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Can I Keep My House If I Lose My Job?

Updated

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.

StageTimelineWhat HappensYour Options
Day 1 — Job lossImmediatelyNo mortgage impact yetContact lender proactively, file for EI, review budget
Month 1 — First payment at risk0–30 daysYou may still be able to make the payment from savings or EIRequest deferral, tap emergency fund, explore hardship programs
Month 2 — First missed payment30–60 daysLender contacts you, late fee applied ($25–$50), credit report noteCall your lender — do not ignore their calls
Month 3 — Second missed payment60–90 daysCredit score drops significantly (50–100 points), lender escalates to collectionsNegotiate a repayment plan, consider private lending bridge
Month 4–6 — Continued default90–180 daysLender issues formal demand letter, begins legal processSell voluntarily, refinance with B-lender, file consumer proposal
Month 6–12+ — Power of sale / foreclosure180–365+ daysLegal proceedings advance, court involvement (in some provinces)Redemption period — you can still pay arrears to stop the process
Final — Property sold12–18+ monthsLender sells your property to recover the debtAny 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

  1. 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.

  2. Review your emergency fund — how many months of mortgage payments can you cover from savings?

  3. Calculate your reduced budget — determine minimum monthly obligations:

Essential ExpenseMonthly 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$ _____
  1. 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 OptionHow It WorksImpact
Payment deferralSkip 1–6 payments; deferred amounts added to principalInterest continues accruing; mortgage balance increases
Reduced paymentsPay interest-only for 3–12 monthsPayments drop significantly; no principal paydown during this period
Extended amortizationStretch remaining mortgage over longer periodLower payments permanently; more total interest paid
Capitalization of arrearsMissed payments added to mortgage balanceCatches you up on payments; balance increases
Payment holidayFormal 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 FactorDetails
EligibilityGenerally need 420–700 insurable hours depending on unemployment rate in your region
Benefit rate55% of average insurable earnings
Maximum weekly benefit (2026)$668/week ($2,672/month)
Duration14–45 weeks depending on hours worked and regional unemployment rate
Waiting period1 week unpaid
ReportingMust complete biweekly reports, actively seeking employment

Other income sources to explore

SourceDetails
Severance payMay cover several months of expenses; negotiate if offered a package
Partner incomeJoint mortgage — one income may cover payments temporarily
Freelance / contract workReport any earnings to EI; first $0.50/dollar is kept, then deducted
RRSP withdrawalsEmergency option — withdrawals are taxable income; loses contribution room forever
TFSA withdrawalsTax-free; contribution room returns the following year
FHSACannot 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 incomeRent 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

CategoryEmployed (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$ _____$0Cancel all non-essential
Gap$0$ _____This is the amount you need to bridge

Provincial differences — foreclosure timelines

ProvinceProcessMinimum TimelineRedemption Period
OntarioPower of sale35 days after notice of sale35 days — can pay arrears to stop process
British ColumbiaJudicial foreclosure6–18 months (court process)Until court grants Order Absolute
AlbertaJudicial foreclosure6–12 months; court supervisedUntil court order; typically one opportunity to pay
QuebecHypothecary recourse60-day notice + court process60 days to cure default after notice
ManitobaPower of sale4+ monthsAfter notice period; can redeem by paying arrears
SaskatchewanJudicial foreclosure6–12 monthsCourt-determined redemption period
Nova ScotiaPower of sale or foreclosure4–6 months minimumAfter notice period

Proactive steps to take now (before you ever lose a job)

ProtectionHow It HelpsCost
Emergency fund (3–6 months)Covers mortgage while you find new workNo cost — it is savings
Disability / job loss insurancePays mortgage for specified period if unemployed$30–$80/month per $100K of mortgage
HELOC (established while employed)Access to equity as emergency bridgeNo cost until drawn; interest on balance drawn
Flexible mortgage (Manulife One, etc.)Built-in ability to skip paymentsSlightly higher rate may apply
Diversified incomeSide income, partner income, rental incomeReduces single-point-of-failure risk
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