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How OSFI Capital Requirements Affect Your Mortgage Rate in Canada (2026)

Updated

When economists and mortgage analysts discuss why mortgage rates in Canada are what they are, they typically focus on the Bank of Canada overnight rate, bond yields, and inflation. But there is another powerful force shaping your mortgage rate that few borrowers know about: OSFI’s capital requirements for banks.

OSFI (Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions) regulates how much capital Canadian banks must hold against their loan portfolios. These rules directly affect the cost of mortgage lending and, by extension, the rates you pay.

How Capital Requirements Work

The Basic Concept

Banks do not lend entirely from deposits. They operate with a layer of equity capital that absorbs losses if borrowers default. Regulators require banks to maintain minimum capital ratios to ensure stability.

ConceptExplanation
CapitalThe bank’s own equity — shareholder equity, retained earnings, and other qualifying instruments
Risk-weighted assetsEach asset on the bank’s balance sheet is assigned a “risk weight” based on how risky it is
Capital ratioCapital ÷ Risk-weighted assets — must exceed minimum thresholds
Minimum CET1 ratio4.5% Common Equity Tier 1 (international Basel III standard)
With buffersCanadian D-SIBs must hold CET1 of approximately 11%–12% including all buffers

Why It Matters for Your Mortgage

Every mortgage a bank issues consumes capital. The more capital required per dollar of mortgage, the higher the internal cost of that mortgage — and the higher the rate the bank needs to charge to earn an acceptable return.

If OSFI requires…Then banks…And borrowers see…
More capital per mortgageHave higher cost of lendingSlightly higher mortgage rates
Less capital per mortgageHave lower cost of lendingSlightly lower mortgage rates or more competitive pricing
Higher risk weights on certain mortgagesAllocate more capital to those loansHigher rates on those specific products

OSFI’s Key Capital Tools

1. Domestic Stability Buffer (DSB)

The DSB is OSFI’s primary macro-prudential tool for managing systemic risk.

FeatureDetails
What it isAn additional capital reserve above minimum requirements
Who it applies toCanada’s 6 Domestic Systemically Important Banks (D-SIBs): RBC, TD, BMO, Scotiabank, CIBC, National Bank
Range0% – 4% of risk-weighted assets
Current level (2026)3.5% (as of last OSFI review)
How often adjustedSemi-annually (June and December)
PurposeBuild reserves during good times to absorb losses during downturns

DSB History

DateDSB LevelContext
June 20181.75%Initial implementation
June 20192.25%Increased as housing risks grew
March 20201.00%Cut during COVID-19 to free lending capacity
December 20212.50%Raised as economy recovered
December 20223.00%Rising housing market risks
June 20233.50%Further increase amid rate volatility
2024–20263.50%Held steady

When OSFI raised the DSB from 1.00% to 3.50% between 2020 and 2023, it required the Big 6 banks to hold approximately $35 billion more in combined capital. That capital has an opportunity cost — it could otherwise be deployed for lending or returned to shareholders — which contributes to the banks’ cost of each mortgage dollar lent.

2. Mortgage Risk Weights

Under OSFI’s capital framework (aligned with Basel III), each mortgage is assigned a risk weight that determines how much capital the bank must hold against it.

Mortgage TypeApproximate Risk WeightCapital Required (per $100K)Relative Cost
Insured mortgage (CMHC/Sagen/CG)0%*~$0Lowest
Uninsured, LTV ≤ 65%25%–35%~$2,750–$3,850Low
Uninsured, LTV 65%–75%35%–45%~$3,850–$4,950Moderate
Uninsured, LTV 75%–80%45%–55%~$4,950–$5,500Higher
HELOC50%–65%~$5,500–$7,150Higher
Non-conforming/B-lendingHigherVariesHighest

*Insured mortgages carry a 0% risk weight because the government-backed insurer (CMHC, Sagen, Canada Guaranty) covers the default risk. This is why insured mortgages often get lower rates than uninsured — they cost the bank nothing in capital.

Why Insured Rates Are Lower Than Uninsured

FactorInsured MortgageUninsured Mortgage
Risk weight0%25%–55%
Capital cost to bank~$0 per $100K$2,750–$5,500 per $100K
Default risk to bankZero (insurer pays)Bank absorbs loss
Typical rate advantage5–15 bps lower

This capital cost difference is a key reason why borrowers who put down 20%+ (uninsured) sometimes pay slightly higher rates than those putting down less than 20% (insured), even though the insured borrower has less equity in the home. The insurance premium, paid by the borrower, makes the loan risk-free for the bank.

For more on this, see: Insured vs Uninsured Mortgage.

3. B-20 Guideline (Underwriting Standards)

While B-20 is primarily about qualification standards rather than capital, it works alongside capital rules to shape the mortgage market.

B-20 ComponentRequirement
Stress testQualify at contract rate + 2% or 5.25% floor
LTV limitsMaximum 80% LTV for uninsured mortgages
Income verificationReasonable efforts to verify borrower income
Risk managementBanks must have sound mortgage underwriting policies
Applies toAll federally regulated financial institutions

For the stress test specifically, see: Mortgage Stress Test Canada 2026.

How OSFI Decisions Translate Into Your Rate

The Transmission Chain

StepWhat Happens
1. OSFI sets capital requirementsDSB level, risk weights, and qualification rules
2. Banks calculate capital costHow much equity must be allocated per mortgage dollar
3. Banks factor in funding costsBond market rates, deposit rates, wholesale funding
4. Banks add profit marginTarget return on equity and competitive positioning
5. Result: your mortgage rateThe rate offered to you reflects all of the above

Estimated Rate Impact of Capital Requirements

OSFI ActionEstimated Rate ImpactDirection
DSB increase of 0.50%+2–5 basis pointsHigher rates
DSB decrease of 0.50%−2–5 basis pointsLower rates
Risk weight increase on uninsured mortgages+5–15 bps on affected productsHigher rates for uninsured
Shift from standardized to advanced risk modelsVaries by bank; can reduce or increaseBank-specific

These are small numbers individually, but they compound. The cumulative impact of tighter post-2008 capital rules is estimated at 15–30 basis points on uninsured mortgage rates compared to what they would be under pre-crisis capital standards.

Recent and Upcoming OSFI Changes

Recent Changes (2024–2025)

ChangeDateImpact
Stress test removed for uninsured switchesNovember 2024Improved competition at renewal; more borrower mobility
DSB held at 3.50%2024–2025 reviewsCapital costs stable
Revised residential mortgage risk-weight frameworkPhased implementationAligns with Basel III final standards

For the stress test change specifically, see: Stress Test Changes for Switches and Transfers.

Potential Future Changes

Potential ChangeLikelihoodImpact
DSB reduction if economy weakensModerateWould free bank capital; could lead to slightly lower rates
DSB increase if housing bubble concerns growLow (currently)Would further tighten bank lending capacity
HELOC risk-weight changesPossibleCould affect HELOC pricing and availability
Climate risk integrationIn progressProperties in flood/fire zones may eventually face higher risk weights

What This Means for Borrowers

Why You Should Care

You cannot negotiate OSFI capital rules. But understanding them helps you:

InsightPractical Application
Insured mortgages are cheaper for banksIf you are putting down just over 20%, consider whether insured (less than 20% down + insurance) might get you a better rate
Different products have different costsHELOCs carry higher risk weights than conventional mortgages — this is one reason HELOC rates are higher
Bank vs non-bank lendersNon-bank lenders (monoline, credit unions, MICs) face different capital rules than Big 6 banks — this creates pricing differences
Rate changes are not always about BoCWhen rates move without a BoC change, OSFI capital adjustments or bank funding costs may be the driver

Comparing Lenders Under Capital Rules

Lender TypeOSFI Regulated?Capital RulesTypical Rate Advantage
Big 6 banksYes (D-SIBs)Strictest — DSB + full OSFI frameworkCompetitive on insured; slightly higher on uninsured
Smaller banksYes (not D-SIBs)OSFI regulated but no DSB requirementSometimes slightly lower
Credit unionsNo (provincially regulated)Provincial capital rules (often similar)Can be competitive; more flexible
Monoline lendersSome — depends on structureMay securitize through CMHC NHA MBSOften lowest rates on insured mortgages
B-lenders and MICsLimited OSFI oversightLess capital-constrained but higher riskHigher rates but more accessible qualification

For a full comparison, see: Types of Mortgage Lenders in Canada.

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