# Mortgage Readiness After Credit Repair in Canada: 2026 Complete Guide > A step-by-step guide for Canadians with damaged credit who want to qualify for a mortgage. Covers minimum credit score requirements (680+ for A-lenders, 600+ for B-lenders), discharge and completion waiting periods after bankruptcy and consumer proposals, how the federal mortgage stress test affects borrowers using B-lenders, practical credit rebuilding strategies, and key differences between Equifax and TransUnion reporting in Canada. Whether you're 6 months or 3 years out from a credit event, this guide gives you a clear timeline and the highest-impact actions to reach mortgage approval. Category: Qualification Last verified: 2026-04-14 Source: https://ratellow.com/guides/credit-repair-mortgage-readiness ## TL;DR - A-lenders require 680+ credit scores; B-lenders accept 600–679 at rates typically 1.5–3% above prime; private lenders work below 600 at 8–12%. - After bankruptcy discharge: 2 years minimum for A-lenders, 1 year for B-lenders. After consumer proposal completion: 2 years for A-lenders, 1 year for B-lenders — completion date is what lenders count from, not the filing date. - The stress test applies to B-lender mortgages too — at a 7.5% contract rate, you must qualify at 9.5%, which can reduce your maximum purchase price by $40,000–$60,000 on a typical mortgage. - A secured credit card used at 20–30% utilization with full monthly payoff is the fastest single credit rebuilder — payment history is 35% of your score. - Equifax and TransUnion can report different scores for the same borrower — ask your broker which bureau your target lender pulls, and check both reports for errors. - Paying old collections can paradoxically hurt your score by resetting the reporting clock — negotiate 'pay for delete' in writing before making any payment. ## Mortgage Readiness After Credit Repair in Canada: 2026 Complete Guide A less-than-perfect credit history doesn't permanently disqualify you from homeownership. Canadian mortgage lenders have clear, tiered thresholds for credit scores — and there are proven strategies to rebuild your credit over 12–24 months. Understanding the exact timelines, the score benchmarks by lender type, and how the federal stress test applies to higher B-lender rates will put you on the shortest path to mortgage approval. Canada's two major credit bureaus — Equifax and TransUnion (TU) — can report your history differently, which means your score may vary by bureau and by lender. Knowing how the system works is your first advantage. - **Know the Real Score Thresholds by Lender Tier** A-lenders (Canada's Big 5 banks and major credit unions) typically require a **680+ credit score** for their best rates. B-lenders (alternative lenders and monoline lenders) accept **600–679** but charge higher rates — often 1.5–3% above prime. Private lenders work below 600 but at significantly higher costs (typically **8–12% interest**). Canada's two credit bureaus — **Equifax** and **TransUnion** — may report different scores for the same borrower, and lenders often pull from one or both. Ask your broker which bureau your target lender uses. *How this helps you:* Set a realistic target score based on the lender tier you're aiming for, and know which bureau to prioritize. - **Bankruptcy & Consumer Proposal Waiting Periods** After a **discharged bankruptcy**: A-lenders typically require **2 years post-discharge**; B-lenders typically require **1 year post-discharge**. After a **completed consumer proposal**: A-lenders generally require **2 years from completion**; B-lenders typically require **1 year from completion**. Note that consumer proposal timelines differ from bankruptcy — the proposal completion date (not the filing date) is what lenders count from. Both events require re-established credit with **2+ active accounts open for 12+ months**. *How this helps you:* Knowing the exact waiting period by lender tier lets you set a precise homebuying target date. - **The Stress Test Hits Harder at B-Lender Rates** All federally regulated mortgages in Canada require borrowers to qualify under the **mortgage stress test** — you must prove you can afford payments at either your contract rate **plus 2%**, or **5.25%**, whichever is higher. For B-lender borrowers already paying elevated rates (e.g., 7.5%), the qualifying rate becomes **9.5%** — significantly reducing how much home you can afford. Example: On a $400,000 mortgage, qualifying at 9.5% instead of 7.5% can reduce your maximum purchase price by **$40,000–$60,000**. This makes credit repair — and moving to an A-lender — a financially meaningful goal, not just a preference. *How this helps you:* Understand why improving your score before applying can directly increase your buying power. - **The Fastest Credit Rebuilding Tactics** Three tools move the needle fastest: (1) **Secured credit cards** — deposit-backed cards that build payment history from day one; use at **20–30% of your limit** and pay in full monthly. (2) **Becoming an authorized user** on a family member's account with a strong history. (3) **Credit builder loans** from credit unions — small installment loans designed specifically to establish credit history. Payment history accounts for **35% of your credit score** — a single missed payment can set you back 6–12 months. Check both your Equifax and TransUnion reports for errors, as discrepancies between bureaus are common and correctable. *How this helps you:* Focus on high-impact actions instead of credit repair myths. - **Collections and Judgments: Strategy Matters** Paid collections remain on your credit report for **6 years from the date of last activity** in most provinces. Unpaid collections are a deal-breaker for A-lenders and most B-lenders. However, paying an old collection can **temporarily lower your score** by resetting the 'last activity' date — restarting the 6-year reporting clock. Where possible, negotiate a **'pay for delete'** agreement in writing before making any payment. Note that Equifax and TransUnion may handle collection reporting differently, so check both bureaus before acting. *How this helps you:* Strategy matters — don't pay old collections without understanding the full impact on your timeline. ## Strategy & FAQ Tiered lender qualification benchmarks, discharge and completion waiting periods for bankruptcy and consumer proposals, stress test impact calculations for B-lender rate scenarios, and credit rebuilding sequencing for mortgage-readiness coaching. Includes Equifax vs. TransUnion reporting context relevant to Canadian bureau pulls. ### What are the exact credit score requirements by lender tier? - A-lenders (Big 5 banks, credit unions): 680+ Beacon score for prime rates; 720+ for best available rates. - B-lenders (alternative lenders like Home Trust, Equitable Bank): 600-679 with compensating factors (strong income, larger down payment). - Private lenders: No minimum score but require significant equity (typically 25-35% down) and charge 8-12% interest rates plus lender fees of 1-3%. - CMHC-insured mortgages: Require minimum 600 from at least one bureau. ### What is the exact timeline after bankruptcy or consumer proposal? Discharged bankruptcy: A-lenders typically require 2+ years post-discharge with 2 re-established credit accounts active for 12+ months. B-lenders typically require 1 year post-discharge; some may consider earlier but 1 year is standard. Consumer proposal: A-lenders typically require 2 years post-completion; some lenders may consider during active proposal but this is not common. B-lenders typically require 1 year post-completion. Second bankruptcy: minimum 5+ years, often private-only for first 2-3 years. ### Which credit rebuilding actions have the highest impact? Ranked by impact: (1) Payment history — 35% of score, never miss any payment, set up auto-pay. (2) Credit utilization — 30% of score, keep balances below 30% of limits. (3) Credit history length — 15%, keep oldest accounts open. (4) Credit mix — 10%, have both revolving (credit card) and installment (loan) accounts. (5) New inquiries — 10%, minimize applications. A secured credit card with $1,000-2,000 limit used at 20-30% utilization with full monthly payoff is the single fastest rebuilder. ### How long do negative items stay on a Canadian credit report? Varies by province: Late payments: 6 years from date of last activity. Collections: 6 years from date of last activity (some provinces may vary but 6 years is standard). Bankruptcy (first): 6-7 years from discharge. Consumer proposal: 1 year for B-lenders, 2 years for A-lenders. Judgments: 6 years. Credit counselling: 2-3 years after completion. Note: Equifax and TransUnion may have slightly different retention periods. ## Sources - FCAC Consumer Credit Protection — https://www.canada.ca/en/financial-consumer-agency/services/industry/laws-regulations/guideline-existing-mortgage-loans-exceptional-circumstances.html#toc1 - CMHC Credit Score Requirements — https://assets.cmhc-schl.gc.ca/sf/project/cmhc/pdfs/factsheets/new/cmhc-quick-reference.pdf