinct processes for lender recovery of mortgaged property. Which applies depends on your province.
Power of sale is a contractual remedy spelled out in the mortgage agreement. The lender can sell the property without going through the courts, subject to statutory requirements. The process:
Power of sale is faster than foreclosure — 4–6 months from first missed payment to sale in many cases.
Foreclosure is a court process. The lender applies to court for an order to transfer title of the property to the lender. The process:
Foreclosure takes longer — 12–18 months or more in some provinces. The no-deficiency provision in true foreclosure can actually benefit borrowers in extreme situations (underwater property).
If your mortgage was insured through CMHC, Sagen, or Canada Guaranty, the insurer pays the lender if you default and they suffer a loss. However — critically — CMHC then pursues you for the amount paid out. The mortgage insurer has subrogation rights: they can take legal action to recover their loss from you personally. CMHC default insurance protects the lender, not the borrower, from the financial consequences of default.
Mortgage default devastates your credit score:
As soon as you know you are in financial difficulty, call your lender. Do not wait until you have missed payments. Lenders have hardship programs, payment deferrals, and special arrangement options that are generally available BEFORE you default — not after. These may include: payment deferral (skipping 1–3 payments, added to end of amortization), temporary interest-only payments, or an extended amortization to reduce the required payment.
If you have equity in your home and cannot service the mortgage long-term, selling voluntarily is far better than forced power of sale. A voluntary sale maximizes proceeds (you control timing and listing price), preserves some credit, and avoids the legal costs and psychological stress of proceedings.
If you have equity and the default is due to temporarily elevated payments (variable rate spike, short-term income disruption), refinancing to a longer amortization or lower rate can reduce your required payment to a sustainable level.
CMHC has resources for homeowners with insured mortgages facing hardship. They can facilitate discussions between borrower and lender about special payment arrangements. Contact CMHC directly if your mortgage is insured and you are struggling.
As a last resort, a licensed insolvency trustee can help restructure all debts including your mortgage situation. A consumer proposal can stop power of sale proceedings temporarily (automatic stay of proceedings) while a plan is negotiated. Bankruptcy is more severe but also provides protection while finances are restructured.
In power of sale provinces (Ontario, etc.): if the sale proceeds do not cover your mortgage debt plus costs, the lender can sue you for the deficiency. You owe money even after losing your home. In foreclosure provinces (BC, Alberta, etc.): in many situations, the lender forfeits the right to pursue a deficiency after completing foreclosure. This is one reason some financially distressed borrowers in power-of-sale provinces actually prefer the lender to foreclose rather than power of sale — consult a lawyer before making any such decision.
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