Getting a Mortgage with Disability Income in Canada
Updated
Disability income is legitimate qualifying income for a Canadian mortgage — but not all lenders treat it equally, and not all types of disability income are viewed the same way. This guide explains how each type of disability income is assessed, which lenders are most accommodating, and strategies to maximize your chances of approval.
Types of disability income and lender treatment
Income Source
Accepted by A-Lenders?
Gross-Up Allowed?
Max Amount (2026, approx.)
Key Requirement
CPP Disability (CPP-D)
Yes — widely
Yes (25–35%)
$1,606/mo
Proof of ongoing entitlement
Private LTD insurance
Yes — most lenders
Sometimes
Varies by policy (usually 60–70% of pre-disability income)
Proof benefits continue; policy details
Workplace insurance (WSIB/WCB)
Yes — most lenders
Sometimes
Varies by claim
Ongoing entitlement letter
ODSP (Ontario)
Some lenders
Possible
~$1,308/mo (single)
Entitlement letter; amount is very low
AISH (Alberta)
Some lenders
Possible
~$1,787/mo (single)
Entitlement letter
PWD (BC)
Some lenders
Possible
~$1,358/mo (single)
Entitlement letter
Other provincial disability
Varies
Varies
$900–$1,500/mo range
Province-specific documentation
Veterans Affairs disability pension
Yes — most lenders
Yes (25–35%)
Varies by assessment
VAC pension documentation
RDSP withdrawals
Rarely as primary income
No
Varies
Some lenders consider as supplementary
Gross-up — how it increases your qualifying income
Because many disability payments are non-taxable or taxed at reduced rates, lenders may “gross up” the income to its pre-tax equivalent. This increases your qualifying income.
Disability Income
Monthly Payment
Gross-Up (25%)
Qualifying Income Used
CPP-D
$1,606
+ $401
$2,008/mo
VAC pension
$2,000
+ $500
$2,500/mo
Private LTD (non-taxable)
$3,500
+ $875
$4,375/mo
ODSP
$1,308
+ $327
$1,635/mo
AISH
$1,787
+ $447
$2,234/mo
Note: Gross-up policies vary by lender. Not all lenders allow it, and some cap it at 25% while others allow 35%. A mortgage broker can identify which lenders offer the most favorable gross-up for your specific income type.
Qualification by disability income type
CPP Disability (CPP-D)
Factor
Details
Max benefit (2026)
~$1,606/mo ($19,272/yr)
Lender acceptance
Virtually all A-lenders and B-lenders
Gross-up
25–35% (most lenders)
Qualifying income after gross-up
~$2,008/mo ($24,096/yr)
Approximate max mortgage (on CPP-D alone)
$120,000–$150,000
Documentation
CPP-D benefit statement, NOA showing CPP-D income
Duration
Continues until age 65 (converts to CPP retirement) or recovery
Strategy: CPP-D alone limits you to a small mortgage. Combine with a co-borrower’s income, part-time employment income, or other income sources to increase purchasing power.
Most A-lenders accept if benefit is guaranteed to continue
Key concern
Lenders worry the benefit may end (review period, recovery, policy expiry)
Gross-up
Yes, for non-taxable employer-paid LTD; no gross-up if benefits are taxable
Documentation
Policy details, benefit statement, confirmation of ongoing entitlement
Taxability matters:
Who Pays the LTD Premium
Is the Benefit Taxable?
Gross-Up Available?
Employer pays premium
Yes — fully taxable
No (already calculated on gross)
You pay the premium
No — non-taxable
Yes (25–35%)
Shared premium
Partially taxable
Partial gross-up
Provincial disability programs
Program
Province
Max Monthly (Single, 2026 approx.)
Lender Acceptance
Max Mortgage (Alone)
ODSP
Ontario
$1,308
Some lenders
$85,000–$120,000
AISH
Alberta
$1,787
Some lenders
$110,000–$160,000
PWD
British Columbia
$1,358
Some lenders
$85,000–$130,000
SAP-D
Saskatchewan
$1,150
Limited
$70,000–$100,000
EIA-D
Manitoba
$1,100
Limited
$65,000–$95,000
Income Assistance-D
Nova Scotia
$950
Limited
$55,000–$85,000
Reality check: Provincial disability benefits on their own generally do not qualify for enough mortgage to buy a home in most markets. Additional income or a co-borrower is typically needed.
Veterans Affairs Canada (VAC) disability pension
Factor
Details
Lender acceptance
Good — most A-lenders accept
Gross-up
Yes (25–35%) — VAC disability pension is non-taxable
Combined with other income
Lenders often see VAC pension + employment or CPP
Documentation
VAC pension documentation, bank statements showing deposits
Lender comparison for disability income
Lender
CPP-D
Private LTD
ODSP/AISH
Gross-Up
Notes
TD Bank
✅
✅
Case by case
25%
Generally accommodating
RBC
✅
✅
Case by case
25%
Requires strong documentation
CIBC
✅
✅
Limited
25%
Good for combined-income applications
BMO
✅
✅
Case by case
25–35%
Varies by underwriter
Scotiabank
✅
✅
Limited
25%
Conservative on provincial programs
National Bank
✅
✅
Limited
25%
Quebec-focused
Credit unions
✅
✅
Often yes
25–35%
Local CUs may be most flexible
B-lenders
✅
✅
Generally yes
Varies
More flexible but higher rates
Strategies to qualify with disability income
Strategy 1: Combine income sources
Your Income
Co-Borrower Income
Combined
Approx. Max Mortgage
CPP-D ($1,606/mo)
Partner employment ($4,000/mo)
$5,606/mo
~$310,000
ODSP ($1,308/mo)
Partner employment ($3,500/mo)
$4,808/mo
~$260,000
Private LTD ($3,500/mo)
None
$3,500/mo (+ gross-up = $4,375)
~$230,000
CPP-D + part-time work ($1,606 + $1,200)
None
$2,806/mo (+ gross-up on CPP-D)
~$175,000
Strategy 2: Larger down payment
A larger down payment reduces the mortgage amount needed. If you have savings, RDSP accumulation, or family support:
Purchase Price
Down Payment
Mortgage Needed
Monthly Payment (5.5%, 25 yr)
$250,000
$50,000 (20%)
$200,000
$1,194
$250,000
$100,000 (40%)
$150,000
$896
$250,000
$150,000 (60%)
$100,000
$597
With a $100,000 down payment, you only need ~$96,000 in qualifying income (pre-gross-up) to afford the $896/mo payment — achievable with CPP-D alone (after gross-up).
Strategy 3: Affordable markets
Market
Typical Home Price
Mortgage Needed (20% down)
Monthly Payment
Small-town Ontario
$250,000–$400,000
$200,000–$320,000
$1,194–$1,911
Rural Quebec
$180,000–$300,000
$144,000–$240,000
$860–$1,433
Saskatchewan cities
$200,000–$350,000
$160,000–$280,000
$955–$1,672
Manitoba (Winnipeg)
$250,000–$400,000
$200,000–$320,000
$1,194–$1,911
New Brunswick
$180,000–$300,000
$144,000–$240,000
$860–$1,433
Nova Scotia (outside Halifax)
$200,000–$350,000
$160,000–$280,000
$955–$1,672
RDSP and homeownership
The Registered Disability Savings Plan (RDSP) interacts with homeownership in several ways:
Factor
Details
RDSP withdrawals as income
Most lenders do not count RDSP withdrawals as qualifying income — they are one-time, not guaranteed
RDSP for down payment
You can withdraw from your RDSP for a down payment, but there are clawback implications if government grants/bonds were received in the last 10 years
RDSP and ODSP/AISH
RDSP is generally exempt from provincial disability asset limits
RDSP and HBP
RDSP is separate from RRSP — you cannot use HBP with RDSP
Home as exempt asset
In most provinces, your primary residence is exempt from disability program asset limits
Provincial disability programs and homeownership rules
Province
Asset Exemption for Home
Impact
Ontario (ODSP)
Primary residence exempt
Home equity does not count against ODSP asset limit
Alberta (AISH)
Primary residence exempt
Same
BC (PWD)
Primary residence exempt
Same
Saskatchewan
Primary residence exempt
Same
Manitoba
Primary residence exempt
Same
Important: While the home itself is exempt, cash assets above provincial limits (typically $40,000 for ODSP, $100,000 for AISH) may affect your disability benefits. Plan your down payment and savings carefully with a financial advisor who understands disability program rules.