Joint mortgages are the most common way couples buy homes in Canada, but many borrowers do not fully understand how joint liability works — especially when relationships change. Here is what you need to know about qualification, title, and the legal implications.
Mortgage vs title: two separate things
This is the most misunderstood aspect of joint home purchases. The mortgage (the loan) and the title (the ownership) are separate legal documents:
| Document | What It Determines | Who Can Be On It |
|---|---|---|
| Mortgage | Who owes the debt to the lender | One or both partners (and/or a guarantor) |
| Title | Who owns the property | One or both partners (and/or others) |
Common configurations
| Configuration | On Mortgage | On Title | When Used |
|---|---|---|---|
| Both on both | Partner A + B | Partner A + B | Most common for couples |
| One on mortgage, both on title | Partner A only | Partner A + B | Partner B does not qualify (credit/income) |
| Both on mortgage, one on title | Partner A + B | Partner A only | Uncommon — lender usually wants all title holders on mortgage |
| One on both | Partner A only | Partner A only | Only one partner wants ownership (pre-marriage, asset protection) |
Joint mortgage qualification
When applying jointly, lenders combine your financial profiles:
| Factor | How Joint Applications Are Assessed |
|---|---|
| Income | Combined gross income of both applicants |
| Debts | Combined debt obligations of both applicants |
| Credit score | Both scores reviewed — weakest score may affect rate or approval |
| Down payment | Combined contributions |
| Stress test | Applied to combined GDS/TDS ratios |
| Employment | Both applicants’ employment verified |
When one partner has weak credit
| Strategy | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|
| Apply jointly anyway | Use both incomes for higher qualification | Weaker credit may hurt rate or cause decline |
| Stronger partner applies alone | Better rate from strong credit | Lose weaker partner’s income — may qualify for less |
| Stronger partner applies, weaker guarantees | Uses stronger credit for rate, weaker’s income helps qualify | Guarantor still has credit exposure |
| Fix credit first, then apply | Best long-term outcome | Delays the purchase (6–24 months) |
Decision framework: joint vs solo application
| Monthly Mortgage Needed | Partner A Income | Partner B Income | Partner B Credit | Best Approach |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $2,500 | $100,000 | $60,000 | 750+ | Joint — higher qualification, good credit |
| $2,500 | $100,000 | $60,000 | 580 | Solo (Partner A) if income sufficient |
| $3,500 | $80,000 | $70,000 | 650 | Joint — need both incomes, accept rate premium |
| $2,000 | $120,000 | $40,000 | 520 | Solo (Partner A) — sufficient income, avoid credit damage |
Title options for couples
Joint tenancy (most common for couples)
- Equal ownership (50/50 for two owners)
- Right of survivorship — when one partner dies, the other automatically receives full ownership
- Both partners must agree to sell
- Most appropriate for married or committed common-law couples
Tenancy in common
- Ownership can be unequal (e.g., 70/30 based on contribution)
- No right of survivorship — each partner’s share goes to their estate
- Either partner can sell their share independently
- More appropriate when partners want proportional ownership or have estate planning needs
Most couples choose joint tenancy for the right of survivorship, which avoids the need for probate on the property.
What happens in a separation or divorce
For married couples
Family law in every Canadian province treats the matrimonial home specially:
| Province | Matrimonial Home Treatment |
|---|---|
| Ontario | Both spouses have equal right to live in the home regardless of whose name is on the title. Net family property is divided equally |
| British Columbia | Family property (including the home) is divided equally unless a prenuptial agreement states otherwise |
| Alberta | Matrimonial property is divided equitably (which usually means equally) |
| Quebec | Family patrimony includes the home — divided equally |
Key point: Even if only one spouse is on the title, the other has rights to the matrimonial home under family law. A divorce court can order the home to be sold, or order one spouse to buy out the other.
For common-law couples
Common-law property rights vary significantly by province:
| Province | Common-Law Property Rights |
|---|---|
| Ontario | No automatic property division rights. Property belongs to whoever is on the title. Must claim unjust enrichment in court |
| British Columbia | After 2 years of cohabitation, common-law partners have the same property division rights as married couples |
| Alberta | No automatic rights. Must apply to court under the Adult Interdependent Partner legislation |
| Saskatchewan | After 2 years of cohabitation, property division rights similar to married couples |
| Manitoba | After 3 years (or 1 year with a child), common-law partners have property division rights |
Common-law couples should have a cohabitation agreement that specifies how the property will be divided if the relationship ends.
Mortgage obligations after separation
| Scenario | What Happens to the Mortgage |
|---|---|
| One partner buys out the other | The buying partner refinances in their name only. Must qualify independently |
| Property is sold | Mortgage is paid off from sale proceeds. Remaining equity is divided |
| Neither can refinance or agree to sell | Court may order a sale. Both remain liable for payments in the meantime |
| One partner stops paying | The other is still responsible for full payment. Non-payment damages both credit scores |
| Separation agreement | Can specify who pays the mortgage and who gets the property — but does not release the other from lender liability |
Critical distinction: agreement vs lender liability
A separation agreement or divorce order can specify that one partner takes over the mortgage. However, the lender is not bound by your separation agreement. Until the mortgage is formally refinanced in one person’s name, both co-borrowers remain liable. If the person who agreed to pay stops paying, the lender will pursue both of you.
Buying out a partner after separation
The process
- Get an appraisal — Determine current fair market value
- Calculate equity — Market value minus mortgage balance = total equity
- Determine buyout amount — Departing partner’s share of equity (usually 50% for married couples)
- Refinance — Remaining partner refinances the mortgage in their name only, often increasing the mortgage amount to fund the buyout
- Transfer title — Departing partner is removed from title. A separation agreement typically waives land transfer tax on matrimonial home transfers
- Release from mortgage — New mortgage replaces the old one, formally releasing the departing partner
Buyout example: $800,000 home, $500,000 mortgage
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Appraised value | $800,000 |
| Mortgage balance | $500,000 |
| Total equity | $300,000 |
| Departing partner’s share (50%) | $150,000 |
| New mortgage needed | $650,000 ($500K existing + $150K buyout) |
| Remaining partner must qualify for | $650,000 on their income alone |
The biggest challenge is often that the remaining partner cannot qualify for the larger mortgage alone.
The bottom line
A joint mortgage doubles your borrowing power but also doubles your liability. The mortgage and the title are separate — understand who is on each and why. For couples, joint tenancy with right of survivorship is the standard approach. If the relationship ends, the mortgage does not care about your separation agreement — both borrowers remain liable until the mortgage is formally refinanced. Plan for the worst case: common-law couples need a cohabitation agreement, and all couples should understand their buyout options before they are needed.