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Reverse Mortgage vs HELOC Canada 2025 — Which Is Better for Seniors?

A detailed cost comparison of the CHIP Reverse Mortgage and Home Equity Line of Credit (HELOC) for Canadian homeowners aged 55+.

Table of Contents

Overview: Two Ways to Tap Home Equity

Many Canadian seniors are "house rich, cash poor" — they own significant home equity but have limited liquid retirement income. Two common tools for accessing this equity are:

How the CHIP Reverse Mortgage Works

HomeEquity Bank's CHIP Reverse Mortgage is the dominant reverse mortgage product in Canada. Key features:

CHIP Interest Rates (2025)

CHIP rates are significantly higher than regular mortgage or HELOC rates. In 2025, CHIP rates are typically:

These rates are 2–4 percentage points above typical HELOC rates, which is the core cost of not making payments.

How a HELOC Works for Seniors

A Home Equity Line of Credit (HELOC) allows you to borrow against your home equity at any time, up to your approved limit. Most Canadian banks offer HELOCs up to 65% of home value (as part of a total mortgage + HELOC of up to 80% LTV).

Side-by-Side Comparison

FeatureCHIP Reverse MortgageHELOC
Minimum age55+Any age (income-dependent)
Monthly payments requiredNoYes (minimum interest)
Interest rate (2025)~8–9.5%~6–7%
Max borrowingUp to 55% of home valueUp to 65% of home value (as part of 80% LTV)
Income qualificationNot requiredRequired — can be a barrier
Effect on OAS/GISNone (proceeds not income)None (proceeds not income)
Credit checkSoft check onlyFull credit check
Debt grows over time?Yes — compounding interestOnly if you borrow and don't repay
Reduces estate valueSignificantly over timeOnly outstanding balance
Can be called/reduced by bankNo — guaranteed termTheoretically yes

True Cost Over 10 Years — $100,000 Borrowed

Assuming $100,000 borrowed on a $500,000 home:

ScenarioCHIP (8.5%)HELOC (6.5%)
Year 1 interest cost$8,500 (compounding)$6,500 (paid monthly)
Year 5 balance (CHIP compounding)~$150,366$100,000 (if interest paid)
Year 10 balance (CHIP compounding)~$226,098$100,000 (if interest paid)
Total interest paid to year 10~$126,098 (not paid — compounded)~$65,000 (paid over time)
The Compounding Cost: The biggest danger of a reverse mortgage is compounding interest. At 8.5% over 15 years, $100,000 grows to over $337,000. On a $600,000 home, this could eat up 56% of your home equity. The HELOC is significantly cheaper if you can make the interest payments.

Pros and Cons

CHIP Reverse Mortgage — Pros

CHIP Reverse Mortgage — Cons

HELOC — Pros

HELOC — Cons

Other Alternatives to Consider

Who Should Choose Which?

SituationBetter Choice
Can make monthly interest paymentsHELOC (lower rate)
Fixed income, no ability to make paymentsReverse Mortgage
Want to preserve maximum estate for heirsHELOC or neither
Don't qualify for HELOC (income too low)Reverse Mortgage
Short-term need (1–3 years)HELOC (lower total cost)
Long-term need (10+ years)Be very cautious of both; consider downsizing

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