$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
Factor
Old Rule
New Rule
Maximum insured home price
$999,999
$1,499,999
Minimum down payment under $500K
5%
5% (unchanged)
Minimum down payment $500K–$999,999
10% on the portion above $500K
10% on the portion above $500K (unchanged)
Minimum down payment $1M–$1.5M
20% (no insurance available)
10% on the portion above $500K
Insurance available above $1M
No
Yes (up to $1,499,999)
Properties at $1.5M+
20% down required
20% down required (unchanged)
Down payment comparison
Purchase Price
Old Minimum Down
New Minimum Down
Cash Savings
$800,000
$55,000 (5% on $500K + 10% on $300K)
$55,000
No change
$999,999
$75,000
$75,000
No 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 Price
Down Payment
Mortgage
CMHC 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: $7,008
Monthly payment: $5,855
Cash needed: $95,000 + closing costs
Cash 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 Profile
How They Benefit
First-time buyers in Toronto/Vancouver
Can buy a starter home (townhouse, small detached) that costs $1M–$1.5M with 5–10% down instead of 20%
Move-up buyers
Can bridge the gap from a condo to a house without needing $250K+ in cash
Dual-income households
High enough income to qualify but not enough savings for 20% on a $1M+ home
New-build buyers
Combines with 30-year amortization for first-time buyers — maximum affordability
Who does NOT benefit
Buyer Profile
Why
Buyers in affordable markets
Homes under $1M — rules did not change for them
Investors
Investment properties still require 20% down
Buyers above $1.5M
Still need 20% down — no insured option
Buyers who already have 20% saved
Insured 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 Price
Down Payment
Mortgage (incl. CMHC)
Monthly Payment at Stress Test Rate
Required 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 Change
Benefit
$1.5M insured cap
Less down payment required (5–10% instead of 20%)
30-year amortization (first-time buyers, new builds)
Lower monthly payments (8–12% reduction)
Combined effect
Can buy a $1.2M home with $95,000 down and 30-year amortization
Worked example: Maximum benefit
Factor
Old Rules
New Rules (Stacked)
Purchase price
$1,200,000
$1,200,000
Down payment required
$240,000 (20%)
$95,000 (7.9%)
Amortization
25 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
City
Avg. Detached Price (2025)
Previously Required 20%?
Newly Insurable?
Toronto
$1,250,000
Yes — $250,000 down
✅ Now insured at ~$100,000 down
Vancouver
$1,550,000
Yes — $310,000 down
Partially — some homes now insurable
Victoria
$900,000
No — already under $1M
No change
Ottawa
$680,000
No — already under $1M
No change
Calgary
$620,000
No — already under $1M
No change
Hamilton
$850,000
No — already under $1M
No change
Kelowna
$900,000
No — already under $1M
No change
The policy primarily benefits Toronto and Vancouver buyers, where average detached home prices straddle or exceed the $1M threshold.
Risks and considerations
Risk
Details
Larger mortgage = more debt
Carrying $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 build
With only 5–10% down on a $1M+ home, you start with very little equity cushion
Market downturn risk
A 10% price decline on a $1.2M home is $120,000 — with only $95,000 down, you are immediately underwater
Stress test still applies
The lower down payment does not change the income needed to qualify
Higher payments at renewal
If rates are higher at your 5-year renewal, the payment increase on a $1.1M+ mortgage is significant
Closing costs at this price level
Cost
Amount (Ontario)
Amount (BC)
Land transfer tax
$22,475–$32,475
PTT: $28,000–$40,000
Toronto municipal LTT (if applicable)
$22,475–$32,475
N/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.