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What Happens When You Miss a Mortgage Payment in Canada

Updated

Missing a mortgage payment is more common than most people think — and while it is serious, it is not the end. This guide provides an exact timeline of what happens at each stage, what your lender does, how your credit is affected, and what you can do to recover.

The complete timeline

Day 1–15: Grace period

Most mortgage lenders provide a grace period of 10–15 days after your payment due date before imposing consequences.

What HappensImpact
Payment bounces or is not made on due dateNo immediate penalty during grace period
Lender’s system flags the missed paymentInternal tracking begins
No credit bureau reporting yetYour credit score is unaffected
Your move: Make the payment ASAPPaying within the grace period often avoids all consequences

Day 16–30: Late payment

What HappensImpact
Late fee charged ($25–$75, varies by lender)Added to your next payment or mortgage balance
Lender contacts you (phone or letter)Routine collection — not yet escalated
Payment is now past the grace periodMay be reported to credit bureaus as “late”
Credit impact: R2 rating (30 days late)Score drops 50–80 points
Your move: Pay immediately and call lender to explainMost lenders will note the account with an explanation

Day 31–60: One month in arrears

What HappensImpact
Second month payment also dueYou now owe 2 months of payments
Lender’s collection department contacts youMore persistent outreach — calls, letters
Credit report shows 30-day delinquencyVisible to all creditors running credit checks
Credit impact: Score has dropped 60–100+ pointsAffects ability to get new credit, refinance, or qualify for other loans
Your move: Contact lender to negotiate — partial payments, deferral, repayment planCommunication is critical at this stage

Day 61–90: Two months in arrears

What HappensImpact
Third month payment is also dueArrears are compounding (you may owe 3 payments)
Lender refers to loss mitigation or special accountsInternal escalation — more senior staff involved
Demand letter may be sentFormal request to cure the default
Credit impact: R3 rating (60+ days late), score drops 100–150+ pointsSevere credit damage
Your move: Propose a concrete plan — B-lender refinance, asset sale, repayment scheduleShow the lender you have a path forward

Day 91–120: Three months in arrears (acceleration clause)

What HappensImpact
Lender may invoke the acceleration clauseEntire mortgage balance becomes due immediately
Legal department or external lawyers engagedForeclosure/power of sale process preparation begins
Formal demand letter sent (registered mail)Specifies amount owed and deadline to cure
Credit impact: R4–R5 rating, score severely damagedFuture mortgage approval will be very difficult for years
Your move: Consult a mortgage broker and lawyer immediatelyB-lender or private refinance may still be possible if you have equity

The process diverges by province at this stage:

Ontario — Power of Sale:

StepTimeline
Notice of sale served under mortgage termsDay 120+
35-day redemption periodYou can pay full arrears + costs to stop the process
If not redeemed, lender lists property for saleLender must get fair market value
Sale closes, lender recovers debtAny surplus goes to you; shortfall may be pursued

British Columbia — Judicial Foreclosure:

StepTimeline
Lender files foreclosure petition in BC Supreme CourtDay 120+
Court grants Order Nisi (conditional foreclosure)Sets a redemption period (usually 2–6 months)
If not redeemed, court grants Order AbsoluteTitle transfers to lender
Or court orders sale under conduct of lenderProperty listed, court supervised

Alberta — Judicial Foreclosure:

StepTimeline
Lender files Statement of ClaimDay 120+
Court hearing for Order for Sale or Order for ForeclosureSeveral months
Redemption period (typically 1–6 months)You can pay full amount to stop process
If not redeemed, property is sold or title transfers to lenderCourt supervised

Day 180+ — Property sale

What HappensImpact
Property sold by lender or through courtUsually at or below market value
Mortgage debt, arrears, legal costs, and real estate costs deducted from sale proceedsLender recovers all costs first
Any surplus paid to youYou keep equity above what is owed
Any shortfall — lender may pursue deficiency judgmentYou could owe money even after losing the house (province-dependent)
Credit impact: R8–R9 rating (power of sale or foreclosure)Remains on credit file for 6–7 years

Credit score impact summary

StageCredit RatingEstimated Score ImpactHow Long on File
30 days lateR2–50 to –80 points6–7 years
60 days lateR3–80 to –120 points6–7 years
90 days lateR4–100 to –150 points6–7 years
120+ days / demand letterR5–150 to –200+ points6–7 years
Power of saleR8–200+ points6–7 years
ForeclosureR9Maximum negative impact6–7 years

The worst part: Mortgage delinquencies are weighted more heavily than credit card or loan late payments because mortgages are secured by your home.

What to do at each stage

If you are about to miss your first payment

ActionWhy It Matters
Call your lender immediatelyLenders offer more options to proactive borrowers
Request a payment deferralSkip 1–6 months; deferred amounts added to balance
Ask about interest-only paymentsReduces payment by 40–60% temporarily
Review if you have mortgage insurance (job loss coverage)Some creditor insurance policies cover unemployment
Tap savings (TFSA first, then RRSP)TFSA withdrawals are tax-free; RRSP is a last resort

If you have missed 1–2 payments

ActionWhy It Matters
Negotiate a repayment planSpread arrears over 6–12 months on top of regular payments
Contact a mortgage brokerStart exploring B-lender or private refinance options
Calculate your equityHigh equity (35%+ LTV) gives you refinancing options
Consider renting a roomMonthly income to help cover shortfall
Do NOT take on payday loans or high-interest creditCreates a worse problem

If you have missed 3+ payments

ActionWhy It Matters
Hire a real estate lawyerUnderstand your rights and the timeline in your province
Explore private mortgage refinancePrivate lenders lend based on equity, not income
Consider selling voluntarilyYou get market value vs power-of-sale discount
File a consumer proposal (if total debts warrant it)Triggers stay of proceedings; can stabilize your finances
Do NOT vacate the propertyStay in the home and maintain it — vacant properties lose value

Recovering from missed payments

After you catch up on payments

Recovery StepTimeline
Make 12 consecutive on-time paymentsStart rebuilding payment history
Credit score begins recovering6–12 months of consistent payments
May qualify for A-lender refinance12–24 months after last late payment
Late payment falls off credit file6–7 years from date of delinquency
Full credit recovery2–5 years with consistent positive credit behavior

Refinancing after missed payments

Time Since Last Late PaymentLikely Lender OptionsExpected Rate Premium
Currently in arrearsPrivate lender only+5–10% above prime
0–12 months cleanB-lender+1.5–3% above prime
12–24 months cleanSome A-lenders (with explanation)+0.5–1% above prime
24+ months cleanMost A-lendersStandard rates possible

Insurance that can help

CoverageWhat It CoversCostLimitation
Mortgage creditor insurance (job loss)Payments for 6–12 months if involuntarily unemployed$30–$80/month per $100KMust be purchased before job loss; often has 30-day waiting period
Disability insurance (own-occupation)Income replacement if you cannot work due to disability$50–$150/monthDoes not cover job loss; covers health-related inability to work
Critical illness insuranceLump sum payment upon diagnosisVariesCovers cancer, heart attack, stroke — not job loss

Important: Mortgage creditor insurance (sold by lenders at closing) has been widely criticized for high cost, limited coverage, and declining benefits. An independent disability or life insurance policy is usually better value.

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