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Flexible Mortgages in Canada: Readvanceable, Hybrid & All-in-One Products (2026)

Updated

Flexible mortgage products give you more than a standard mortgage — they combine borrowing, revolving credit, and sometimes banking into a single structure. Here is how they work and whether they are right for you.

Types of flexible mortgages

Product TypeHow It WorksKey Feature
Readvanceable mortgageMortgage + HELOC under one registered charge. HELOC limit grows as mortgage principal is repaidAccess equity without refinancing
All-in-one accountMortgage + chequing + savings in a single account. Interest calculated daily on net balanceEvery dollar reduces interest
Hybrid / split mortgageMultiple mortgage sub-accounts (segments) with different rates and terms under one productMix fixed and variable rates
HELOC-only mortgageEntire mortgage is structured as a HELOC (interest-only option)Maximum flexibility, no forced principal repayment

How a readvanceable mortgage works

A readvanceable mortgage is registered as a collateral charge (not a standard charge) for the maximum lending value — typically 80% of your home’s value. This single registration covers both your mortgage and HELOC.

Example: $600,000 home, $480,000 total credit (80% LTV)

ComponentDay 1After 2 YearsAfter 10 Years
Mortgage balance$480,000$440,000$320,000
HELOC available$0$40,000$160,000
Total credit$480,000$480,000$480,000

As you pay down the mortgage, your HELOC limit automatically increases by the same amount. You can access this credit at any time for any purpose — renovations, investing, emergencies — without applying for a new loan or paying legal fees.

Major flexible mortgage products compared

ProductLenderReadvanceableSub-AccountsAll-in-One BankingRate Premium
Scotia STEPScotiabankYesUp to 3 sub-accounts (fixed/variable) + HELOCNo~0.10–0.15%
Manulife OneManulife BankYesMultiple sub-accountsYes — chequing, savings, mortgage combined~0.15–0.30%
National Bank All-in-OneNational BankYesUp to 4 sub-accounts + HELOCYes~0.10–0.20%
TD FlexLineTDYesMultiple segments + HELOCNo~0.10–0.15%
RBC Homeline PlanRBCYesMortgage + HELOC segmentsNo~0.10–0.15%
BMO ReadiLineBMOYesMortgage + HELOCNo~0.10%

The Smith Manoeuvre connection

The most financially powerful use of a readvanceable mortgage is the Smith Manoeuvre — a strategy to make your mortgage interest tax-deductible:

How it works

  1. Make your regular mortgage payment (which includes principal repayment)
  2. Your HELOC limit automatically increases by the principal portion
  3. Borrow from the HELOC and invest in an income-producing portfolio (Canadian dividend stocks, ETFs)
  4. The interest on the HELOC becomes tax-deductible because the borrowed funds are used for investment
  5. Use investment income (dividends) to make additional mortgage prepayments
  6. Repeat — over time, your non-deductible mortgage debt is replaced with deductible investment debt

Smith Manoeuvre requirements

RequirementWhy
Readvanceable mortgageHELOC must automatically increase as mortgage is paid down
Non-registered investment accountInvested funds cannot go into RRSP, TFSA, or other registered accounts
Income-producing investmentsInterest is only deductible if the investment has a reasonable expectation of generating income
Separate HELOC trackingKeep the investment HELOC completely separate from any personal-use HELOC borrowing
Long time horizonThe strategy works best over 15+ years with consistent execution

All-in-one accounts: Manulife One deep dive

The Manulife One is the most well-known all-in-one product. It works differently from a standard mortgage:

How daily interest calculation works

DayBalance StartPaycheque InExpenses OutClosing BalanceInterest Charged
1st (payday)$400,000−$5,000$395,000$395,000 × daily rate
5th$395,000+$200 (groceries)$395,200$395,200 × daily rate
10th$395,200+$1,500 (rent/bills)$396,700$396,700 × daily rate
15th (payday)$396,700−$5,000$391,700$391,700 × daily rate

Because interest is calculated daily on the net balance, every dollar deposited — even temporarily — reduces your interest. If your paycheque sits in the account for 14 days before bills come out, you save interest on that $5,000 for 14 days.

Who benefits most from Manulife One

ProfileBenefit LevelWhy
High-income earnerHighLarge paycheques reduce balance significantly between spending
Irregular income (self-employed)HighLarge deposits offset periods of lower income automatically
Two-income householdHighTwo paycheques keep balance lower more often
Living paycheque to paychequeLowNo surplus cash to reduce interest — the rate premium just costs more
Heavy credit card userModerateIf you pay off cards monthly, keeping cash in Manulife One longer saves interest

Hybrid / split mortgage strategy

Many flexible mortgage products allow you to split your mortgage into multiple sub-accounts with different rates and terms. This is useful for diversifying rate risk:

Example: $500,000 split mortgage

SegmentAmountTypeRateTerm
Segment 1$250,0005-year fixed4.49%5 years
Segment 2$150,000Variable (ARM)4.20%5 years
Segment 3$100,000HELOC (interest-only)6.45%Revolving

This gives you the stability of a fixed rate on half your mortgage, the potential savings of a variable rate on another portion, and flexible access to equity through the HELOC.

Collateral charge vs standard charge

Flexible mortgages are registered as collateral charges, which has important implications:

FeatureStandard ChargeCollateral Charge
Registered amountExact mortgage amountUp to 125% of home value
Re-borrow as you pay downNo — requires refinanceYes — automatic with readvanceable
Switch lenders at renewalSimple transfer (no legal fees)May require discharge and re-register (legal fees of $500–$1,000+)
Additional borrowingNew application and registrationMay be available within existing registration
HELOC includedSeparate registration neededIncluded under same charge

The main drawback of a collateral charge is that switching lenders at renewal is more expensive and complicated. You may need to pay legal fees to discharge the collateral charge and register a new one with the new lender.

When a flexible mortgage is worth it

SituationFlexible MortgageStandard Mortgage
Planning the Smith Manoeuvre✓ Essential✗ Cannot readvance
Want HELOC access as equity grows✓ Automatic✗ Needs refinance
Two-income household with surplus cash✓ All-in-one saves interest✗ No daily interest benefit
Plan to stay with same lender long-term✓ No switching penalty concernEither works
Want the lowest possible rate✗ Rate premium✓ Best rates
Plan to switch lenders at renewal✗ Collateral charge switching costs✓ Easy transfer
Simple needs — just a basic mortgage✗ Unnecessary complexity✓ Keep it simple

The bottom line

Flexible mortgages are powerful tools for borrowers who will actively use the features — especially the readvanceable capability for the Smith Manoeuvre or the all-in-one structure for high-income households. But they come with a rate premium and collateral charge complications that make switching lenders harder. If you want the lowest rate and plan to shop lenders at every renewal, a standard mortgage with a standard charge is the better choice.

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