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The bank will offer to insure your mortgage — but term life insurance is almost always the smarter choice for Canadian homeowners.
When you take out a mortgage in Canada, your bank or lender will almost certainly offer mortgage life insurance. It's convenient, requires minimal underwriting, and is presented as the simple way to protect your home for your family. But for most Canadians, a personally owned term life insurance policy is a significantly better option.
Mortgage life insurance (also called creditor insurance or mortgage protection insurance) is sold by banks and lenders at the time you take out your mortgage. If you die while the mortgage is outstanding, the insurance pays off the remaining mortgage balance — directly to the lender.
Key characteristics:
Term life insurance is a standalone life insurance policy purchased through a licensed insurance broker or directly from an insurer. A 20-year term policy, for example, pays a fixed death benefit if you die within 20 years — regardless of your mortgage balance.
| Feature | Mortgage Life Insurance | Term Life Insurance |
|---|---|---|
| Coverage amount | Decreases as mortgage decreases | Level — stays the same |
| Premiums | Stay level while coverage decreases | Level for the term |
| Beneficiary | The lender (bank) | Your chosen beneficiary |
| Portability | Not portable — tied to lender | Fully portable |
| Medical underwriting | Minimal at application (post-claim) | Full underwriting upfront |
| Cost (per $) | Higher | Lower |
| Family flexibility | Benefit goes to pay off mortgage only | Family decides how to use funds |
Don't just buy enough to cover your mortgage. Factor in:
Most Canadians with a new mortgage and young family need $500,000–$1,500,000 in total life insurance coverage — far more than just the mortgage balance.
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