Debt consolidation mortgage help in Toronto and Ontario
Rolling high-interest debt into your mortgage can be the single most impactful financial move you make, or a way to push the problem six years out. Here's how I tell the difference.
If you own a home and you're carrying credit card balances at 19%, lines of credit at 11%, and a car loan at 8%, debt consolidation through your mortgage is often the single most powerful tool available to you. But it only works if you also fix what created the debt in the first place. I run the numbers honestly with every client, including the version where consolidation buys time without solving the problem.
I told the Toronto Star last year that roughly half of mortgage holders haven't yet faced the renewal-rate shock. That's the exact moment the credit-card balances start growing. If that's you, consolidation isn't a last resort. It's a strategic move you make before the renewal forces a worse one.
Why it works so well
The math is simple. Credit cards charge 19-22%. Personal loans run 8-15%. Unsecured lines of credit are typically 8-12%. Mortgages are around 4-6%. When you consolidate high-interest debt into your mortgage, every dollar of that debt immediately starts costing a fraction of what it used to, and your total monthly payment usually drops significantly too.
Sarah owns a home worth $750,000 with a $350,000 mortgage. She also has $35,000 in credit card debt at 19.99%, $15,000 on a line of credit at 11%, and a $12,000 car loan at 8%. She's making $1,850/month in minimum debt payments beyond her mortgage and barely touching the principal.
We refinance to $412,000 (60% LTV), roll the $62,000 in debt in, and her new mortgage payment covers everything. She saves about $1,100 per month and tens of thousands in interest over time.
What can we roll into the mortgage?
Almost any unsecured or higher-rate debt is fair game:
The honest trade-off
Consolidating $60,000 of credit card debt into a 25-year mortgage means you'll be paying it off over 25 years at a low rate, versus 3-7 years at a high rate. The monthly payment drops dramatically, but if you only make the minimum, the total interest paid over time could be more.
The fix: use the monthly savings to make prepayments against the principal. Most mortgages allow 15-20% prepayments per year penalty-free. That's how you get both the relief AND the savings.
A warning about the behavior loop
Consolidation only works if the credit cards stay paid off. Otherwise you end up with a fresh round of credit card debt AND a bigger mortgage. I always talk with clients about the spending patterns that created the debt in the first place, and what needs to change to avoid a repeat. This isn't financial advice, but as your broker, I'd rather flag it up front than watch you end up right back here in three years.
Your credit, your equity, your income mix, your goals: no two consolidations look the same. The fastest way to know what's possible for yours is a 15-minute call. I'll walk you through what your numbers actually allow, no commitment, no pressure.
Frequently Asked Questions
Will consolidating hurt my credit score?
Can I consolidate if my credit is bad?
Can I consolidate CRA debt?
What if I'm in active collections?
Get a clear picture of your options
Send me your debt list (balances and rates) and your current mortgage details. I'll show you the consolidation math, the alternatives if it doesn't work, and the honest assessment of whether refinancing solves the problem or postpones it.
My office is in North York, and most of my closest local work is across the north GTA. I also work with clients across Toronto, Ontario, and the other provinces where I'm licensed. See the areas served page for the full service-area map.
Simplify your debt honestly
Confidential. No judgment. Real numbers, including the ones you might not want to hear.