Skip to main content

40-Year Mortgage in Canada: What You Need to Know (2026)

Updated

A 40-year mortgage is the longest amortization period available from Canadian lenders and carries the lowest monthly payment of any standard mortgage term. The trade-off is significantly more interest paid over the life of the loan. Because mortgage insurers (CMHC, Sagen, Canada Guaranty) do not cover amortizations this long, a 40-year mortgage is only available as an uninsured product — requiring at least 20% down.

Monthly Payment Comparison

The appeal of a 40-year amortization is the lower monthly payment. Here is how it compares to shorter amortizations on a $600,000 mortgage at 5%:

AmortizationMonthly PaymentTotal InterestExtra Interest vs 25-Year
25 years$3,486~$517,000
30 years$3,156~$596,000+$79,000
35 years$2,962~$658,000+$141,000
40 years$2,831~$708,000+$191,000

The 40-year option saves $655/month versus a 25-year mortgage — but at a cost of $191,000 in additional interest over the full amortization.

Who Offers 40-Year Mortgages in Canada?

The major Schedule A banks (RBC, TD, Scotiabank, BMO, CIBC) generally max out at 30-year amortizations. For 40-year terms, you typically need to work with:

  • B-lenders (alternative lenders): Equitable Bank, Home Trust, Bridgewater Bank
  • Credit unions: Some provincial credit unions offer up to 40-year amortizations
  • Private lenders: Available but at significantly higher interest rates
  • Monoline lenders via mortgage brokers: Some offer extended amortizations for qualified borrowers

A mortgage broker can source options across lenders and identify who is currently offering 40-year terms given that product availability changes with market conditions.

Requirements for a 40-Year Mortgage

Minimum 20% down payment: Since CMHC insurance is not available on amortizations beyond 25 years (or 30 for new construction), borrowers need at least 20% down to access a 40-year term.

Stress test: All federally regulated lenders must stress test borrowers at the greater of their contract rate plus 2% or the Bank of Canada benchmark rate. A 40-year amortization lowers your payment but does not change the stress test rate — you still need to qualify at a higher rate than your actual mortgage rate.

Credit and income requirements: B-lenders typically have more flexible credit score minimums (580–620 vs 680+ for A-lenders), but the trade-off is a higher interest rate — often 0.5–2% above prime lender rates.

How Equity Builds More Slowly

A key downside of a 40-year mortgage is slow equity accumulation in the early years. With a 40-year amortization, a much larger portion of each payment goes to interest rather than principal.

YearEquity Built (25-yr, $600K at 5%)Equity Built (40-yr, $600K at 5%)
After 1 year~$9,000~$5,300
After 5 years~$46,000~$28,000
After 10 years~$99,000~$63,000

Slower equity growth means:

  • Less equity available for a HELOC or refinancing
  • A higher loan-to-value ratio if property values fall
  • Less financial cushion if you need to sell

When a 40-Year Amortization Makes Sense

Qualifying in a high-cost market: In markets like Toronto or Vancouver, extending amortization can make the difference between qualifying and not. Use our mortgage affordability calculator to compare scenarios.

Cash flow management: Self-employed borrowers or those with irregular income sometimes prefer lower mandatory payments, using surplus income for prepayments.

Investment strategy: Some borrowers use the savings to invest elsewhere — though this requires discipline and assumes investment returns that exceed the mortgage rate after tax.

Prepayments: The Most Important Tool

The real power of a 40-year mortgage is the built-in flexibility. Most Canadian mortgages allow prepayments of 15–20% of the original mortgage balance annually, without penalty. Making regular prepayments dramatically shortens the effective amortization.

Extra Monthly PaymentEffective Years SavedInterest Saved
$250/month~5 years~$55,000
$500/month~9 years~$95,000
$1,000/month~14 years~$150,000

(Estimates for $600,000 at 5%, 40-year amortization.)

40-Year Mortgage vs 35-Year Mortgage

The difference between 35 and 40 years is less dramatic than the jump from 25 to 35 years:

Feature35-Year40-Year
Monthly payment (at 5%, $600K)$2,962$2,831
Monthly savings vs 35-year~$131
Additional interest vs 35-year~$50,000
Lender availabilityBetterMore limited

For many borrowers, the 35-year option is a better balance of payment reduction and interest cost — while being more widely available. See our 35-year mortgage guide for a full comparison.

Key Takeaways

  • 40-year mortgages require 20% down (uninsured) and are offered by B-lenders and some credit unions
  • Monthly payments are the lowest available but total interest is the highest
  • Equity builds slowly — a significant risk if property values decline
  • The mortgage stress test applies at the standard qualifying rate regardless of amortization length
  • Most effective when paired with aggressive prepayments to reduce the effective term

Related: 35-Year Mortgage in Canada · 30-Year Mortgage Guide · Mortgage Types in Canada · Alternative Mortgages