Getting a Mortgage with Commission Income in Canada
Updated
Commission income is common in Canada — real estate agents, car salespeople, financial advisors, insurance brokers, pharmaceutical reps, and many technology sales professionals earn a significant portion of their income through commissions. Getting a mortgage when your income varies month to month requires understanding how lenders calculate and verify commission earnings.
How lenders classify commission income
Commission Type
How Lenders View It
Documentation
Base salary + commission
Base is guaranteed; commission is variable income
T4, pay stubs (base + commission breakdown), employer letter
100% commission (employee)
Fully variable; higher risk to lenders
T4, 2-year history, employer letter, T2200
100% commission (self-employed)
Self-employed income; different qualification rules
NOAs, T1 generals, 2-year business history
Draw against commission
Treated as commission, not salary — draws are advances, not guaranteed pay
T4, pay stubs, employer letter clarifying draw structure
Key distinction: An employee earning commission (T4 income) is treated differently than a self-employed commission earner (T1 business income). The employee route is simpler and qualifies more easily.
How lenders calculate commission income
The 2-year averaging method
Most lenders use this formula:
Qualifying income = Lower of (2-year average) or (most recent year)
Year
Commission Earned
2024
$85,000
2025
$95,000
2-year average
$90,000
Used for qualification
$90,000 (average, since most recent year is higher)
If income is declining:
Year
Commission Earned
2024
$95,000
2025
$75,000
2-year average
$85,000
Used for qualification
$75,000 (most recent year, since it is lower)
Declining income triggers caution. Lenders want to see stable or growing commission earnings.
Base + commission calculation
Component
Amount
How It Is Used
Base salary
$55,000/yr
Counted at 100%
Commission (2-year avg)
$65,000/yr
Counted at 50–100% depending on lender
Qualifying income (conservative lender, 50%)
$55,000 + $32,500 = $87,500
Qualifying income (generous lender, 100%)
$55,000 + $65,000 = $120,000
The difference between a lender counting 50% vs 100% of your commission is massive — $32,500 more qualifying income in this example, which translates to roughly $70,000–$80,000 more mortgage.
Lender comparison — how they treat commission
Lender
Commission Treatment
Notes
TD Bank
100% of 2-year average (employee)
One of the most commission-friendly; requires 2-year history
CIBC
80–100% of 2-year average
Flexible; strong for sales professionals
RBC
50–100% depending on structure
More conservative with 100% commission earners
BMO
2-year average; may discount variable portion
Middle of the road
Scotiabank
2-year average; 50–100%
Varies by branch/underwriter
National Bank
2-year average at 100% (employee)
Good for Quebec-based commission earners
Credit unions
Varies widely
Some are very flexible; worth exploring
B-lenders
More flexible averaging
Use stated income if commission is hard to document
Can state $140,000–$150,000 with bank statement support
Mortgage difference
~$165,000 more with a B-lender stated income program
Example 3: New commission earner (less than 2 years)
Factor
Details
Started commission job
14 months ago
YTD commission (annualized)
$70,000
A-lender
Declines — requires 2 full years
B-lender
May consider 1 year of T4 history + employer letter
Strategy
Wait 10 months for 2-year history OR use B-lender now and refinance later
Strategies to maximize qualifying income
Strategy
How It Helps
Time your application
Apply after your best commission year, when the 2-year average is highest
Get the right employer letter
Ensure it states your commission structure clearly and confirms ongoing employment
Use a mortgage broker
Brokers know which lenders are most commission-friendly — this is critical
Minimize other debts
Pay down car loans, LOCs, and credit cards to improve your TDS ratio
Consider co-borrower
A spouse with stable T4 income strengthens the application
Choose the right lender
The difference between 50% and 100% commission counting can be $100,000+ in purchasing power
Build a 2-year track record
If you recently switched to commission, wait for 2 full years if possible
Keep T4s clean
Avoid excessive T2200 deductions that reduce your T4 income below what lenders need
Commission income and the stress test
All commission income is subject to the mortgage stress test at the qualifying rate (contract rate + 2% or 5.25%, whichever is higher). The stress test applies to the commission portion the same way it applies to base salary.
Qualifying Income
Mortgage at 5.25% Stress Test
Mortgage at 7.25% Stress Test
$80,000
~$370,000
~$300,000
$100,000
~$465,000
~$375,000
$120,000
~$555,000
~$450,000
$150,000
~$695,000
~$565,000
Approximate — assumes 25-year amortization, GDS 39%, no other debts, property tax and heating estimated
Common challenges and solutions
Challenge
Solution
Less than 2 years of commission history
Use a B-lender until you have 2 years; or combine with a co-borrower who has stable income
Commission income is declining
Lenders use the lower year — consider waiting for a stronger year or use stated income via B-lender
Employer will not provide a detailed letter
Work with HR to get the minimum: position, compensation structure, start date, ongoing status
Self-employed and income is hard to prove
Use a B-lender stated income program with bank statements and accountant letter
High gross commission but high expenses
A-lenders use net income; B-lenders can state gross with reasonable expense deductions
Seasonal commission (bunched earnings)
Annual T4 matters more than monthly fluctuations; ensure 2-year consistency