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Options for Financing Home Renovations in Canada

Updated

Home renovations range from a $15,000 kitchen refresh to a $200,000 full-home renovation. The right financing option depends on how much you need, how much equity you have, and whether you are buying or already own your home. Here is every option compared.

Quick comparison: all financing options

OptionTypical RateBest ForMaximum AmountSecured?
HELOCPrime + 0.50–1.00%Ongoing access, flexible drawsUp to 65% LTV (combined max 80%)Yes (home)
Mortgage refinance4.50–6.50%Large, one-time renovationUp to 80% LTVYes (home)
Purchase Plus ImprovementsYour mortgage rateBuying a home that needs workUp to improved home valueYes (home)
Second mortgage6.50–12%Don’t want to break first mortgageUp to 80% LTV (combined)Yes (home)
Personal loan7–13%No equity, smaller reno ($10K–$50K)$50,000 (typical max)No
Personal line of credit8–12%Flexible smaller amounts$25,000–$50,000No
Credit card19–29%Very small expenses (under $5K)Credit limitNo
0% retailer financing0% for 6–24 monthsSpecific purchases (appliances, flooring)Purchase amountVaries
Government grants0% (free)Energy-efficient upgrades$5,000–$7,500No

Option 1: HELOC (Home Equity Line of Credit)

A HELOC lets you borrow against your home equity as needed, up to 65% of your home’s value (or 80% combined with your mortgage).

ProsCons
Lowest rate among revolving optionsVariable rate — payments fluctuate
Draw only what you need, when you need itInterest-only minimum payments can be a trap
Reusable — repay and borrow againRequires sufficient home equity
No prepayment penaltyMust qualify based on income
Interest may be tax-deductible if used for investment propertySecured by your home — risk of loss if you default

Best for: Homeowners with significant equity who want flexible access to renovation funds over time. Ideal for phased renovations where the total budget may change.

Example: Home value $700,000, mortgage balance $350,000. Available HELOC: up to $105,000 (65% of value minus mortgage = $455K – $350K = $105K).

Option 2: Mortgage refinance

Break your current mortgage and take out a new, larger one. The difference is your renovation budget.

ProsCons
Lowest fixed rate for large amountsPrepayment penalty if mid-term (can be $5,000–$25,000+)
Fixed payment schedule — predictable budgetingLegal fees ($800–$1,500) and appraisal ($300–$500)
Amortized over 25+ years — lower monthly impactExtends your mortgage, increasing total interest
One simple payment (mortgage + renovation combined)Maximum 80% LTV — need 20% equity after borrowing

Best for: Large renovations ($50K+) where you want a fixed rate and know the total cost. Also ideal if you are near the end of your current term (minimal penalty).

Example: Home value $600,000, current mortgage $300,000. Maximum refinance: $480,000 (80% LTV). Available for renovation: up to $180,000 minus penalty and fees.

For the full refinance process, see our refinancing guide.

Option 3: Purchase Plus Improvements (CMHC)

If you are buying a home that needs renovations, this program lets you include renovation costs in your insured mortgage.

Detail
Available throughCMHC, Sagepoint (formerly Genworth), Canada Guaranty
Maximum renovation amountLesser of: renovation cost or 10–20% of the as-improved home value (depending on insurer)
How it worksLender holds back the renovation funds. You complete work, get inspected, funds are released to contractors.
ProsFinance renovations at your mortgage rate (lowest possible), no separate loan needed
ConsMust complete renovations within a set period (typically 90–120 days), inspections required, limited to certain renovation types

Best for: First-time buyers purchasing a home that needs work — especially in competitive markets where move-in-ready homes are priced higher.

Option 4: Second mortgage

A separate loan registered behind your first mortgage. Allows you to access equity without breaking your first mortgage.

ProsCons
No penalty on your first mortgageHigher interest rate (6.50–12%)
Access equity for renovationsAdditional monthly payment
Shorter terms available (1–3 years)Lender fees may apply (1–2% of loan amount)
Available from B-lenders and private lendersCombined LTV still capped at 80% (A-lenders)

Best for: Homeowners mid-term in a low-rate first mortgage who do not want to pay a large prepayment penalty. The higher second mortgage rate on a smaller amount may cost less than the penalty to refinance the entire balance.

Option 5: Personal loan or line of credit

Unsecured borrowing — no home equity required.

Personal LoanPersonal Line of Credit
Rate7–13% (fixed)8–12% (variable)
AmountUp to $50,000Up to $50,000
Term1–7 yearsRevolving
PaymentsFixed monthlyInterest-only minimum
Best forKnown renovation cost, want fixed paymentsFlexible, phased spending
ApprovalBased on income and credit scoreBased on income and credit score

Best for: Homeowners without sufficient equity, or renters renovating a property. Also for smaller renovations ($10K–$35K) where setting up a HELOC is not worth the cost.

Option 6: Government grants and tax credits

Free money exists — but it is targeted at specific renovation types:

ProgramAmountEligible Renovations
Multigenerational Home Renovation Tax CreditUp to $7,500 (15% of $50,000)Adding a secondary suite for a senior or disabled family member
Canada Greener Homes Grant (closed, successor expected)Up to $5,000Insulation, windows, heat pumps, solar panels
Provincial energy rebates (vary by province)$1,000–$10,000Heat pumps, insulation, EV chargers, water heaters
Home Accessibility Tax CreditUp to $1,500 (15% of $10,000)Modifications for seniors or disabled individuals (ramps, grab bars, walk-in tubs)
Medical Expense Tax CreditVariesRenovations required for medical reasons

Check your province: Most provinces offer energy efficiency rebates that stack with federal programs. Search “[your province] home energy rebate” for current programs.

Decision framework: which option to choose

Your SituationBest Option
Buying a fixer-upperPurchase Plus Improvements
Large reno ($50K+), lots of equity, at or near maturityRefinance
Large reno, mid-term in a good rateHELOC or second mortgage
Phased renovation, budget may changeHELOC
Small reno ($10K–$30K), limited equityPersonal loan
Energy-efficient upgradesApply for grants first, then HELOC for the remainder
Adding a suite for aging parentsMultigenerational tax credit + HELOC or refinance

How to calculate the true cost of renovation financing

StepWhat to Calculate
1Total renovation cost (get 3 contractor quotes)
2Financing cost: interest over repayment period + fees + penalties
3Value added: expected increase in home value from the renovation
4Net cost: financing cost minus value added
5Monthly payment impact: can you afford the additional payment?

Rule of thumb: Kitchen and bathroom renovations typically return 75–100% of their cost in added home value. Structural improvements and additions return 50–75%. Cosmetic-only upgrades return less.

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