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Mortgage Defaults and Foreclosures in Canada: Rates, Trends, and What Happens

Updated

Canada has one of the lowest mortgage default rates in the developed world. But low default rates can create a false sense of security — understanding what drives defaults, where they happen, and what the consequences are can help you prepare for worst-case scenarios.

Current mortgage arrears rates

National data

YearMortgage Arrears Rate (90+ days)Context
20050.28%Pre-boom
20080.38%Global financial crisis (Canadian peak was mild)
20100.42%Lagged effect from 2008 + Alberta oil shock
20150.28%Low rates, strong recovery
20190.24%Stable economy
20200.23%COVID — low because of payment deferrals (masked real stress)
20210.17%Ultra-low rates, strong housing market
20220.15%Rate hikes beginning, stress not yet showing
20230.16%Beginning to tick up as variable-rate payments reset
20240.18%Modest increase as renewals hit higher rates
20250.19%Renewal wall building
2026 (est.)0.20%–0.25%Peak renewal year — expected modest increase

Sources: Canadian Bankers Association, CMHC. Arrears = 3+ months behind on payments.

Provincial arrears rates

ProvinceArrears Rate (approx. 2025)TrendKey Factor
Saskatchewan0.52%ElevatedResource economy, agricultural volatility
Alberta0.38%ElevatedOil sector exposure, previous price corrections
Manitoba0.30%ModerateMixed economy
Atlantic provinces0.25%–0.30%ModerateLower incomes, but affordable housing
Quebec0.15%LowAffordable housing, stable employment
Ontario0.13%LowStrong employment, high home equity
British Columbia0.11%Very lowHigh home equity, strong market

Why some provinces have higher arrears

FactorHigh-Arrears Provinces (SK, AB)Low-Arrears Provinces (ON, BC, QC)
EconomyResource-dependent, cyclicalDiversified, service-sector
Home pricesMore affordable → lower equity cushion per dollarHigher prices → more equity buffer
EmploymentVolatile (oil, mining, agriculture)More stable (government, tech, finance)
MigrationOutmigration during downturnsNet immigration
Equity positionModest appreciation in some periodsStrong long-term appreciation

Canada vs international default rates

CountryMortgage Arrears RateContext
Canada~0.20%Stress test, full recourse, conservative lending
United States~1.5%–2.0%Peaked at 11% in 2010; non-recourse in many states
United Kingdom~0.8%–1.0%Higher but declining
Australia~1.0%–1.5%Rising with rate increases
Ireland~3%–4% (declining from 12%+ post-2008)Severe post-crisis legacy

Why Canada’s rate is so low

FactorExplanation
Stress testBorrowers qualify at rate + 2% — built-in buffer for rate increases
Full recourse mortgagesIn most provinces, you can’t walk away without personal liability
Mortgage insuranceHigh-ratio mortgages are insured (CMHC/Sagen/Canada Guaranty) — insurer absorbs losses
Conservative underwritingIncome verification required, GDS/TDS limits enforced
Social normsCanadian borrowers prioritize mortgage payments over other debts
Lender flexibilityBanks offer deferrals and modifications before pursuing default
Government supportEI, tax credits, and recession-era programs provide income bridges

What drives mortgage defaults

Primary causes of individual default

CauseFrequencyDescription
Job loss#1Loss of primary income source
Relationship breakdown#2Divorce/separation — one income can’t support the mortgage
Illness/disability#3Unable to work, often combined with medical expenses
Rate shock at renewalRising2020–2021 borrowers now renewing at much higher rates
Over-leveragingModerateBorrowing maximum without adequate buffer
Business failureModerateSelf-employed borrowers whose business collapses

Systemic factors that increase defaults

FactorHow It Increases Defaults
RecessionWidespread job losses → more borrowers can’t pay
Rapid rate increasesVariable holders see immediate payment increases; renewers face shock
Home price declineReduces equity → “strategic default” incentive in non-recourse scenarios (rare in Canada)
Regional economic shockOil crash (Alberta 2014–2016), plant closures, industry disruption
Overleveraged investor exitsInvestors with multiple properties sell or default when cash flow turns negative

The default timeline: what happens step by step

Typical default progression

DayEventImpact
Day 1You miss a mortgage paymentLate fee charged (typically 3%–5% of payment)
Day 15–30Lender contacts youReminder call/letter, asks to arrange payment
Day 30Missed 1 full paymentCredit score impact begins (~50–100 point drop)
Day 60Missed 2 paymentsLender escalates contact, offers hardship options
Day 90Missed 3 payments — officially in arrearsLender may issue formal demand letter
Day 90–120Demand letter / notice of defaultYou have a set period to cure the default (pay arrears)
Day 120–180Power of sale / foreclosure proceedings beginLegal process starts
Day 180–365Property sold or court order obtainedTimeline varies significantly by province
Post-saleDeficiency balance (if any)You may owe the difference if sale doesn’t cover the mortgage

Options before you lose your home

OptionHow It WorksWhen to Use
Payment deferralPause payments for 1–6 months; interest accruesTemporary hardship (job loss, medical)
Extended amortizationStretch remaining payments over longer periodPermanent income reduction
Interest-only paymentsPay only interest for a set periodShort-term cash flow crunch
Mortgage modificationRenegotiate rate, term, or balanceLender agrees to restructure
Sell the propertySell before lender initiates proceedingsIf you can’t sustain payments long-term
RefinancePay off current mortgage with new oneIf equity exists and you can qualify
Consumer proposalNegotiate with creditors to reduce total debtSevere financial distress (affects credit for 3+ years)
BankruptcyLast resort — debts discharged but significant consequencesExtreme situations only

Power of sale vs foreclosure by province

ProvinceDefault ProcessCourt Required?Typical TimelineDeficiency Judgment?
OntarioPower of saleNo (contractual right)60–90 days after default noticeYes — borrower liable for shortfall
British ColumbiaForeclosure (court order)Yes6–12 monthsYes
AlbertaForeclosure (court order)Yes6–12 monthsYes (but exceptions for insured mortgages)
QuebecExercise of hypothecary rightsCourt required60+ days after noticeDepends on remedy chosen
SaskatchewanForeclosureYes6–12 monthsYes
ManitobaPower of sale or foreclosureDepends on lender4–12 monthsYes
Nova ScotiaPower of sale or foreclosureDepends on lender3–12 monthsYes
New BrunswickPower of saleNo60–90 days after noticeYes
NewfoundlandForeclosureYes6–12 monthsYes
PEIPower of sale or foreclosureDepends3–12 monthsYes

Full recourse: you can’t just walk away

In virtually all Canadian provinces, mortgages are full recourse — meaning if your home sells for less than your mortgage balance, you still owe the difference. This is fundamentally different from many US states where borrowers can surrender the keys and walk away.

SituationExample
Mortgage balance at default$400,000
Home sold via power of sale$360,000
Deficiency$40,000
Legal and selling costs$15,000
Total you owe after losing your home$55,000

The lender can pursue you for this amount through the courts. This is why Canadian borrowers fight much harder to avoid default than borrowers in non-recourse US states.

What happens to your credit after default

EventCredit ImpactDuration
1 missed payment (30 days)−50 to −100 pointsStays on report for 6 years
2 missed payments (60 days)−75 to −150 points6 years
3+ missed payments (90+ days)−100 to −200 points6 years
Power of sale / foreclosureDevastating — score drops to 400–500 range6–7 years on report
Consumer proposalMajor negative — R7 rating3 years after completion (or 6 years from filing)
BankruptcyMost severe — R9 rating6–7 years after discharge (14 years for second bankruptcy)

Rebuilding after default

TimelineWhat You Can Do
ImmediatelyOpen a secured credit card, pay all bills on time
1–2 yearsQualify for secured lending, gradual score improvement
2–3 yearsMay qualify for B-lender mortgage (higher rate)
3–5 yearsMay qualify for A-lender mortgage with strong recent history
6–7 yearsDefault falls off credit report — fresh start if you’ve rebuilt

Mortgage insurance and defaults

When an insured mortgage defaults, the mortgage insurer (CMHC, Sagen, or Canada Guaranty) covers the lender’s losses:

PartyRole in Default
LenderInitiates power of sale/foreclosure, sells property
InsurerReimburses lender for any loss (sale proceeds minus mortgage balance minus costs)
BorrowerMay still owe deficiency to insurer (insurer can pursue you for it)

This is why CMHC and private insurers are so strict about qualification requirements — they bear the financial risk of default.

Emerging risks for 2026–2027

Risk FactorConcern LevelDetails
Renewal wallHigh$450B+ in mortgages renewing at rates 2–3% higher than origination
Persistent inflationModerateIf BoC can’t cut as fast as expected, payment shock worsens
Trade disruptionModerateTariff-related job losses in export sectors
Overleveraged investorsModerateMulti-property investors with negative cash flow
Construction industry slowdownModerateReduced housing starts → construction job losses

The bottom line

  1. Canada’s default rate is very low — ~0.20%, among the lowest globally
  2. The stress test is working — it built a buffer that has protected most borrowers
  3. Full recourse means you can’t walk away — defaulting has serious financial consequences
  4. Provincial rules differ — power of sale (Ontario) is faster than foreclosure (Alberta, BC)
  5. Contact your lender early — options exist but only if you communicate before it’s too late
  6. The renewal wall is the near-term risk — 2026 is the peak renewal year for ultra-low-rate mortgages

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