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First Time Getting a Mortgage in Canada 2026 | Beginner Guide

Updated

Getting your first mortgage is one of the biggest financial decisions of your life. This guide walks you through every step, from understanding how much you can afford to closing day.

Can You Afford to Buy?

Before applying, check if homeownership makes financial sense for your situation.

Factor What to Check
Down payment saved Minimum 5%, 20% avoids CMHC insurance
Stable income 2+ years in same field (or same employer for best rates)
Credit score 680+ for best rates, 600+ minimum
Existing debt Low debt-to-income ratio
Job security Avoid applying right after starting a new job
Emergency fund Keep 3 months expenses after down payment

Use our mortgage affordability calculator to see how much house you can afford.

Step 1: Know the Numbers

Minimum Down Payment Rules

Home Price Minimum Down Payment
Up to $500,000 5%
$500,001–$999,999 5% on first $500K + 10% on remainder
$1,000,000 and over 20%

Example: $750,000 home = 5% × $500,000 ($25,000) + 10% × $250,000 ($25,000) = $50,000 minimum down payment

Down Payment Under 20%: CMHC Insurance

If your down payment is under 20%, you must pay CMHC mortgage default insurance:

Down Payment Insurance Premium
5%–9.99% 4.00% of mortgage
10%–14.99% 3.10% of mortgage
15%–19.99% 2.80% of mortgage

The premium is added to your mortgage, not paid upfront. On a $400,000 mortgage with 5% down, the CMHC premium is $16,000 — your actual mortgage becomes $416,000.

Upfront Closing Costs (Often Forgotten)

Cost Amount Notes
Land transfer tax 0.5%–2.5% of purchase price Provincial (double in Toronto)
Legal fees + disbursements $1,500–$3,500 Always required
Home inspection $400–$700 Strongly recommended
Title insurance $200–$400 Required by most lenders
Property tax adjustment Varies First payment may be due at closing
Moving costs $500–$3,000 DIY vs professional movers
Typical total $5,000–$20,000+ Varies by province and price

First-time buyers in ON/BC: Check first-time buyer land transfer tax rebates — up to $4,000 federal and $4,000 provincial.

Step 2: Get Pre-Approved

A mortgage pre-approval tells you how much a lender will lend you and locks in your rate for 90–120 days.

Pre-Approval vs Pre-Qualification

Pre-Qualification Pre-Approval
Credit check Soft check Hard check
Income verification Self-reported Documented
Rate commitment No Yes (90–120 days)
Reliability Low High
Needed for home offers No Yes (recommended)

Always get a pre-approval, not just a pre-qualification, before making offers.

Documents for Pre-Approval

Document What It Shows
2 most recent pay stubs Current income
2–3 years T4 slips or NOA Income history
Letter of employment Confirms employment and salary
Bank statements (3 months) Down payment source and savings
ID (government-issued) Identity
SIN Required for credit check
Statement of existing debts Car loans, student loans, credit cards

If self-employed, you will also need 2 years of NOAs and potentially T1 generals.

Step 3: Understand the Mortgage Stress Test

The B-20 stress test requires you to qualify at: The greater of: your contracted rate + 2% OR 5.25%

Example: Qualifying Rate Impact

Offered Rate Stress Test Rate Effect
4.5% 6.5% Qualify for 20–25% less
5.0% 7.0% Qualify for 20–25% less
6.0% 8.0% Qualify for 20–25% less

This means your pre-approval amount will be less than if there were no stress test.

Gross Debt Service (GDS) ratio must be under 39% — total housing costs (principal, interest, property tax, heat) cannot exceed 39% of gross income.

Total Debt Service (TDS) ratio must be under 44% — all debts including housing cannot exceed 44% of gross income.

Use our mortgage qualification calculator.

Step 4: Fixed vs Variable Mortgage

Fixed Rate Variable Rate
Payment Locked for term Changes with Prime Rate
Predictability High Low
Penalty to break 3 months interest or IRD Usually 3 months interest
Best when Rates expected to rise; you want certainty Rates expected to fall
Current spread (2026) Usually 0.5–1% lower than fixed

For most first-time buyers, a fixed rate provides peace of mind. A variable rate makes more sense if rates are expected to fall.

Step 5: Mortgage Term and Amortization

Term Amortization
What it is Length of rate commitment Total loan repayment period
Common lengths 1, 2, 3, 5, 10 years 25 or 30 years
When it ends Renew or refinance Mortgage fully paid

Most Canadians choose a 5-year term and 25-year amortization. A 30-year amortization lowers monthly payments but costs significantly more in interest.

Monthly Payment Comparison

Amortization $400K mortgage at 5% Total Interest
25 years $2,326/month $297,800
30 years $2,147/month $373,200

25-year saves ~$75,500 in interest over the full term.

Step 6: Choose a Lender

Mortgage Broker vs Bank vs Monoline Lender

Option Access Rate How
Mortgage broker 20+ lenders Best rates available Online, phone, in-person
Big bank One lender Negotiable Branch or online
Monoline lender Low overhead, competitive Often best rates Via broker
Credit union One lender Often competitive Branch

Recommendation: Start with a mortgage broker (free to you, paid by the lender) to see all available rates. Then compare to your bank’s best offer.

Best Mortgage Lenders Canada 2026

See our best mortgage lenders Canada guide for current rate comparisons.

Step 7: Make an Offer and Close

Once pre-approved:

  1. Work with a real estate agent to find a home
  2. Make a conditional offer (include financing and inspection conditions)
  3. Pass the home inspection
  4. Firm up financing with lender (full application)
  5. Lender issues commitment letter
  6. Lawyer prepares closing documents
  7. You provide remaining down payment and closing costs to lawyer
  8. Title transfers on closing date — you get the keys

Timeline from Offer to Close

Step Typical Timeframe
Conditional offer accepted Day 1
Financing condition removed 5–10 business days
Inspection condition removed 3–7 days
Lender issues commitment 5–7 business days after full application
Lawyer reviews documents 1–2 weeks before close
Closing day 30–90 days after offer (as agreed)

First-Time Home Buyer Programs

Program Benefit Eligibility
FHSA Up to $40,000 tax-free toward down payment First-time buyers
RRSP Home Buyers Plan Withdraw up to $60,000 from RRSP First-time buyers
First Home Buyers’ Tax Credit $1,500 federal tax credit First home purchase
Land Transfer Tax Rebate (ON) Up to $4,000 First-time Ontario buyers
BC First Time Home Buyers Program LTT exemption up to $500K First-time BC buyers

See our first-time home buyer programs guide for full eligibility details.