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Should You Borrow for Your Down Payment? Rules and Risks in Canada

Updated

Saving a down payment is the biggest hurdle for most Canadian home buyers. When savings fall short, borrowing for a down payment may seem like an obvious solution. But the rules around borrowed down payments can significantly affect — or even derail — your mortgage approval.

Here’s what you need to know.


Can you legally borrow for a down payment?

Yes, there is no law preventing you from borrowing for a down payment. However:

  1. You must disclose it — Failing to disclose borrowed funds is mortgage fraud
  2. The loan payments count as debt — They increase your TDS ratio and reduce your qualifying amount
  3. Lenders verify the source — They check your bank statements for the origin of your down payment funds

How borrowed down payments affect qualification

When you borrow for your down payment, the lender adds the loan payments to your debt obligations:

Borrowed AmountMonthly Payment (LOC at 7%)Impact on Qualifying Amount
$25,000~$750 (3% of balance)Reduces by ~$30,000–$35,000
$50,000~$1,500Reduces by ~$60,000–$70,000
$75,000~$2,250Reduces by ~$90,000–$105,000

Lenders use 3% of the outstanding balance as the assumed monthly payment for revolving credit.

The catch: Borrowing $50,000 for a down payment reduces your qualifying mortgage by roughly $60,000–$70,000. You may end up in a worse position than saving a smaller down payment from your own funds.


Down payment sources ranked

Best sources (no impact on debt ratios)

SourceAmount AvailableRepayment Required?Counts as Debt?
Personal savingsUnlimitedNoNo
FHSAUp to $40,000NoNo
RRSP Home Buyers’ PlanUp to $60,000/personYes (over 15 years), but not counted as debtNo
Gift from immediate familyUnlimitedNo (with gift letter)No
Sale of existing propertyVariesNoNo
InheritanceVariesNoNo

Acceptable but risky sources (affects debt ratios)

SourceImpact on Qualification
Line of credit3% of balance added to monthly debt
Personal loanFull monthly payment added to debt
Credit card cash advance3% of balance + high interest rate
Loan from employerMonthly payment added to debt

Not acceptable

SourceWhy
Undisclosed loansMortgage fraud
Cash with no paper trailCannot verify source
Proceeds of crimeObvious

The FHSA + HBP strategy

The best way to “borrow” for a down payment without affecting your qualification is to use registered accounts:

StrategyMaximum Down PaymentTax BenefitCounts as Debt?
FHSA only$40,000Tax-deductible contributionsNo
HBP only$60,000 per person ($120,000 couple)Tax-free withdrawal (repay over 15 years)No
FHSA + HBP combined$100,000 per person ($200,000 couple)Both tax-advantagedNo

A couple could access up to $200,000 in down payment funds through these programs without any impact on their debt ratios.

FHSA CalculatorHome Buyers’ Plan Calculator


Gift down payments

Gifted funds are one of the most common down payment sources and have no negative impact on your mortgage qualification.

Requirements for a gift letter

The donor must provide a signed letter stating:

ElementDetails
Donor’s name and relationshipMust be immediate family (parent, sibling, grandparent)
Amount of giftSpecific dollar amount
No repayment expectedExplicitly stated
Signed and datedBy the donor
Donor’s contact informationLender may verify

Some lenders also require:

  • Proof the donor has the funds (bank statement)
  • Confirmation the funds have been transferred to the buyer’s account

Who can gift?

RelationshipAccepted by Most Lenders?
ParentsYes
GrandparentsYes
SiblingsYes
Aunt/uncleSome lenders
FriendsRarely accepted
EmployerMay be treated as a loan

When borrowing makes sense

Despite the drawbacks, there are limited situations where borrowing can work:

1. Bridging a small gap

If you need $5,000–$10,000 more to reach the 20% threshold (avoiding CMHC insurance), borrowing a small amount may save you more in insurance premiums than it costs in interest.

Example:

ScenarioCost
19% down → CMHC premium (2.8%)$11,200 on a $500K mortgage
Borrow $5,000 to reach 20% → no CMHC premium$5,000 + ~$350 interest
Net savings~$5,850

2. Using a secured line of credit at low rates

If you have a HELOC at a low rate and the payments don’t push your TDS over 44%, borrowing from your existing home equity can work.

3. Short-term bridge financing

If you’re selling a property and closing dates don’t align, a bridge loan covers the gap temporarily. Lenders treat this differently from a permanent loan.


What NOT to do

Bad StrategyWhy It’s Dangerous
Borrow without disclosingMortgage fraud — lenders verify bank deposits
Use credit card cash advancesInterest rates of 20%+ make this extremely expensive
Borrow from private lenderHigh interest, potential legal complications
Accept a “loan disguised as a gift”If the lender discovers it, your application is denied
Deplete your emergency fundHomeownership comes with unexpected costs

Alternative strategies

If you can’t reach your down payment goal:

StrategyDetails
Wait and saveEven 6–12 months of focused saving can close the gap
Buy a less expensive propertyReduces the required down payment
Buy with a partnerCombine two people’s savings and income
Look at shared equity programsSome programs provide part of the down payment in exchange for shared appreciation
Consider a different market$50,000 down goes much further in Calgary than Toronto

Down Payment Calculator


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