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
| Year | Mortgage Arrears Rate (90+ days) | Context |
|---|---|---|
| 2005 | 0.28% | Pre-boom |
| 2008 | 0.38% | Global financial crisis (Canadian peak was mild) |
| 2010 | 0.42% | Lagged effect from 2008 + Alberta oil shock |
| 2015 | 0.28% | Low rates, strong recovery |
| 2019 | 0.24% | Stable economy |
| 2020 | 0.23% | COVID — low because of payment deferrals (masked real stress) |
| 2021 | 0.17% | Ultra-low rates, strong housing market |
| 2022 | 0.15% | Rate hikes beginning, stress not yet showing |
| 2023 | 0.16% | Beginning to tick up as variable-rate payments reset |
| 2024 | 0.18% | Modest increase as renewals hit higher rates |
| 2025 | 0.19% | 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
| Province | Arrears Rate (approx. 2025) | Trend | Key Factor |
|---|---|---|---|
| Saskatchewan | 0.52% | Elevated | Resource economy, agricultural volatility |
| Alberta | 0.38% | Elevated | Oil sector exposure, previous price corrections |
| Manitoba | 0.30% | Moderate | Mixed economy |
| Atlantic provinces | 0.25%–0.30% | Moderate | Lower incomes, but affordable housing |
| Quebec | 0.15% | Low | Affordable housing, stable employment |
| Ontario | 0.13% | Low | Strong employment, high home equity |
| British Columbia | 0.11% | Very low | High home equity, strong market |
Why some provinces have higher arrears
| Factor | High-Arrears Provinces (SK, AB) | Low-Arrears Provinces (ON, BC, QC) |
|---|---|---|
| Economy | Resource-dependent, cyclical | Diversified, service-sector |
| Home prices | More affordable → lower equity cushion per dollar | Higher prices → more equity buffer |
| Employment | Volatile (oil, mining, agriculture) | More stable (government, tech, finance) |
| Migration | Outmigration during downturns | Net immigration |
| Equity position | Modest appreciation in some periods | Strong long-term appreciation |
Canada vs international default rates
| Country | Mortgage Arrears Rate | Context |
|---|---|---|
| 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
| Factor | Explanation |
|---|---|
| Stress test | Borrowers qualify at rate + 2% — built-in buffer for rate increases |
| Full recourse mortgages | In most provinces, you can’t walk away without personal liability |
| Mortgage insurance | High-ratio mortgages are insured (CMHC/Sagen/Canada Guaranty) — insurer absorbs losses |
| Conservative underwriting | Income verification required, GDS/TDS limits enforced |
| Social norms | Canadian borrowers prioritize mortgage payments over other debts |
| Lender flexibility | Banks offer deferrals and modifications before pursuing default |
| Government support | EI, tax credits, and recession-era programs provide income bridges |
What drives mortgage defaults
Primary causes of individual default
| Cause | Frequency | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Job loss | #1 | Loss of primary income source |
| Relationship breakdown | #2 | Divorce/separation — one income can’t support the mortgage |
| Illness/disability | #3 | Unable to work, often combined with medical expenses |
| Rate shock at renewal | Rising | 2020–2021 borrowers now renewing at much higher rates |
| Over-leveraging | Moderate | Borrowing maximum without adequate buffer |
| Business failure | Moderate | Self-employed borrowers whose business collapses |
Systemic factors that increase defaults
| Factor | How It Increases Defaults |
|---|---|
| Recession | Widespread job losses → more borrowers can’t pay |
| Rapid rate increases | Variable holders see immediate payment increases; renewers face shock |
| Home price decline | Reduces equity → “strategic default” incentive in non-recourse scenarios (rare in Canada) |
| Regional economic shock | Oil crash (Alberta 2014–2016), plant closures, industry disruption |
| Overleveraged investor exits | Investors with multiple properties sell or default when cash flow turns negative |
The default timeline: what happens step by step
Typical default progression
| Day | Event | Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Day 1 | You miss a mortgage payment | Late fee charged (typically 3%–5% of payment) |
| Day 15–30 | Lender contacts you | Reminder call/letter, asks to arrange payment |
| Day 30 | Missed 1 full payment | Credit score impact begins (~50–100 point drop) |
| Day 60 | Missed 2 payments | Lender escalates contact, offers hardship options |
| Day 90 | Missed 3 payments — officially in arrears | Lender may issue formal demand letter |
| Day 90–120 | Demand letter / notice of default | You have a set period to cure the default (pay arrears) |
| Day 120–180 | Power of sale / foreclosure proceedings begin | Legal process starts |
| Day 180–365 | Property sold or court order obtained | Timeline varies significantly by province |
| Post-sale | Deficiency balance (if any) | You may owe the difference if sale doesn’t cover the mortgage |
Options before you lose your home
| Option | How It Works | When to Use |
|---|---|---|
| Payment deferral | Pause payments for 1–6 months; interest accrues | Temporary hardship (job loss, medical) |
| Extended amortization | Stretch remaining payments over longer period | Permanent income reduction |
| Interest-only payments | Pay only interest for a set period | Short-term cash flow crunch |
| Mortgage modification | Renegotiate rate, term, or balance | Lender agrees to restructure |
| Sell the property | Sell before lender initiates proceedings | If you can’t sustain payments long-term |
| Refinance | Pay off current mortgage with new one | If equity exists and you can qualify |
| Consumer proposal | Negotiate with creditors to reduce total debt | Severe financial distress (affects credit for 3+ years) |
| Bankruptcy | Last resort — debts discharged but significant consequences | Extreme situations only |
Power of sale vs foreclosure by province
| Province | Default Process | Court Required? | Typical Timeline | Deficiency Judgment? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ontario | Power of sale | No (contractual right) | 60–90 days after default notice | Yes — borrower liable for shortfall |
| British Columbia | Foreclosure (court order) | Yes | 6–12 months | Yes |
| Alberta | Foreclosure (court order) | Yes | 6–12 months | Yes (but exceptions for insured mortgages) |
| Quebec | Exercise of hypothecary rights | Court required | 60+ days after notice | Depends on remedy chosen |
| Saskatchewan | Foreclosure | Yes | 6–12 months | Yes |
| Manitoba | Power of sale or foreclosure | Depends on lender | 4–12 months | Yes |
| Nova Scotia | Power of sale or foreclosure | Depends on lender | 3–12 months | Yes |
| New Brunswick | Power of sale | No | 60–90 days after notice | Yes |
| Newfoundland | Foreclosure | Yes | 6–12 months | Yes |
| PEI | Power of sale or foreclosure | Depends | 3–12 months | Yes |
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.
| Situation | Example |
|---|---|
| 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
| Event | Credit Impact | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1 missed payment (30 days) | −50 to −100 points | Stays on report for 6 years |
| 2 missed payments (60 days) | −75 to −150 points | 6 years |
| 3+ missed payments (90+ days) | −100 to −200 points | 6 years |
| Power of sale / foreclosure | Devastating — score drops to 400–500 range | 6–7 years on report |
| Consumer proposal | Major negative — R7 rating | 3 years after completion (or 6 years from filing) |
| Bankruptcy | Most severe — R9 rating | 6–7 years after discharge (14 years for second bankruptcy) |
Rebuilding after default
| Timeline | What You Can Do |
|---|---|
| Immediately | Open a secured credit card, pay all bills on time |
| 1–2 years | Qualify for secured lending, gradual score improvement |
| 2–3 years | May qualify for B-lender mortgage (higher rate) |
| 3–5 years | May qualify for A-lender mortgage with strong recent history |
| 6–7 years | Default 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:
| Party | Role in Default |
|---|---|
| Lender | Initiates power of sale/foreclosure, sells property |
| Insurer | Reimburses lender for any loss (sale proceeds minus mortgage balance minus costs) |
| Borrower | May 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 Factor | Concern Level | Details |
|---|---|---|
| Renewal wall | High | $450B+ in mortgages renewing at rates 2–3% higher than origination |
| Persistent inflation | Moderate | If BoC can’t cut as fast as expected, payment shock worsens |
| Trade disruption | Moderate | Tariff-related job losses in export sectors |
| Overleveraged investors | Moderate | Multi-property investors with negative cash flow |
| Construction industry slowdown | Moderate | Reduced housing starts → construction job losses |
The bottom line
- Canada’s default rate is very low — ~0.20%, among the lowest globally
- The stress test is working — it built a buffer that has protected most borrowers
- Full recourse means you can’t walk away — defaulting has serious financial consequences
- Provincial rules differ — power of sale (Ontario) is faster than foreclosure (Alberta, BC)
- Contact your lender early — options exist but only if you communicate before it’s too late
- The renewal wall is the near-term risk — 2026 is the peak renewal year for ultra-low-rate mortgages