Owning a vacation property — a lakeside cottage in Muskoka, a ski chalet in Tremblant, or a BC cabin — is a Canadian dream. But financing a recreational property involves additional hurdles compared to a primary residence. Lenders apply stricter property criteria, and some types of vacation properties simply don't qualify for conventional mortgage financing.
Can You Get an Insured Mortgage on a Vacation Property?
Yes — but only if the property meets specific criteria. CMHC, Sagen, and Canada Guaranty will insure vacation property mortgages under the following conditions:
- Property is in Canada
- Self-contained dwelling (not timeshare, fractional, or condo hotel)
- Suitable for year-round occupancy (even if used seasonally)
- Accessible by a public road year-round (not water-access only)
- Adequate heating (not wood-only stove)
- Owner will occupy personally (not primary rental)
Properties that fail these criteria require conventional financing (20%+ down) — and often only from lenders with appetite for recreational/rural property.
Properties That Are Harder to Finance
- Water-access only (no road access) — many lenders won't touch these
- Seasonal cabins with no winterization
- Wood-only heating systems
- Leasehold land (Crown land lease) rather than freehold title
- Mobile homes, park model units, or modular structures on vacation land
- Condo hotels (hotel-managed vacation units)
- Fractional ownership / timeshare arrangements
For water-access properties or non-standard structures, you typically need a specialty lender or a large down payment (often 35-40%) through a credit union or B lender willing to take on rural recreational property.
Down Payment Requirements
| Property Type | Minimum Down | Insurable? |
|---|---|---|
| Standard vacation home (road access, winterized, owner-occupied) | 5-10% | Yes |
| Vacation home over $1.5M | 20% | No |
| Water-access cottage | 20-35% | Usually no |
| Leasehold / Crown land | 25-35% | No |
| Condo hotel / fractional | 35-50%+ | No |
Qualifying with Two Properties
When you already own a primary residence with a mortgage, adding a vacation property means lenders assess your ability to carry both. Your TDS (Total Debt Service) ratio — which includes both mortgage payments, property taxes, heat, and other debts — must typically stay under 44% of your gross income.
Example: If your primary mortgage payment is $2,800/month and vacation property costs add another $1,500/month (mortgage, taxes, heat), your total housing debt is $4,300/month. To keep TDS at or below 44%, you'd need gross monthly income of roughly $9,800+ (~$117,600/year) — before accounting for other debts like car loans or credit cards.
Using Home Equity to Buy a Vacation Property
A common strategy is to leverage equity from your primary home via a HELOC or refinance to fund the down payment on a vacation property. This avoids using liquid savings and can make the vacation property mortgage more straightforward (since you're bringing a larger down payment). However, you must qualify carrying the HELOC/refinance debt plus the new vacation property mortgage.
Vacation Property vs. Investment Property
If you intend to rent out your vacation property short-term (e.g., Airbnb), lenders and CRA treat this differently:
- Rental income must be reported as income (taxable)
- If rental is primary use, lenders may classify it as an investment property (20% down required)
- Mortgage interest and operating expenses become deductible against rental income
- Capital gains on sale are taxable (principal residence exemption applies only to years of personal use)
Property Insurance for Vacation Properties
Vacation property insurance is more complex and expensive than primary home insurance. Insurers consider vacancy periods, seasonal occupancy, proximity to fire services, and construction type. Budget for higher premiums — often 1.5-2x what you'd pay for a similar primary residence. Some lenders require proof of insurance before funding.
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Yes, if the mortgage is insured (5-10% down, qualifying property). Uninsured vacation property mortgages are capped at 25-year amortization under federal rules, same as primary residences.
Highly recommended. Older cottages often have aged systems (electrical, plumbing, septic) that can generate large unexpected costs. Some lenders require an inspection for properties over a certain age or in rural locations.
A leasehold cottage sits on land you don't own — typically Crown land leased from the provincial government. Because the land isn't yours, the collateral position for the lender is weaker. Most major lenders won't finance leasehold properties; credit unions and private lenders are typically the options.
No. The Home Buyers' Plan allows RRSP withdrawals only for a qualifying principal residence — not vacation or recreational properties.