Reverse mortgages get oversold and overhated in equal measure. Here's the honest version I give clients: it is a real tool for the right situation — usually a 70+ homeowner who is house-rich and cash-poor, with a clear plan to age in place. It is not a magic solution, and the compounding cost is real. The page below explains how the product works, when it makes sense, and the questions I make every family answer before we proceed.
Leah's take, from the press
I told the Toronto Sun in February 2026 that homeowners 55+ need to be prepared as mortgage options narrow. A reverse mortgage is one option in that landscape — not the first one I recommend, but not the last one either. Whether it's the right fit depends on your timeline, your alternatives, and what your kids and family expect. Those are conversations we have before any application.
How a reverse mortgage works
Unlike a traditional mortgage (where you borrow money and repay over time), a reverse mortgage lets you borrow against your home equity with no regular payments required. The loan, including accrued interest, is repaid when you sell the home, move out permanently, or the last borrower passes away.
Key features:
- Tax-free cash. The funds are a loan, not income, so they don't affect OAS, GIS, or any other government benefits.
- No monthly payments required. You can make payments if you want to reduce the interest accrual, but you're not required to.
- You still own your home. Title stays in your name. You can live there as long as you want.
- Up to 55% of home value. The maximum you can borrow depends on your age and location — older borrowers and premium locations get higher limits.
- Lump sum or regular payments. Take it all at once, or structure it as monthly income, or draw as needed.
Who offers reverse mortgages in Canada
There are three main providers:
- Home Equity Bank (CHIP Reverse Mortgage): The largest and most established. Available to homeowners 55+.
- Equitable Bank (Flex Reverse Mortgage): A newer entrant. Similar product, sometimes more competitive rates.
- Bloom Financial: Newest of the three. Independent, focused exclusively on reverse mortgages, and often competitive on terms for borrowers who don't quite fit the larger providers' boxes.
I work with all three and can compare options side-by-side for your specific situation.
When a reverse mortgage makes sense
- You want to stay in your home but need cash flow in retirement
- You want to supplement pension income without monthly payments
- You want to help a family member (grandchild's education, down payment gift)
- You have a specific one-time need (home modifications, healthcare, paying off a debt)
- You don't qualify for a traditional mortgage or HELOC due to income requirements
When it doesn't
- You plan to sell and move within a few years (the set-up costs aren't worth it for a short horizon)
- You have enough other retirement income to cover your needs
- Leaving a debt-free home to your heirs is a high priority (the balance owed grows over time)
- You could qualify for a regular mortgage or HELOC — those typically have lower rates
A common myth: the bank owns your home
Not true. With a reverse mortgage, you retain full ownership. The bank has a lien against the home (same as any mortgage), but title remains in your name. You decide when and how to sell, and any equity remaining after repayment goes to you or your estate.
The honest trade-off
Reverse mortgages carry higher interest rates than traditional mortgages — typically 1-3% above conventional rates. And because you're not making monthly payments, interest compounds over time. Over 15-20 years, the balance owed can grow substantially.
This isn't automatically bad — it just needs to match your situation. If staying in your home matters more than maximum inheritance for your heirs, a reverse mortgage can be exactly the right solution. If it's the opposite, there are usually better options.
Frequently Asked Questions
What happens to my heirs?
When you pass away (or the last borrower on title does), your heirs have options: pay off the balance from other assets and keep the home, sell the home and keep any equity remaining after repayment, or let the lender sell. They have up to 12 months to decide, and they're never personally liable for more than the home's value — even if the balance exceeds it.
Can I make payments if I want to?
Yes. Most reverse mortgages allow interest-only or principal payments with no penalty. Many clients choose to cover the interest so the balance doesn't grow, while still benefiting from the initial lump sum.
What if my home value drops?
You're protected by a "no negative equity guarantee" — built into every Canadian reverse mortgage. Even if the home's value drops below the loan balance, neither you nor your heirs ever owe more than the home is worth at sale.
Do I need to qualify with income?
Income requirements are minimal compared to traditional mortgages. The primary qualifying factors are age (55+), home location, and home value. That's why this product works for retirees on fixed income who wouldn't qualify for a standard refinance.
Should I talk to my family first?
I strongly recommend it. A reverse mortgage affects your estate, and having your adult children in the conversation avoids surprises later. Many of my reverse mortgage clients bring a family member to our initial call.
Let's talk through your situation
This is a decision worth a real conversation, ideally with the family member you trust most in the room. I'll walk you through the numbers for your specific home value and age, the alternatives I'd consider first, and the questions I'd want a parent of mine to ask. No pressure, no pitch.
These are educational estimates. Lender criteria, government program limits, insurance premiums, and qualifying rules all change. For an accurate quote for your situation,
start your application now and I'll come back to you with real numbers from real lenders within a business day.