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Mortgage and Parental Leave in Canada: How to Plan for Reduced Income

Updated

Parental leave in Canada means 12–18 months at significantly reduced income. Here is how to keep your mortgage on track when your paycheque shrinks.

EI maternity and parental benefits: What you actually get

2025 benefit rates

BenefitDurationRateWeekly MaximumAnnual Maximum
Maternity (birth parent only)15 weeks55% of insurable earnings$695$10,425
Standard parental35 weeks (one parent) or 40 weeks (shared)55%$695$24,325 (35 wks)
Extended parental61 weeks (one parent) or 69 weeks (shared)33%$417$25,437 (61 wks)

Real income comparison

Working SalaryEI (Standard 12-Month)EI (Extended 18-Month)Income Drop
$60,000~$33,000~$19,80045%–67%
$80,000~$36,000~$21,60055%–73%
$100,000~$36,140~$21,70064%–78%
$120,000~$36,140 (capped)~$21,700 (capped)70%–82%

Note: EI benefits are taxable income. After tax, your actual take-home is even lower.

Employer top-up policies

Top-Up LevelYour Income During LeaveHow Common
No top-up55% of insurable earnings (capped)Most private sector
75% top-up75% of salary for 6–17 weeksSome mid-size employers
93% top-up93% of salary for 17–52 weeksFederal government, some large employers
Full salary (rare)100% for limited periodVery few employers

Check your employer’s parental leave policy as early as possible — top-up pay varies significantly by employer, union agreement, and tenure.

How reduced income affects your mortgage

Scenario: $90,000 household income, $2,200/month mortgage

PeriodGross Monthly IncomeMortgage as % of IncomeGDS Equivalent
Working$7,50029%Comfortable
One parent on EI (standard)$4,500 (one on EI + partner working)49%Stretched
One parent on EI (sole income)$3,00073%Unsustainable
Extended leave (33% rate)$3,900 (one on EI + partner)56%Very tight

Monthly budget impact: Dual income → one income + EI

ExpenseWorking BudgetParental Leave BudgetChange
Mortgage$2,200$2,200No change (fixed)
Property tax/insurance$450$450No change
Utilities$300$300No change
Food$800$900+$100 (baby; less dining out saves some)
Transportation$600$350−$250 (no commute)
Child care$0$0Parent is home
Baby costs$0$400+$400 (diapers, formula, gear)
Discretionary$800$200−$600
Total$5,150$4,800−$350
Income available$6,200$4,200−$2,000
Monthly surplus/deficit+$1,050−$600Need $600/mo from savings

6-Step parental leave mortgage plan

Step 1: Calculate your gap (6–12 months before due date)

CalculationAmount
A. Monthly expenses during leave$_____
B. EI monthly benefit (after tax)$_____
C. Employer top-up (after tax)$_____
D. Partner’s income (after tax)$_____
E. Total leave income (B + C + D)$_____
F. Monthly gap (A − E)$_____
G. Total gap (F × months of leave)$_____

Example: $600/month gap × 12 months = $7,200 parental leave fund needed.

Step 2: Build a parental leave fund

Months Before LeaveMonthly Savings NeededFor 12-Month LeaveFor 18-Month Leave
12 monthsGap ÷ 12$600$900
9 monthsGap ÷ 9$800$1,200
6 monthsGap ÷ 6$1,200$1,800

Where to save: TFSA high-interest savings account — withdrawals are tax-free and contribution room is restored the following year.

Step 3: Explore mortgage payment options

OptionHow It WorksCost
Skip-a-paymentMiss 1–4 payments per year; interest accruesAdds $500–$2,000 to total interest per skipped payment
Payment reduction (recast)Refinance to longer amortization before leavePenalty may apply if mid-term; lower payment but more interest long-term
Variable rate → lower paymentIf variable rate drops, payment may decreaseRate risk if it rises
Switch to interest-only (HELOC)If you have a HELOC portion, pay interest onlyPrincipal does not decrease
Prepayment holidaySome lenders allow reduced payments after prepaymentsCheck your mortgage contract

Best timing: Arrange any mortgage changes 3–6 months before leave, while you still qualify on full income.

Step 4: Optimize your tax situation

StrategyBenefit
Front-load RRSP contributions before leaveHigher refund at current tax rate; lower income during leave
Apply RRSP tax refund to parental leave fundConverts tax savings into leave buffer
Delay RRSP withdrawal until leave yearLower marginal rate during leave means less tax on withdrawal
Claim child-related creditsCanada Child Benefit (CCB) begins the month after birth — up to $7,787/child under 6

Step 5: Time your Canada Child Benefit

Family Net IncomeCCB per Child Under 6 (Annual)CCB Monthly
Under $36,502$7,787$649
$50,000~$6,700~$558
$75,000~$5,000~$417
$100,000~$3,300~$275
$120,000~$1,900~$158
$150,000+~$600 or less~$50

Note: CCB is calculated on the previous year’s family net income. If your income drops significantly during leave, your CCB will increase the following July — there is a delay.

Step 6: Plan your return-to-work transition

ActionWhenWhy
Confirm childcare availability and cost3–6 months before returnWaitlists can be 12+ months
Budget for childcare ($800–$2,000+/month)Before returningMajor new expense
Increase mortgage payments againFirst paycheque backRestore pre-leave pace
Replenish emergency fundWithin 6 months of returnLeave may have depleted it

Timeline: Mortgage preparation for parental leave

WhenAction
12 months beforeCalculate income gap; start building leave fund
9 months beforeCheck employer top-up policy; review mortgage prepayment privileges
6 months beforeContact lender about skip-a-payment or payment options; consider refinance if renewal is near
3 months beforeFinalize leave budget; set up automatic savings; apply for mortgage payment changes
Month 1 of leaveSwitch to leave budget; begin drawing from leave fund
Month 2–3Apply for CCB; confirm EI is flowing correctly
Month 6Mid-leave financial check-in — adjust if burning through fund too fast
3 months before returnSecure childcare; plan return budget; arrange mortgage payment increase
Return to workRestore normal mortgage payments; rebuild emergency fund

Standard vs extended parental leave: Mortgage impact

FactorStandard (12 months)Extended (18 months)
EI benefit rate55%33%
Monthly EI (before tax, at max)~$3,012~$1,807
Total EI received~$36,140~$36,140 (same total, spread thinner)
Monthly income gap (typical)$600–$1,500$1,200–$2,500
Total savings needed$7,200–$18,000$21,600–$45,000
Childcare savingsNone (still need after 12 mo)6 extra months fee-free
Mortgage stressModerateHigh

Key insight: Extended leave pays the same total EI but spreads it over 18 months — meaning lower monthly income. The childcare savings (6 fewer months at $1,000–$2,000/month) can partially offset this if you factor it in.

If you fall behind

SituationAction
Missed one paymentContact lender immediately; explain the situation; one missed payment can usually be added to the end of your mortgage
Struggling to make paymentsAsk about payment deferral or temporary reduction; credit counselling is free through licensed non-profits
Severe hardshipFile for mortgage payment deferral under the National Housing Strategy (if applicable); last resort: sell before default
NeverIgnore the problem — missed payments damage credit within 30 days

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