With 5% down, you pay more monthly but start building equity 85K sooner.
Should You Get a High-Ratio Mortgage?
Consider High-Ratio If:
Housing prices are rising
Rent is comparable to ownership costs
Your income will increase
You want to stop renting sooner
Consider Waiting for 20% If:
You can save quickly
Housing prices are flat/falling
You want lower monthly payments
You prefer 30-year amortization
CMHC insurance premiums table (2026)
Down payment
LTV ratio
CMHC premium (% of loan)
5%
95%
4.00%
10%
90%
3.10%
15%
85%
2.80%
20%
80%
0% (no insurance required)
Example: Purchase price $650,000, 10% down ($65,000). Insured loan = $585,000 × 3.10% = $18,135 CMHC premium, added to the mortgage (total mortgage = $603,135). This is also subject to provincial sales tax on the premium in Ontario and Quebec at closing.
High-ratio mortgage limits (2026)
Maximum purchase price: $1,499,999 (homes $1.5M+ require 20% down — no CMHC insurance available)
Maximum amortization with CMHC insurance: 30 years (for first-time buyers and new-build purchases); 25 years for all other insured mortgages
Minimum credit score: 680 for most insured mortgage lenders
Property types: Owner-occupied; rental properties with 2–4 units (owner must live in one)
Frequently asked questions
Is CMHC insurance the same as mortgage protection insurance?
No — these are completely different products. CMHC default insurance protects the lender if you default on your mortgage. You pay the premium, but the benefit goes to the lender. Mortgage protection insurance (offered by banks and insurers) protects you (or your estate) — it pays off your mortgage if you die or become disabled. The latter is optional; CMHC insurance is mandatory for high-ratio mortgages.
Can I avoid CMHC insurance by splitting my mortgage?
Some lenders previously offered “cashback” mortgages or second mortgage structures to boost down payments above 20%. OSFI regulations now prevent lenders from using borrowed funds to meet the 20% threshold. Your down payment must come from your own savings, RRSP HBP, FHSA, or a gift from an immediate family member.
Does CMHC insurance apply in all provinces?
CMHC provides the coverage, but Sagen and Canada Guaranty are two private alternatives that offer equivalent coverage. The premiums are identical across providers. In Saskatchewan and Manitoba, CMHC insures both buyer and lender sides; in other provinces, only the lender side is insured. All three providers are approved by the federal government.