Using a HELOC to Invest in Canada 2025
The opportunity: Using a HELOC to invest in income-producing assets creates a potential tax advantage — the interest becomes deductible under CRA rules. However, investing with borrowed money amplifies both gains and losses. This strategy suits investors with long time horizons, stable incomes, and high risk tolerance.
Borrowing to invest is a leveraged strategy — and leverage is a double-edged sword. Using your HELOC for investments can dramatically accelerate wealth building in a rising market, but it also magnifies losses during downturns. Understanding both sides is essential before committing your home equity to the markets.
Why Investors Use HELOCs
- Low borrowing cost: At ~5.45%, a HELOC is one of the cheapest sources of investment capital available to Canadians
- Tax deductibility: Interest on HELOC funds used to earn investment income is deductible (CRA Section 20(1)(c))
- Large capital access: A HELOC can provide $100,000–$500,000+ in investable funds
- Smith Manoeuvre integration: HELOC investing is the foundation of the popular Smith Manoeuvre tax strategy
The Tax Deductibility Advantage
When you use HELOC funds to earn investment income (dividends, interest, rental income), the HELOC interest is deductible as a carrying charge on your tax return (Schedule 4). This effectively lowers your net borrowing cost:
| HELOC Rate | Marginal Tax Rate | After-Tax Borrowing Cost |
| 5.45% | 26% (lowest federal bracket) | ~4.03% |
| 5.45% | 33% (highest federal bracket) | ~3.65% |
| 5.45% | 53% (highest combined ON) | ~2.56% |
At the highest marginal rates, your effective borrowing cost is under 3% — making it easier for investments to deliver positive net returns.
What Qualifies for the Interest Deduction?
- Yes: Dividend-paying stocks, income ETFs, REITs, rental property, bonds, balanced funds
- No: RRSP/TFSA contributions, pure growth assets (capital gains only), cryptocurrencies (grey area), personal spending
- Grey area: Growth stocks with no dividend; consult a tax advisor
HELOC Investing Strategies
Strategy 1: Lump-Sum Investment
Draw a large amount from your HELOC and invest it all at once. Maximizes immediate exposure but concentrates timing risk. Works well if you have conviction about valuations and a long holding period.
Strategy 2: Dollar-Cost Averaging
Draw smaller amounts from the HELOC monthly or quarterly and invest systematically. Reduces timing risk; aligns with the Smith Manoeuvre's incremental structure.
Strategy 3: Smith Manoeuvre
Reborrow exactly the principal portion of each mortgage payment and invest it. Gradual, disciplined, and tied to your mortgage paydown schedule. See our dedicated Smith Manoeuvre guide for details.
The Risk Side: What Can Go Wrong
Leverage amplifies losses:
- If your $200,000 HELOC investment portfolio drops 30%, you've lost $60,000 — but you still owe $200,000 to the bank
- Rising HELOC rates increase your carrying cost, squeezing the spread between borrowing cost and investment return
- If you need to sell during a downturn (job loss, financial emergency), you crystalize losses and still carry the HELOC debt
- Home prices could also fall, reducing your equity cushion simultaneously
Who Should Consider HELOC Investing?
- Homeowners with significant stable equity (not tapping everything)
- Long investment horizon (10+ years recommended)
- High marginal tax rate (benefit more from deductibility)
- Stable, diversified income (can withstand market volatility)
- Comfortable with leverage risk and investment volatility
Who Should Avoid It?
- Anyone investing in speculative assets (crypto, single stocks, penny stocks)
- Those with unstable employment or income
- Anyone who would panic-sell during a 30–40% market drawdown
- Retirees or near-retirees who can't absorb losses
Portfolio recommendation for HELOC investing: Diversified dividend-focused Canadian equities (for the dividend tax credit benefit) or broad market ETFs with distributions. The goal is predictable income to validate deductibility while maintaining growth. Avoid concentrated bets with leveraged money.
Free Up Cash Flow While You Manage Your Home Equity
Stop paying monthly bank fees while you figure out your HELOC strategy. KOHO gives Canadian homeowners a no-fee account with cash back on spending. Use code 45ET55JSYA for a sign-up bonus.
Get KOHO Free — Use Code 45ET55JSYA
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I use a HELOC to invest in a TFSA?
No — TFSA contributions are not considered income-earning for CRA purposes, so the interest would not be deductible. Use non-registered accounts for HELOC-funded investments to preserve deductibility.
Can I use a HELOC to invest in real estate?
Yes — using HELOC funds as a down payment on a rental property is a common and well-understood use case. The interest is deductible against rental income. See our dedicated HELOC rental property guide.
What records do I need to keep?
Keep all HELOC statements, investment account statements, and documentation showing the direct flow of funds from your HELOC to your investment account. CRA may require proof of the direct linkage to allow the deduction.