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
| Benefit | Duration | Rate | Weekly Maximum | Annual Maximum |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Maternity (birth parent only) | 15 weeks | 55% of insurable earnings | $695 | $10,425 |
| Standard parental | 35 weeks (one parent) or 40 weeks (shared) | 55% | $695 | $24,325 (35 wks) |
| Extended parental | 61 weeks (one parent) or 69 weeks (shared) | 33% | $417 | $25,437 (61 wks) |
Real income comparison
| Working Salary | EI (Standard 12-Month) | EI (Extended 18-Month) | Income Drop |
|---|---|---|---|
| $60,000 | ~$33,000 | ~$19,800 | 45%–67% |
| $80,000 | ~$36,000 | ~$21,600 | 55%–73% |
| $100,000 | ~$36,140 | ~$21,700 | 64%–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 Level | Your Income During Leave | How Common |
|---|---|---|
| No top-up | 55% of insurable earnings (capped) | Most private sector |
| 75% top-up | 75% of salary for 6–17 weeks | Some mid-size employers |
| 93% top-up | 93% of salary for 17–52 weeks | Federal government, some large employers |
| Full salary (rare) | 100% for limited period | Very 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
| Period | Gross Monthly Income | Mortgage as % of Income | GDS Equivalent |
|---|---|---|---|
| Working | $7,500 | 29% | Comfortable |
| One parent on EI (standard) | $4,500 (one on EI + partner working) | 49% | Stretched |
| One parent on EI (sole income) | $3,000 | 73% | Unsustainable |
| Extended leave (33% rate) | $3,900 (one on EI + partner) | 56% | Very tight |
Monthly budget impact: Dual income → one income + EI
| Expense | Working Budget | Parental Leave Budget | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mortgage | $2,200 | $2,200 | No change (fixed) |
| Property tax/insurance | $450 | $450 | No change |
| Utilities | $300 | $300 | No change |
| Food | $800 | $900 | +$100 (baby; less dining out saves some) |
| Transportation | $600 | $350 | −$250 (no commute) |
| Child care | $0 | $0 | Parent 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 | −$600 | Need $600/mo from savings |
6-Step parental leave mortgage plan
Step 1: Calculate your gap (6–12 months before due date)
| Calculation | Amount |
|---|---|
| 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 Leave | Monthly Savings Needed | For 12-Month Leave | For 18-Month Leave |
|---|---|---|---|
| 12 months | Gap ÷ 12 | $600 | $900 |
| 9 months | Gap ÷ 9 | $800 | $1,200 |
| 6 months | Gap ÷ 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
| Option | How It Works | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Skip-a-payment | Miss 1–4 payments per year; interest accrues | Adds $500–$2,000 to total interest per skipped payment |
| Payment reduction (recast) | Refinance to longer amortization before leave | Penalty may apply if mid-term; lower payment but more interest long-term |
| Variable rate → lower payment | If variable rate drops, payment may decrease | Rate risk if it rises |
| Switch to interest-only (HELOC) | If you have a HELOC portion, pay interest only | Principal does not decrease |
| Prepayment holiday | Some lenders allow reduced payments after prepayments | Check 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
| Strategy | Benefit |
|---|---|
| Front-load RRSP contributions before leave | Higher refund at current tax rate; lower income during leave |
| Apply RRSP tax refund to parental leave fund | Converts tax savings into leave buffer |
| Delay RRSP withdrawal until leave year | Lower marginal rate during leave means less tax on withdrawal |
| Claim child-related credits | Canada Child Benefit (CCB) begins the month after birth — up to $7,787/child under 6 |
Step 5: Time your Canada Child Benefit
| Family Net Income | CCB 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
| Action | When | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Confirm childcare availability and cost | 3–6 months before return | Waitlists can be 12+ months |
| Budget for childcare ($800–$2,000+/month) | Before returning | Major new expense |
| Increase mortgage payments again | First paycheque back | Restore pre-leave pace |
| Replenish emergency fund | Within 6 months of return | Leave may have depleted it |
Timeline: Mortgage preparation for parental leave
| When | Action |
|---|---|
| 12 months before | Calculate income gap; start building leave fund |
| 9 months before | Check employer top-up policy; review mortgage prepayment privileges |
| 6 months before | Contact lender about skip-a-payment or payment options; consider refinance if renewal is near |
| 3 months before | Finalize leave budget; set up automatic savings; apply for mortgage payment changes |
| Month 1 of leave | Switch to leave budget; begin drawing from leave fund |
| Month 2–3 | Apply for CCB; confirm EI is flowing correctly |
| Month 6 | Mid-leave financial check-in — adjust if burning through fund too fast |
| 3 months before return | Secure childcare; plan return budget; arrange mortgage payment increase |
| Return to work | Restore normal mortgage payments; rebuild emergency fund |
Standard vs extended parental leave: Mortgage impact
| Factor | Standard (12 months) | Extended (18 months) |
|---|---|---|
| EI benefit rate | 55% | 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 savings | None (still need after 12 mo) | 6 extra months fee-free |
| Mortgage stress | Moderate | High |
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
| Situation | Action |
|---|---|
| Missed one payment | Contact lender immediately; explain the situation; one missed payment can usually be added to the end of your mortgage |
| Struggling to make payments | Ask about payment deferral or temporary reduction; credit counselling is free through licensed non-profits |
| Severe hardship | File for mortgage payment deferral under the National Housing Strategy (if applicable); last resort: sell before default |
| Never | Ignore the problem — missed payments damage credit within 30 days |