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$1.5 Million Insured Mortgage in Canada — New Cap Explained

Updated

The federal government raised the insured mortgage cap from $999,999 to $1,499,999 in 2024, opening up CMHC-insured mortgages with less than 20% down for homes in Canada’s most expensive markets. This is one of the most significant mortgage policy changes in years — here is how it works and who benefits.

What changed

Old rules vs new rules

FactorOld RuleNew Rule
Maximum insured home price$999,999$1,499,999
Minimum down payment under $500K5%5% (unchanged)
Minimum down payment $500K–$999,99910% on the portion above $500K10% on the portion above $500K (unchanged)
Minimum down payment $1M–$1.5M20% (no insurance available)10% on the portion above $500K
Insurance available above $1MNoYes (up to $1,499,999)
Properties at $1.5M+20% down required20% down required (unchanged)

Down payment comparison

Purchase PriceOld Minimum DownNew Minimum DownCash Savings
$800,000$55,000 (5% on $500K + 10% on $300K)$55,000No change
$999,999$75,000$75,000No change
$1,000,000$200,000 (20% required)$75,000 (5% + 10% sliding scale)$125,000 saved
$1,100,000$220,000 (20% required)$85,000$135,000 saved
$1,200,000$240,000 (20% required)$95,000$145,000 saved
$1,300,000$260,000 (20% required)$105,000$155,000 saved
$1,400,000$280,000 (20% required)$115,000$165,000 saved
$1,499,999$300,000 (20% required)$125,000$175,000 saved
$1,500,000+$300,000+ (20% required)$300,000+ (20% required)No change

Key takeaway: For a $1.3 million home, the required cash dropped from $260,000 to $105,000 — a $155,000 reduction. This is transformative for buyers in Toronto and Vancouver where starter homes regularly exceed $1 million.

CMHC insurance premiums at higher price points

Premium rates

Down Payment %CMHC Premium Rate
5.00–9.99%4.00%
10.00–14.99%3.10%
15.00–19.99%2.80%

Premium cost examples

Purchase PriceDown PaymentMortgageCMHC Premium (4.00%)Total Mortgage (with insurance)Monthly Payment (5.5%, 25 yr)
$1,000,000$75,000 (7.5%)$925,000$37,000$962,000$5,866
$1,100,000$85,000 (7.7%)$1,015,000$40,600$1,055,600$6,437
$1,200,000$95,000 (7.9%)$1,105,000$44,200$1,149,200$7,008
$1,300,000$105,000 (8.1%)$1,195,000$47,800$1,242,800$7,579
$1,499,999$125,000 (8.3%)$1,375,000$55,000$1,430,000$8,721

The CMHC premium at these price levels is significant — $37,000 to $55,000 added to your mortgage. This is the trade-off for the lower down payment.

Is it worth paying the insurance premium?

Option A: Insured (New Rules)Option B: Uninsured (20% down)
$1,200,000 purchase$1,200,000 purchase
$95,000 down (7.9%)$240,000 down (20%)
$1,105,000 mortgage$960,000 mortgage
$44,200 CMHC premium$0 premium
$1,149,200 total mortgage$960,000 total mortgage
Monthly payment: $7,008Monthly payment: $5,855
Cash needed: $95,000 + closing costsCash needed: $240,000 + closing costs
$145,000 less cash needed$1,153 lower monthly payment

The trade-off: You save $145,000 in cash upfront but pay $1,153 more per month and carry $189,200 more in total mortgage debt (including the insurance premium). Over 25 years, the insured option costs approximately $155,000 more in interest.

When Option A makes sense: You have $95,000 but not $240,000. Waiting to save the additional $145,000 could take 3–5+ years, during which prices may rise further.

When Option B makes sense: You have the 20% available and want lower payments and less total cost.

Who benefits most

Primary beneficiaries

Buyer ProfileHow They Benefit
First-time buyers in Toronto/VancouverCan buy a starter home (townhouse, small detached) that costs $1M–$1.5M with 5–10% down instead of 20%
Move-up buyersCan bridge the gap from a condo to a house without needing $250K+ in cash
Dual-income householdsHigh enough income to qualify but not enough savings for 20% on a $1M+ home
New-build buyersCombines with 30-year amortization for first-time buyers — maximum affordability

Who does NOT benefit

Buyer ProfileWhy
Buyers in affordable marketsHomes under $1M — rules did not change for them
InvestorsInvestment properties still require 20% down
Buyers above $1.5MStill need 20% down — no insured option
Buyers who already have 20% savedInsured route adds premium cost they do not need

Income required to qualify

The stress test still applies. You need to qualify at the higher of your contract rate + 2% or 5.25%.

Purchase PriceDown PaymentMortgage (incl. CMHC)Monthly Payment at Stress Test RateRequired Household Income (approx.)
$1,000,000$75,000$962,000$6,689~$200,000
$1,100,000$85,000$1,055,600$7,339~$220,000
$1,200,000$95,000$1,149,200$7,990~$240,000
$1,300,000$105,000$1,242,800$8,640~$260,000
$1,499,999$125,000$1,430,000$9,942~$300,000

Approximate — assumes 7.5% stress test rate, 25-year amortization, GDS 39%, property tax and heating estimated, no other debts

Reality check: A $1.3M home requires approximately $260,000 household income to qualify. This limits the benefit to higher-income households — but those are exactly the households that were locked out of Toronto and Vancouver’s $1M+ markets despite strong incomes.

Combining with other 2024 policy changes

Maximum benefit stack

Policy ChangeBenefit
$1.5M insured capLess down payment required (5–10% instead of 20%)
30-year amortization (first-time buyers, new builds)Lower monthly payments (8–12% reduction)
Combined effectCan buy a $1.2M home with $95,000 down and 30-year amortization

Worked example: Maximum benefit

FactorOld RulesNew Rules (Stacked)
Purchase price$1,200,000$1,200,000
Down payment required$240,000 (20%)$95,000 (7.9%)
Amortization25 years (insured cap)30 years (first-time/new-build)
Monthly payment$5,855 (uninsured, 25 yr)$6,395 (insured, 30 yr)
Cash needed$240,000$95,000
Cash savings$145,000

The stacked benefit lowers the cash barrier dramatically while keeping the monthly payment roughly comparable.

Market impact

Markets where this matters most

CityAvg. Detached Price (2025)Previously Required 20%?Newly Insurable?
Toronto$1,250,000Yes — $250,000 down✅ Now insured at ~$100,000 down
Vancouver$1,550,000Yes — $310,000 downPartially — some homes now insurable
Victoria$900,000No — already under $1MNo change
Ottawa$680,000No — already under $1MNo change
Calgary$620,000No — already under $1MNo change
Hamilton$850,000No — already under $1MNo change
Kelowna$900,000No — already under $1MNo change

The policy primarily benefits Toronto and Vancouver buyers, where average detached home prices straddle or exceed the $1M threshold.

Risks and considerations

RiskDetails
Larger mortgage = more debtCarrying $1.1M+ in mortgage debt means higher vulnerability to rate increases at renewal
CMHC premium is substantial$37,000–$55,000 added to your debt — this is not free money
Slower equity buildWith only 5–10% down on a $1M+ home, you start with very little equity cushion
Market downturn riskA 10% price decline on a $1.2M home is $120,000 — with only $95,000 down, you are immediately underwater
Stress test still appliesThe lower down payment does not change the income needed to qualify
Higher payments at renewalIf rates are higher at your 5-year renewal, the payment increase on a $1.1M+ mortgage is significant

Closing costs at this price level

CostAmount (Ontario)Amount (BC)
Land transfer tax$22,475–$32,475PTT: $28,000–$40,000
Toronto municipal LTT (if applicable)$22,475–$32,475N/A
Legal fees$2,000–$3,500$2,000–$3,500
Home inspection$500–$800$500–$800
Appraisal$400–$600$400–$600
Title insurance$300–$500$300–$500
Total closing costs$48,000–$70,000 (Toronto)$31,000–$45,000

Important: At the $1M+ level, closing costs are substantial — especially in Toronto with double land transfer tax. Budget $50,000–$70,000 above your down payment.

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