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What Is a Mortgage Broker in Canada? Complete Guide (2026)

Updated

A mortgage broker can save you thousands of dollars — or cost you if you choose the wrong one. Here’s everything you need to know about how brokers work in Canada, what they actually do, and when you should (and shouldn’t) use one.

What does a mortgage broker do?

A mortgage broker is a licensed intermediary who:

  1. Assesses your financial situation — income, debts, credit score, down payment
  2. Shops your application across multiple lenders — typically 30–50+ lending institutions
  3. Recommends the best mortgage — best rate AND best terms for your specific situation
  4. Handles the paperwork — application, document collection, submission, follow-up
  5. Guides you through closing — coordinating with lawyers, lenders, and real estate agents

What a broker is NOT

A Broker IsA Broker Is Not
An independent intermediaryAn employee of any bank
Licensed and regulatedUnregulated or self-appointed
Paid by lenders (usually)Paid by you (in standard situations)
Shopping across many lendersLimited to one institution’s products
Offering adviceMaking the lending decision

How the mortgage broker process works

StepWhat HappensTimeline
1. Initial consultationBroker reviews your goals, finances, and timelineDay 1 (30–60 min)
2. Pre-approvalBroker pulls credit, verifies income, determines borrowing capacityDays 1–3
3. Rate shoppingBroker compares rates and terms across their lender panelDays 1–3
4. RecommendationBroker presents the best option(s) with rate, terms, and trade-offs explainedDay 3–5
5. ApplicationYou choose a lender; broker submits full application with documentsDay 5–7
6. Lender approvalLender underwrites the file — may ask for additional documentsDays 7–14
7. CommitmentYou receive and sign the mortgage commitment letterDay 14–21
8. ClosingBroker coordinates with lawyer; mortgage funds on closing dayClosing day

Broker vs bank: at a glance

FeatureMortgage BrokerBank
Number of lenders30–50+1 (their own products)
Rate competitivenessTypically lower (competition-driven)Varies — posted rates are higher, negotiated rates vary
Product rangeFull market — insured, uninsured, alternative, privateBank’s own products only
Advice independenceIndependent (not employed by any lender)Bank advisor works for the bank
Cost to youFree (standard mortgages)Free
SpeedCan be faster (direct lender relationships)Varies by branch and workload
Relationship benefitsNone (new each time unless you return)Bundled pricing, loyalty discounts, account integration
Complex situationsStrong — access to B-lenders and alternative optionsLimited — may decline non-standard files
Self-employed borrowersOften better — multiple stated-income optionsLess flexible — strict documentation requirements
Refinance/renewalAlways shops the marketMay default to a retention offer

Who regulates mortgage brokers in Canada?

Mortgage brokers are provincially regulated. Each province has a regulator that licenses, supervises, and disciplines brokers:

ProvinceRegulatory BodyLicense Types
OntarioFSRA (Financial Services Regulatory Authority)Mortgage Broker, Mortgage Agent, Mortgage Administrator
British ColumbiaBCFSA (BC Financial Services Authority)Mortgage Broker, Sub-Mortgage Broker
AlbertaRECA (Real Estate Council of Alberta)Mortgage Broker, Mortgage Associate
QuebecAMF (Autorité des marchés financiers)Mortgage Broker
ManitobaMFDA oversight / Manitoba Securities CommissionMortgage Broker
SaskatchewanFCAA (Financial and Consumer Affairs Authority)Mortgage Broker, Mortgage Associate
Nova ScotiaNSSC (Service Nova Scotia)Mortgage Broker, Mortgage Associate
New BrunswickFCNB (Financial and Consumer Services Commission)Mortgage Broker, Mortgage Associate
NewfoundlandService NLMortgage Broker
PEIConsumer, Corporate and Insurance DivisionMortgage Broker

Licensing requirements

To become a licensed mortgage broker in most provinces, candidates must:

  • Complete an approved education program (mortgage brokering course)
  • Pass a licensing exam
  • Work under a licensed brokerage for a minimum period (as an agent/associate)
  • Carry Errors & Omissions (E&O) insurance
  • Maintain continuing education credits
  • Adhere to a code of conduct and ethics

Types of professionals in the mortgage industry

TitleRoleCan They Help You?
Mortgage brokerSenior licensed professional; can supervise agents, run a brokerage✅ Yes — most experienced
Mortgage agent / associateLicensed professional working under a broker✅ Yes — may have fewer years experience
Bank mortgage specialistEmployee of a specific bank✅ Yes — but limited to that bank’s products
Mobile mortgage advisorBank employee who meets you outside the branch✅ Yes — same products as in-branch
Online mortgage advisorWorks for an online lender (e.g., nesto, HSBC)✅ Yes — limited to that company’s products
Mortgage administratorManages existing mortgage portfolios (backend)❌ Not client-facing

When to use a mortgage broker

Best situations for a broker

ScenarioWhy a Broker Helps
First-time buyerNeed guidance through the process; broker shops the market for you
Self-employedBrokers access lenders with flexible income verification
Imperfect creditBrokers have B-lender and alternative lender relationships
Mortgage renewalBroker ensures you get a competitive rate, not just a retention offer
RefinancingBroker compares refinance options across the full market
Investment propertyBrokers know which lenders are investor-friendly
New to CanadaBrokers access newcomer mortgage programs across multiple lenders
Complex incomeMultiple income sources, commissions, bonuses, rental income

When a bank might be better

ScenarioWhy
Strong banking relationshipLoyalty pricing or bundle discounts may beat broker rates
Need a specific productSome bank products (e.g., all-in-one mortgages) aren’t available through brokers
Very straightforward fileHigh income, excellent credit, 20%+ down — any lender will compete
Prefer one-stop bankingWant mortgage, chequing, investments, and insurance at one institution

What to expect at your first broker meeting

What to bring

DocumentPurpose
Government IDIdentity verification
Recent pay stubs (2–3 months)Income verification
T4s or NOAs (2 years)Income history
Employment letterConfirmation of job, salary, tenure
Bank statements (3 months)Down payment verification, spending patterns
List of debtsCredit cards, car loans, student loans, lines of credit
Down payment proofSavings statements, gift letters, RRSP statements

Questions to ask your broker

  1. How many lenders do you have access to?
  2. Which lender are you recommending and why?
  3. What is the penalty structure for this mortgage?
  4. Are there any restrictions on prepayments?
  5. Is this a collateral charge or standard charge mortgage?
  6. What happens if I need to break this mortgage early?
  7. Do you receive the same commission from all lenders?
  8. What fees (if any) will I pay directly?

Common misconceptions about mortgage brokers

MisconceptionReality
“Brokers cost extra”No — the lender pays the broker’s commission; it does not increase your rate
“Banks always have better rates”Brokers often access lower rates because lenders compete for broker business
“Brokers push you toward higher-commission lenders”Regulated brokers have a duty to act in your best interest; compliance is monitored
“I can’t use a broker if I bank with TD/RBC/etc.”You can use a broker and still bank anywhere — the mortgage and banking are separate
“All brokers are the same”Experience, lender relationships, and service quality vary significantly
“Brokers can’t access big bank rates”Many brokers can access Big 5 bank rates plus additional discounts

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