
Your Home Is Worth a Lot of Money. Did You Know You Can Use It Without Selling It?
Let me paint you a picture.
You've owned your home for 25 or 30 years. You've made every payment, survived every interest rate spike, and watched your neighbourhood transform from modest to genuinely impressive. Your home is worth more than you ever imagined it would be when you signed that first mortgage.
And yet — like a lot of Canadians — you might be finding that the monthly cash flow isn't quite what you'd hoped retirement would look like.
You're not broke. Not even close. But a significant chunk of your wealth is locked inside four walls and a roof.
That's where a reverse mortgage comes in.
So What Exactly Is a Reverse Mortgage?
A reverse mortgage is a loan that lets you convert a portion of your home equity into tax-free cash — without selling your home, without making monthly payments, and without giving up ownership.
Read that again, because those three things tend to surprise people.
No selling. No monthly payments. You stay in your home.
The loan is repaid when you eventually sell the home, move out permanently, or pass away. Until then, the money is yours to use however you like — pay off debt, cover healthcare costs, help the grandkids with a down payment, or simply make retirement feel a little more like retirement.
Who Is This For?
In Canada, reverse mortgages are available to homeowners aged 55 and older. Both borrowers must be 55 if the home is owned jointly.
If you're younger than 55, there's still an option worth knowing about — a term mortgage product that works on a similar no-payment principle but operates quite differently. We'll cover that in a future post.
For most people reading this, the sweet spot looks something like this:
You own your home outright or have significant equity built up
You're 55 or older
Your retirement income covers the basics but doesn't leave much room to breathe
You'd rather stay in your home than downsize
If that sounds familiar, keep reading.
The Part Everyone Gets Wrong
The most common misconception about reverse mortgages — and it comes up constantly — is that the bank ends up owning your home.
It doesn't.
You remain on title. You retain full ownership. The lender simply registers a charge against the property, the same way a regular mortgage works. When the home is eventually sold, the loan is repaid from the proceeds. Whatever is left goes to you or your estate.
The second most common misconception is that you're stuck — that once you sign, you're locked in with no flexibility.
Also not true. Every reverse mortgage lender in Canada allows optional payments. You are never required to make a payment, but you always can. Every lender has their own rules about how that works, which is exactly why talking to a broker matters — but the flexibility exists.
How Much Can You Borrow?
This is where it gets interesting — and honestly, where most people are pleasantly surprised.
The amount you can borrow depends on five things: your age, your gender, your property type, your property location, and your property condition. The older you are, the more you can typically access — because the loan period is statistically shorter.
Most Canadians can access anywhere from around 20% to just over 50% of their home's value. On an $800,000 home, that's potentially $160,000 to $400,000 in tax-free cash.
And because the funds are a loan — not income — the CRA doesn't touch them. They also don't affect your Old Age Security or Guaranteed Income Supplement. That matters more than people realize.

Canada Has Four Reverse Mortgage Lenders. Most People Don't Know That.
Here's something that surprises almost everyone: Canada has only four lenders offering no-payment home equity products. Four. Between them they offer six distinct products — because one lender offers two reverse mortgage options, and one offers a term mortgage alternative with no age restriction.
Each lender has different rules, different qualifying criteria, and — this is the part that really matters — different terms when your mortgage comes up for renewal.
Some lenders always offer their best available rate at renewal. One locks your rate for life so it never changes. One — and this is the one nobody warns you about — resets your rate above what they'd offer a brand new customer.
Over a 10 to 15 year horizon, that difference can add up to tens of thousands of dollars.
This is why going directly to one lender without comparing all of them is a bit like buying the first car you test drive. Maybe it's the right one. But you'll never know if you don't look around.
So What's the Catch?
I promised plain English, so here it is.
The balance on a reverse mortgage grows over time. Because you're not making payments, interest compounds and adds to what you owe. When the home is eventually sold, the loan — including all that accumulated interest — is repaid first.
That means your estate inherits whatever is left, not the full value of the home.
For some families, that's a real consideration. For others, the quality of life improvement in the years between now and then is worth far more than the difference.
Neither answer is wrong. It depends entirely on your situation, your priorities, and what you want retirement to actually feel like.
What Should You Do Next?
If any of this resonated, the smartest next step isn't to call a lender. It's to talk to a broker.
A broker has access to all four lenders and all six products. They compare them objectively, explain the differences in plain language, and help you figure out which one actually fits your life. And because brokers are paid by the lender upon funding — not by you — the advice doesn't cost you a cent.
You can get a free personalized comparison at canadareversemortgageguide.ca — it takes about three minutes and shows you estimates from every lender side by side.
No obligation. No pressure. Just numbers.
[Start Your Free Comparison →]
The information in this post is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial or mortgage advice. Every situation is different. A licensed Canadian mortgage broker can help you understand which products are right for your specific circumstances.
