Assumable Mortgages in Canada 2026: How They Work & When to Use Them
Updated
Assumable mortgages are one of the most underused tools in Canadian real estate. When a buyer takes over the seller’s existing mortgage — including its rate, balance, and remaining term — both sides can win: the buyer locks in a below-market rate, and the seller avoids a prepayment penalty that could easily run $25,000–35,000. In the current rate environment, where many sellers hold sub-3.5% mortgages from 2020–2021 while new mortgages are priced above 5%, assumptions can save buyers tens of thousands over the remaining term. The catch is that lenders must approve the new borrower, and the buyer needs enough cash to cover the seller’s equity.
What Is an Assumable Mortgage?
How It Works
Step
Process
1
Seller has existing mortgage (e.g., 3.5% rate)
2
Buyer agrees to take over mortgage
3
Buyer applies to lender for assumption
4
Lender qualifies buyer
5
Mortgage transfers to buyer
6
Seller released from obligation
Example Scenario
Factor
Detail
House price
$600,000
Seller’s mortgage balance
$400,000
Seller’s mortgage rate
3.2% (locked 2021)
Current market rate
5.5%
Buyer’s down payment
$200,000
Result
Buyer gets $400,000 at 3.2%
Benefits for Buyers
Financial Benefits
Benefit
Impact
Lower interest rate
Below-market rate
Lower payments
Significant monthly savings
Less interest paid
Total savings over mortgage life
Fewer closing costs
May save on some fees
Cost Comparison Example
Scenario
Assumed Mortgage
New Mortgage
Amount
$400,000
$400,000
Rate
3.2%
5.5%
Monthly payment
$1,935
$2,442
Monthly savings
—
$507
Annual savings
—
$6,084
5-year savings
—
$30,420
Other Buyer Benefits
Benefit
Explanation
Easier qualification?
Sometimes (existing mortgage terms)
Faster closing
Potentially (less paperwork)
Known terms
No surprises with existing mortgage
Benefits for Sellers
Why Sellers Like Assumptions
Benefit
Impact
Avoid prepayment penalty
Can be $10,000-50,000+
Marketing advantage
Attract rate-conscious buyers
Faster sale
Appealing to buyers
Higher price possible
Buyers may pay premium for low rate
Penalty Avoidance Example
Breaking Mortgage
Cost
Remaining balance
$400,000
Original rate
3.2%
Current rate
5.5%
IRD penalty estimate
$25,000-35,000
Assumption penalty
$0
Qualification Requirements
What Buyers Must Prove
Requirement
Standard
Credit score
Same as new mortgage (usually 680+)
Debt ratios
GDS <35%, TDS <42% typically
Income verification
Full documentation
Down payment
Enough to cover equity
Stress test
May apply (lender dependent)
The Stress Test Question
Lender Policy
Stress Test
Some lenders
Waive test for assumptions
Other lenders
Still require test
Federally regulated
Usually required
Credit unions
More flexible
Always confirm with the specific lender.
How to Assume a Mortgage
Process Timeline
Step
Timeframe
Identify assumable mortgage
During house search
Make offer with assumption clause
Day 1
Apply to lender for assumption
Week 1-2
Lender reviews qualification
Week 2-4
Approval/denial
Week 4-6
Closing
Upon approval
Documents Typically Required
For Buyer
For Transfer
Proof of income
Original mortgage documents
Credit report
Seller’s mortgage statement
Employment letter
Property appraisal
Down payment proof
Title documents
Common Scenarios
When Assumption Works Best
Scenario
Why It Works
Rate locked before 2022
Sub-3% rates available
Large mortgage balance
More savings
Buyer has large down payment
Can cover equity
Several years remaining
More value from low rate
When Assumption Doesn’t Work
Scenario
Issue
Buyer needs more financing
Gap may require second mortgage
Large equity position
Buyer needs huge down payment
Remaining balance too small
Not worth the hassle
Rate difference minimal
Better to get fresh mortgage
Handling the “Equity Gap”
The equity gap is the biggest practical obstacle to mortgage assumptions. If a home is worth $700,000 but the assumable mortgage balance is only $350,000, the buyer needs $350,000 in cash or alternative financing to make up the difference. Most buyers don’t have that kind of liquidity, which is why second mortgages and seller take-back arrangements are common in assumption deals. The second mortgage will carry a higher rate, so you need to calculate whether the blended cost of the assumed mortgage plus the gap financing still beats a single new mortgage at current rates.
The Math
Factor
Amount
Purchase price
$700,000
Assumable mortgage balance
$350,000
Equity portion
$350,000
Buyer’s cash
$200,000
Gap to cover
$150,000
Solutions for the Gap
Option
Pros
Cons
Second mortgage
Covers gap
Higher rate, two payments
Seller take-back
Flexible terms
Seller must agree
Personal loan
Simple
Very high rate
HELOC from other property
Lower rate
Need other property
More cash
Clean solution
Need the money
Lender Policies
Lenders That Allow Assumptions
Lender Type
Assumption Friendly
Most banks
Yes (with qualification)
Credit unions
Often yes
Monoline lenders
Varies
Private lenders
Usually yes
What Lenders Charge
Fee Type
Typical Amount
Assumption fee
$200-500
Legal review fee
$300-800
Credit check
$0-25
Total
$500-1,300
Much less than closing costs on new mortgage.
Risks and Considerations
Risks for Buyers
Risk
Mitigation
Lender denial
Pre-approval process
Mortgage terms you inherit
Review all conditions
No rate negotiation
Accept seller’s rate
Time pressure
Build in condition period
Risks for Sellers
Risk
Mitigation
Buyer doesn’t qualify
Alternative financing clause
Delays
Set clear timelines
Still on hook until transfer
Ensure proper release
Questions to Ask
For Buyers
Question
Why Ask
What is the current rate?
Core benefit assessment
How much time left on term?
Value calculation
What are the prepayment terms?
Flexibility
Can I blend and extend later?
Future options
Will stress test apply?
Qualification impact
For Sellers
Question
Why Ask
Will lender allow assumption?
Feasibility
What’s my prepayment penalty?
Compare to assumption
Am I fully released?
Liability concern
What fees apply?
Cost comparison
Alternatives to Assumption
Porting
Feature
Assumption
Porting
Who uses
Buyer
Seller (to new home)
What transfers
Mortgage to buyer
Mortgage to new property
Rate kept
Yes
Yes
Same lender
Must stay
Must stay
Blend and Extend (for Sellers)
Action
Outcome
Add to mortgage
Blend old + new rates
Extend term
May lower blended rate
Result
Avoid full penalty
The Bottom Line
If a seller holds a low-rate mortgage and you have the cash to cover their equity, assuming the mortgage can save you $30,000 or more over the remaining term compared to a new mortgage at today’s rates. It’s not common, but in a high-rate environment it’s worth asking about — especially on properties that have been listed for a while. Work with a mortgage broker who has experience with assumptions, and always confirm the lender’s specific policies before making an offer conditional on assumption.