Ideal Debt Service Ratio for a Mortgage in Canada 2026: GDS & TDS Targets
Updated
Canadian mortgage lenders allow GDS up to 39% and TDS up to 44%. But should you borrow to those limits? Here’s what lenders want to see versus what’s actually smart for your finances.
Maximum vs ideal ratios
Ratio
Maximum (A-Lender)
Ideal (Financial Comfort)
Conservative
GDS
39%
25%–32%
Under 25%
TDS
44%
30%–38%
Under 30%
Why the maximum isn’t the target
What happens at maximum ratios
GDS Level
Financial Reality
<25% GDS
Comfortable — ample room for savings, emergencies, lifestyle spending
25%–30% GDS
Manageable — some discipline needed; minor rate increases absorbed easily
30%–35% GDS
Tight — limited discretionary spending; rate increase of 1%–2% begins to strain budget
35%–39% GDS
Maximum — very little cushion; any disruption (job loss, repair, rate hike) creates financial stress
>39% GDS
Over-limit — A-lender declines; B-lender territory with higher rates, making it even tighter
The renewal risk at maximum ratios
If you borrow at 39% GDS with today’s rate, what happens at renewal if rates are higher?
Current Rate
Rate at Renewal (+2%)
GDS at Current Rate
GDS at Renewal
Status
4.50%
6.50%
39%
~48%
Over limit — payment shock
4.50%
5.50%
39%
~43%
Over lender comfort zone
4.50%
4.50%
39%
39%
Still maximum — no cushion
4.50%
3.50%
39%
~36%
Finally comfortable
Borrowing at maximum means any rate increase at renewal creates a GDS over the limit. While lenders must renew existing mortgages, you lose the ability to shop for better rates because other lenders may not approve you at higher ratios.
Ideal ratios by household situation
Household Type
Recommended GDS
Recommended TDS
Why
Dual income, no children
30%–35%
38%–42%
Highest capacity; some flexibility
Dual income, children
25%–30%
35%–40%
Childcare and expenses reduce flexibility
Single income
25%–28%
30%–36%
No backup income if job lost
Self-employed
20%–28%
28%–36%
Income variability requires larger buffer
Near retirement (50+)
20%–25%
25%–32%
Fixed/declining income ahead
First-time buyer
28%–33%
35%–40%
Learning to budget for homeownership costs
Real estate investor
25%–30% (primary)
40%–44%
Higher TDS normal with rental properties
The real cost of “house poor”
Borrowing the maximum means housing dominates your budget. Here’s what a $100,000 gross income household looks like at different GDS levels:
Monthly budget at different GDS levels ($100K income)
Budget Category
25% GDS
32% GDS
39% GDS
Gross monthly income
$8,333
$8,333
$8,333
Take-home (after tax, ~30%)
~$5,833
~$5,833
~$5,833
Housing costs
$2,083
$2,667
$3,250
Other debt payments
$417
$417
$417
Remaining for everything else
$3,333
$2,749
$2,166
Food (family of 2)
–$800
–$800
–$800
Transportation
–$500
–$500
–$500
Insurance (auto, life)
–$300
–$300
–$300
Utilities & telecom
–$300
–$300
–$300
Left for savings, fun, emergencies
$1,433
$849
$266
At 39% GDS, this household has only $266/month for all savings, entertainment, clothing, gifts, vacations, and unexpected expenses. One car repair or dental bill creates a credit card cycle.
What lenders actually look for (beyond the ratios)
Lenders approve or decline based on the full picture. Ideal ratios make every other factor easier.
Factor
Ideal Profile
Borderline Profile
GDS
<32%
37%–39%
TDS
<38%
42%–44%
Credit score
750+
680–700
Down payment
20%+
5%–10%
Employment
3+ years stable
Recently started
Savings after closing
3+ months reserve
Minimal savings
Approval outcome
Fast approval, best rate
Manual review, standard rate
Comfort-testing your mortgage
Before committing to a mortgage amount, stress-test your own budget — not just the lender’s formula.
The 3-question test
Question
How to Test
Can I afford a 2% rate increase?
Calculate your payment at contract rate + 2%. Can you still cover all expenses?
Can I handle 3 months without income?
Do you have emergency savings equal to 3 months of total expenses (not just mortgage)?
Can I absorb a $10,000 surprise expense?
Major repairs, medical costs, or car replacement — do you have access to funds?
If the answer to any question is no, consider borrowing less.
Payment increase impact
On a $500,000 mortgage (25-year amortization):
Rate Scenario
Monthly Payment
Increase from 4.50%
4.50% (original)
$2,749
—
5.50% (+1%)
$3,044
+$295/month (+$3,540/year)
6.50% (+2%)
$3,351
+$602/month (+$7,224/year)
7.50% (+3%)
$3,670
+$921/month (+$11,052/year)
How to get your ratios lower
If your GDS is too high
Strategy
GDS Reduction
Reduce purchase price by $50,000
GDS drops ~2%–3%
Increase down payment by $25,000
GDS drops ~1%–2%
Extend amortization from 25 to 30 years
GDS drops ~3%–4%
Choose a home with lower property taxes
GDS drops ~1%–2%
Choose freehold vs condo
Eliminates condo fee component
If your TDS is too high
Strategy
TDS Reduction
Pay off $10,000 credit card balance
TDS drops ~3%–4% (removes $300/mo from calc)
Pay off car loan ($30,000 remaining)
TDS drops ~5%–6% (removes $450/mo)
Have co-signer removed from other loans
Removes those payments from your TDS
Add co-borrower with income and no debt
Increases denominator (income) substantially
What different lenders will accept
Your Ratios
A-Lender
Credit Union
B-Lender
GDS 30%, TDS 35%
✓ Easy approval
✓ Easy approval
✓
GDS 35%, TDS 40%
✓ Standard approval
✓ Standard approval
✓
GDS 39%, TDS 44%
✓ At limit — may need strong file
✓ Approved
✓
GDS 42%, TDS 48%
✗ Declined (or exception only)
✓ May approve
✓
GDS 45%, TDS 52%
✗ Declined
△ Possible exception
✓ With equity
GDS 50%, TDS 55%
✗ Declined
✗ Likely declined
✓ Standard B-lender
The bottom line: borrow for comfort, not capacity
Principle
Application
Maximum = lender’s risk limit
The most they’ll allow, not what’s comfortable
Ideal = your budget with breathing room
Enough margin for rate increases, emergencies, life changes
Conservative = financial freedom
Housing doesn’t dominate your budget; you build wealth beyond your home
The best mortgage is one where your housing costs feel manageable five years from now — not one that feels tight on day one.