Losing your job is one of the most stressful things that can happen to a homeowner. The good news: you will not lose your house overnight, and you have more options than you might think. The key is acting quickly — the earlier you respond, the more tools are available to you.
Timeline: from job loss to foreclosure
Understanding the timeline takes the panic out of the situation. Foreclosure is a last resort, not an automatic outcome.
| Stage | Timeline | What Happens | Your Options |
|---|---|---|---|
| Day 1 — Job loss | Immediately | No mortgage impact yet | Contact lender proactively, file for EI, review budget |
| Month 1 — First payment at risk | 0–30 days | You may still be able to make the payment from savings or EI | Request deferral, tap emergency fund, explore hardship programs |
| Month 2 — First missed payment | 30–60 days | Lender contacts you, late fee applied ($25–$50), credit report note | Call your lender — do not ignore their calls |
| Month 3 — Second missed payment | 60–90 days | Credit score drops significantly (50–100 points), lender escalates to collections | Negotiate a repayment plan, consider private lending bridge |
| Month 4–6 — Continued default | 90–180 days | Lender issues formal demand letter, begins legal process | Sell voluntarily, refinance with B-lender, file consumer proposal |
| Month 6–12+ — Power of sale / foreclosure | 180–365+ days | Legal proceedings advance, court involvement (in some provinces) | Redemption period — you can still pay arrears to stop the process |
| Final — Property sold | 12–18+ months | Lender sells your property to recover the debt | Any surplus goes to you; any shortfall may become a deficiency judgment |
Critical point: You have 6–12+ months of runway. Most lenders prefer to work with you rather than foreclose — foreclosure is expensive and slow for them too.
Step 1 — Immediate actions after job loss
Within the first week
File for Employment Insurance (EI) — apply online at Service Canada within one week of your last day. Payments start after a one-week waiting period. Regular EI pays 55% of average insurable earnings, up to $668/week.
Review your emergency fund — how many months of mortgage payments can you cover from savings?
Calculate your reduced budget — determine minimum monthly obligations:
| Essential Expense | Monthly Amount |
|---|---|
| Mortgage payment | $ _____ |
| Property tax (if not in mortgage) | $ _____ |
| Home insurance | $ _____ |
| Utilities (heat, hydro, water) | $ _____ |
| Food | $ _____ |
| Total essential housing costs | $ _____ |
| EI income (estimated) | $ _____ |
| Monthly gap | $ _____ |
- Contact your mortgage lender — before you miss a payment. This is the single most important step.
Step 2 — Contact your lender
What lenders can offer
| Hardship Option | How It Works | Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Payment deferral | Skip 1–6 payments; deferred amounts added to principal | Interest continues accruing; mortgage balance increases |
| Reduced payments | Pay interest-only for 3–12 months | Payments drop significantly; no principal paydown during this period |
| Extended amortization | Stretch remaining mortgage over longer period | Lower payments permanently; more total interest paid |
| Capitalization of arrears | Missed payments added to mortgage balance | Catches you up on payments; balance increases |
| Payment holiday | Formal program at some lenders (e.g., Manulife One) | Pre-built into some flexible mortgage products |
How to approach the conversation
- Call before you miss a payment — lenders are far more flexible with proactive borrowers
- Have numbers ready — your EI amount, savings, timeline to re-employment, any other income
- Ask specifically about hardship or loss mitigation programs
- Get everything in writing — verbal agreements are not enforceable
- Take notes — record the agent’s name, date, and what was agreed
What NOT to do
- Do not ignore lender calls — silence makes things worse
- Do not stop paying without an agreement — even partial payments show good faith
- Do not assume you will lose the house — lenders lose money on foreclosures and prefer to avoid them
- Do not take on high-interest debt (credit cards, payday loans) to cover the mortgage — this creates a worse problem
Step 3 — Bridge income options
Employment Insurance details
| EI Factor | Details |
|---|---|
| Eligibility | Generally need 420–700 insurable hours depending on unemployment rate in your region |
| Benefit rate | 55% of average insurable earnings |
| Maximum weekly benefit (2026) | $668/week ($2,672/month) |
| Duration | 14–45 weeks depending on hours worked and regional unemployment rate |
| Waiting period | 1 week unpaid |
| Reporting | Must complete biweekly reports, actively seeking employment |
Other income sources to explore
| Source | Details |
|---|---|
| Severance pay | May cover several months of expenses; negotiate if offered a package |
| Partner income | Joint mortgage — one income may cover payments temporarily |
| Freelance / contract work | Report any earnings to EI; first $0.50/dollar is kept, then deducted |
| RRSP withdrawals | Emergency option — withdrawals are taxable income; loses contribution room forever |
| TFSA withdrawals | Tax-free; contribution room returns the following year |
| FHSA | Cannot be accessed for non-housing purposes without tax consequences |
| Home equity line of credit (HELOC) | If you have one established, use it as a short-term bridge — but not long-term |
| Rental income | Rent a room or basement suite to generate monthly income |
Step 4 — If the situation extends
If you cannot find employment within 3–6 months and lender options are exhausted, consider these strategies:
Refinance with a B-lender or private lender
- B-lenders may approve you with reduced or irregular income
- Private lenders will lend based on equity (50–65% LTV) regardless of income
- Rates are higher (private: 8–15%) but buy you time
- Plan an exit strategy — private mortgages are short-term solutions (6–12 months)
Sell voluntarily before forced sale
Selling your home on your terms gives you:
- Control over timing and price
- The ability to negotiate and get market value
- Money from equity after mortgage is paid off
- No power-of-sale or foreclosure on your credit report
A power of sale by the lender typically results in a below-market price and stays on your credit history for years.
Consumer proposal
If total debts (mortgage, credit cards, car loans) are overwhelming:
- A consumer proposal reduces unsecured debts by 50–80%
- Your mortgage is a secured debt and continues as normal
- Filing a consumer proposal triggers a stay of proceedings that stops collection action
- Credit impact: R7 rating for 3 years after completion
- You can keep your house if you continue making mortgage payments
Monthly budget planning template
Pre-job vs post-job comparison
| Category | Employed (Before) | Unemployed (After) | Adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Income | $ _____ | $ _____ (EI + other) | Reduced by ____% |
| Mortgage | $ _____ | $ _____ (deferral?) | Contact lender |
| Property tax | $ _____ | $ _____ | Cannot defer |
| Insurance | $ _____ | $ _____ | Do not cancel — review for savings |
| Utilities | $ _____ | $ _____ | Reduce usage; contact providers for hardship rates |
| Food | $ _____ | $ _____ | Reduce spending; use food banks if needed |
| Transportation | $ _____ | $ _____ | Reduce; cancel unused cars/parking |
| Subscriptions | $ _____ | $0 | Cancel all non-essential |
| Gap | $0 | $ _____ | This is the amount you need to bridge |
Provincial differences — foreclosure timelines
| Province | Process | Minimum Timeline | Redemption Period |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ontario | Power of sale | 35 days after notice of sale | 35 days — can pay arrears to stop process |
| British Columbia | Judicial foreclosure | 6–18 months (court process) | Until court grants Order Absolute |
| Alberta | Judicial foreclosure | 6–12 months; court supervised | Until court order; typically one opportunity to pay |
| Quebec | Hypothecary recourse | 60-day notice + court process | 60 days to cure default after notice |
| Manitoba | Power of sale | 4+ months | After notice period; can redeem by paying arrears |
| Saskatchewan | Judicial foreclosure | 6–12 months | Court-determined redemption period |
| Nova Scotia | Power of sale or foreclosure | 4–6 months minimum | After notice period |
Proactive steps to take now (before you ever lose a job)
| Protection | How It Helps | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Emergency fund (3–6 months) | Covers mortgage while you find new work | No cost — it is savings |
| Disability / job loss insurance | Pays mortgage for specified period if unemployed | $30–$80/month per $100K of mortgage |
| HELOC (established while employed) | Access to equity as emergency bridge | No cost until drawn; interest on balance drawn |
| Flexible mortgage (Manulife One, etc.) | Built-in ability to skip payments | Slightly higher rate may apply |
| Diversified income | Side income, partner income, rental income | Reduces single-point-of-failure risk |