Skip to main content

Home Equity Loans in Canada: The Complete Guide

Updated

A home equity loan lets you convert the equity you’ve built in your home into cash — without selling. Here’s everything Canadian homeowners need to know about how home equity loans work, what they cost, and when they make sense.

What is a home equity loan?

A home equity loan (HEL) is a fixed-rate, lump-sum loan secured against your home’s equity. You receive the full loan amount upfront and repay it in equal monthly installments over a set term.

FeatureDetail
Loan typeLump-sum, closed
Interest rateFixed (most common) or variable
RepaymentEqual monthly payments (principal + interest)
CollateralYour home
RegistrationRegistered on title as a second charge (behind your first mortgage)
Maximum LTV80% combined (first mortgage + HEL) at A-lenders
Typical terms1–10 years

How much equity do you have?

Your accessible equity is the difference between your home’s current value and what you owe, capped at 80% LTV.

Equity calculation formula

Accessible equity = (Home value × 80%) – Outstanding mortgage balance

Examples by home value

Home ValueMortgage OwingAvailable Equity (80% LTV)Maximum HEL
$400,000$300,000$320,000 – $300,000$20,000
$500,000$350,000$400,000 – $350,000$50,000
$600,000$350,000$480,000 – $350,000$130,000
$700,000$400,000$560,000 – $400,000$160,000
$800,000$450,000$640,000 – $450,000$190,000
$1,000,000$500,000$800,000 – $500,000$300,000
$1,200,000$600,000$960,000 – $600,000$360,000

Current home equity loan rates in Canada (2026)

Lender TypeTypical Rate RangeLTV LimitMinimum Credit Score
Big 5 banks6.50%–8.00%80%680+
Credit unions6.00%–7.50%80%650+
Monoline lenders6.50%–8.50%80%680+
B-lenders8.00%–12.00%80%–85%550+
Private lenders10.00%–15%+65%–75%No minimum

Why are HEL rates higher than mortgage rates? Home equity loans are registered as a second charge on your property title. If you default and the home is sold, the first mortgage gets repaid first. The second-position lender takes on more risk and charges accordingly.

Monthly payment examples

$50,000 home equity loan

TermRateMonthly PaymentTotal Interest Paid
5 years6.50%$978$8,702
5 years8.00%$1,014$10,844
10 years6.50%$568$18,165
10 years8.00%$607$22,804

$100,000 home equity loan

TermRateMonthly PaymentTotal Interest Paid
5 years6.50%$1,957$17,404
5 years8.00%$2,028$21,688
10 years6.50%$1,135$36,331
10 years8.00%$1,213$45,609

$200,000 home equity loan

TermRateMonthly PaymentTotal Interest Paid
5 years6.50%$3,913$34,808
5 years8.00%$4,056$43,376
10 years6.50%$2,271$72,661
10 years8.00%$2,426$91,217

How to qualify for a home equity loan

RequirementA-Lender StandardB-Lender Standard
Home equityMinimum 20% (combined LTV ≤80%)Minimum 15%–20%
Credit score680+550+
Debt service ratiosGDS ≤39%, TDS ≤44%GDS ≤50%, TDS ≤55%
Income verificationFull documentation (T4, NOA, pay stubs)Stated income available
Property typeStandard residentialMore flexible
Property appraisalRequiredRequired
EmploymentStable employment or 2+ years self-employedFlexible

Documents you’ll need

  • Government-issued photo ID
  • Proof of income (T4, pay stubs, NOA, T1 General for self-employed)
  • Current mortgage statement showing balance and payment
  • Property tax bill
  • Recent bank statements (3–6 months)
  • Property appraisal (lender will order this)

Costs beyond the interest rate

CostTypical AmountWhen You Pay
Appraisal fee$300–$500At application
Legal fees$800–$2,000At closing
Title search$100–$300At closing
Title insurance$200–$500At closing
Lender fee (B-lender)1%–3% of loan amountDeducted from proceeds
Broker fee (B-lender/private)0.5%–2% of loan amountDeducted from proceeds or paid separately
Discharge fee$200–$400At payoff

Setup cost example: $100,000 HEL

CostA-LenderB-Lender
Appraisal$400$400
Legal fees$1,200$1,500
Title insurance$300$300
Lender fee$0$1,500 (1.5%)
Broker fee$0$1,000 (1%)
Total setup cost~$1,900~$4,700

Common uses for a home equity loan

PurposeWhy HEL Makes SenseCaution
Home renovationsOne-time cost; potential to increase home valueEnsure ROI — not all renovations add value
Debt consolidationReplace high-interest debt (20%+ credit cards) with 6%–8%Only works if you stop accumulating new debt
EducationLarge, known cost; lower rate than student line of creditConsider government student loans first (interest-free while studying)
Emergency fundBridge unexpected large expensesHEL is not flexible — HELOC may be better for emergencies
InvestmentKnown upfront amount for portfolio investmentInterest may be tax-deductible (consult tax professional)
Business startupLower rate than commercial lendingYour home is at risk if the business fails

Home equity loan vs other options

FeatureHome Equity LoanHELOCMortgage RefinancePersonal Loan
DisbursementLump sumRevolvingLump sumLump sum
Interest rateFixed (6%–8%)Variable (prime + 0.5%–2%)Fixed or variable (4%–5.5%)Fixed (8%–15%)
Rate typeFixedVariableFixed or variableFixed
PaymentsFixed monthlyInterest-only minimumFixed monthlyFixed monthly
Access to fundsOne-timeOngoingOne-timeOne-time
Setup costs$1,500–$5,000$0–$1,000$2,000–$5,000+ (penalty to break)Minimal
RegistrationSecond charge on titleFirst or second chargeFirst chargeUnsecured
Max LTV80% combined65% (HELOC only) / 80% combined80%N/A (unsecured)
Best forOne-time known expenseFlexible, ongoing needsLowest rate on large amountsSmall amounts, no equity

The application process

StepTimelineWhat Happens
1. Initial inquiryDay 1Contact lender or mortgage broker; discuss needs and eligibility
2. ApplicationDay 1–3Submit application with income documents and property details
3. Credit checkDay 1–3Lender pulls credit report (hard inquiry)
4. Property appraisalDay 3–10Appraiser visits property; report sent to lender
5. UnderwritingDay 5–15Lender reviews all documents, confirms LTV, approves
6. Commitment letterDay 10–20Written approval with rate, terms, and conditions
7. Legal closingDay 15–30Lawyer registers charge on title; funds released
Total timeline2–4 weeksFaster with a broker who pre-qualifies your application

Tax implications

When interest is tax-deductible

In Canada, interest on a home equity loan is not deductible when used for personal purposes (renovations, debt consolidation, vacations). However, it may be deductible when:

Use of FundsTax-Deductible?Condition
Home renovationsNoPersonal use
Debt consolidationNoPersonal debt
Investment in income-producing assetsYesMust produce income (rental property, dividend stocks, business)
Rental property down paymentYesClear paper trail from HEL to investment
Business investmentYesLegitimate business purpose

Important: The CRA requires a clear link between borrowed funds and the income-producing use. Keep meticulous records and consult a tax professional before claiming interest deductions.

Risks to understand

RiskExplanationMitigation
Your home is collateralDefault on the HEL and the lender can force a saleOnly borrow what you can comfortably repay
Two paymentsHEL payment is on top of your mortgage paymentEnsure combined payments fit your budget (TDS < 44%)
Interest rate premiumHEL rates are higher than first mortgage ratesConsider refinancing your entire mortgage instead if the amount is large
Closing costsLegal and appraisal fees reduce net proceedsFactor setup costs into your borrowing decision
Over-leveragingBorrowing against equity reduces your safety bufferKeep combined LTV under 75% for comfort
Home value declineIf home values drop, you could owe more than the home is worthConservative LTV (≤75%) provides margin of safety

When to choose a home equity loan vs alternatives

Your SituationBest OptionWhy
Need a specific amount for a renovationHome equity loanFixed rate, fixed payments, one-time disbursement
Want ongoing access to fundsHELOCRevolving credit you can draw and repay repeatedly
Need a large amount and have a high mortgage rateMortgage refinanceBlend everything into one lower-rate mortgage
Need a small amount (<$25,000)Personal loan or LOCAvoids legal and appraisal fees
Want tax-deductible interest for investingHELOC or HELEither works; Smith Manoeuvre uses HELOC specifically
Have equity but poor creditB-lender HELMore accessible than unsecured options

🏠

Get the best mortgage rate in Canada — in minutes

Homewise negotiates with 30+ banks and lenders for you. Free, 5 minutes, no credit check.

Get Started →