QualificationVerified 2026-04-20

Qualifying for a Mortgage After Bankruptcy Discharge in Canada

An absolute discharge from bankruptcy does not permanently bar mortgage access — it resets the clock on a structured re-entry timeline. B-lenders and private lenders will consider applications as early as 2 full years post-discharge with demonstrated re-established credit, while prime federally regulated lenders typically require 4-6 years of clean post-discharge history before underwriting at standard rates. The rate premium at each stage is material: expect 150-300 bps above prime-lender pricing in the B-lender window, narrowing as the discharge ages and credit depth grows.

Who this is for

Canadians who have received an absolute discharge from bankruptcy and are working toward homeownership or re-entry into the mortgage market, typically 1-6 years post-discharge with rebuilt but still bruised credit profiles.

Worked example
Assume a borrower received an absolute discharge in March 2024. By April 2026 — exactly 2 years post-discharge — they have rebuilt two secured credit cards (both at $2,500 limits, utilization under 30%), one auto loan with 18 months of clean payment history, an Equifax score of 638, and $85,000 saved for a down payment on a $420,000 property in Hamilton, Ontario. Employment is salaried, $78,000 gross, verified by T4 and letter of employment. Because post-bankruptcy files are ineligible for CMHC / Sagen / Canada Guaranty default insurance, the borrower must place the minimum 20% down ($84,000) that B-lenders require — they put $85,000 down to clear that floor.
Purchase price
$420,000
Down payment (20.2%)
$85,000 (B-lender minimum is 20% post-bankruptcy; no default insurance available)
Mortgage required
$335,000
Estimated B-lender rate (5-yr fixed, 2026)
~7.25–7.75% (prime + 200–250 bps)
Prime-lender eligibility window
March 2028–2030 (4–6 yrs post-discharge)

Framework

The discharge-to-mortgage timeline

The credit bureau retains a first bankruptcy for 6 years from the discharge date in most provinces (7 years in some); a second bankruptcy stays for 14 years. These are Equifax and TransUnion retention schedules, not lender policy — lenders set their own overlays on top. The practical market segments by elapsed time:

0–24 months post-discharge: Private lenders (MICs, individual investors) only. Rates typically 9–13%, 1-year terms, 65–75% LTV maximum. Useful only as a bridge.

24–48 months post-discharge: B-lenders (Home Trust, Equitable Bank, Haventree, MCAP's alt channel) will consider files with 2 full years of re-established credit, minimum 2 active trade lines, and a score generally above 600. Rates run 150–300 bps above equivalent prime pricing. Down payment requirements are typically 20% minimum — insured mortgages are not available post-bankruptcy at this stage.

48–72 months post-discharge: Prime federally regulated lenders (Schedule I banks, credit unions, monolines) begin to consider files, particularly if the bureau entry has aged off or is close to aging off. Stress test under B-20 applies in full. Some lenders require the bankruptcy to have been discharged for the full bureau retention period before they will approve.

Re-establishing credit — the mechanics that matter

Lenders at the B-tier and above are not simply looking for a score number — they are looking for evidence of repayment behaviour since the discharge. The minimum viable credit rebuild for a 2-year B-lender application requires:

1. Two active revolving trade lines (secured credit cards are the fastest route) with at least 12 months of on-time payment history each. Secured cards from institutions like Home Trust Visa or Capital One are widely reported to both bureaus.

2. An installment trade line — an auto loan or personal loan with 12–24 months of clean history adds significant weight because it demonstrates management of a fixed repayment obligation, which is structurally closer to a mortgage.

3. No new derogatory marks — any NSF, collection, or missed payment post-discharge resets lender confidence materially, even if the score has recovered.

4. Credit utilization below 35% on revolving lines. High utilization suppresses scores and signals cash-flow stress to underwriters.

Down payment sourcing and LTV constraints

Post-bankruptcy borrowers cannot access CMHC, Sagen, or Canada Guaranty default insurance — all three insurers exclude applicants with a bankruptcy on file that has not been fully discharged for a sufficient period (CMHC's standard underwriting requires a clean credit history with no prior bankruptcy within the insured program's credit guidelines). This means the minimum down payment at the B-lender stage is 20%, and many B-lenders require 25–35% depending on the property type and the recency of the discharge.

Down payment sourcing is scrutinized carefully: 90 days of bank statements are standard, and gifted funds from immediate family are generally acceptable with a signed gift letter, but borrowed down payments are not. If savings are held in a TFSA or RRSP (RRSP Home Buyers' Plan is available to discharged bankrupts who meet the first-time buyer definition), document the withdrawal trail clearly.

B-20 stress test application

OSFI's Guideline B-20 applies to all federally regulated financial institutions, including the Schedule I banks that own some B-lender subsidiaries. For uninsured mortgages (which all post-bankruptcy files will be at 20%+ down), the qualifying rate is the greater of the contract rate plus 200 bps or 5.25%. At a B-lender contract rate of 7.50%, the stress-test qualifying rate is 9.50% — a meaningful constraint on maximum purchase price.

Credit unions chartered provincially (e.g., in BC or Ontario) are not subject to B-20 and may apply their own qualifying rate standards, which can be more accommodating. However, provincial credit union regulators have increasingly aligned with B-20 principles, so the practical difference has narrowed since 2023.

The private-to-B-to-prime migration strategy

For borrowers who cannot wait 2 years for B-lender access, a private mortgage bridge is sometimes the only entry point — but it should be structured as a deliberate 12-month exit strategy, not a long-term solution. Key parameters for a viable private bridge:

1. 1-year open or closed term with a lender fee of 1–3% and a rate of 9–12%. Total cost of carry must be modelled against the alternative of renting and saving.

2. Exit underwriting pre-confirmed — before taking a private mortgage, have a B-lender confirm in writing (or at minimum verbally with a broker) that they will refinance the file at the 24-month mark assuming credit milestones are met.

3. Avoid prepayment penalties that would trap you in the private mortgage beyond the intended term. Negotiate open terms or short closed terms with defined exit windows.

Rate environment and cost modelling (2025–2026)

With the Bank of Canada overnight rate at approximately 2.75% as of early 2026 and 5-year fixed prime-lender rates in the 5.00–5.50% range, B-lender pricing for post-bankruptcy files sits roughly at 7.00–8.00% on a 5-year fixed, depending on LTV, credit score, and time since discharge. On a $335,000 mortgage at 7.50% over a 25-year amortization, monthly principal and interest is approximately $2,454 — versus roughly $1,994 at a prime-lender rate of 5.25%. The cumulative premium over a 5-year term is approximately $27,600 in additional interest. This is the quantified cost of the credit-rebuild timeline, and it is the most compelling argument for maximizing the down payment and accelerating credit repair before applying.

Key considerations

  • The 6-year bureau retention clock runs from the **discharge date**, not the filing date. Confirm your exact discharge date from your Licensed Insolvency Trustee's discharge certificate — this document is the anchor for every lender's timeline calculation.
  • A consumer proposal is not a bankruptcy and carries a different bureau retention schedule (3 years from the date the proposal is fully paid). If your situation involved a proposal rather than a bankruptcy, the mortgage re-entry timeline is materially shorter — confirm which insolvency event is on your bureau before assuming the bankruptcy timeline applies.
  • Some credit unions — particularly in Ontario (FSRA-regulated) and BC (BCFSA-regulated) — have more flexible post-bankruptcy policies than federally regulated lenders. A broker with credit union access can sometimes find prime-adjacent rates at the 3-year post-discharge mark rather than 4–6 years.
  • Multiple bankruptcies are treated significantly more harshly. A second bankruptcy stays on the bureau for 14 years from discharge, and most B-lenders will not consider a second-bankruptcy file until at least 4–5 years post-discharge with exceptional compensating factors.
  • Property type matters at the B-lender stage. Condos in high-density markets, rural properties, and anything with a non-standard title or zoning will face additional LTV haircuts on top of the post-bankruptcy overlay — stick to freehold residential in established markets for your first post-bankruptcy purchase.
  • Tax arrears or CRA debt that contributed to the bankruptcy must be fully resolved. Lenders will pull a property tax certificate and may ask for confirmation that CRA has no outstanding claims — unresolved government debt is a hard stop at most institutions.

Common mistakes

  • Applying to a prime lender too early — a declined application at a Schedule I bank generates a hard inquiry that suppresses your score and creates a paper trail of recent declines that B-lenders will see. Work through a broker who pre-screens lender appetite before submitting.
  • Closing all pre-bankruptcy credit accounts after discharge — a zero-trade-line bureau is worse than a thin one. Open new secured accounts immediately post-discharge rather than waiting until you feel financially stable.
  • Assuming a high income compensates for insufficient post-discharge credit history. B-20 and lender overlays treat time-since-discharge and trade-line depth as near-binary gates — a $200,000 income does not override a 14-month post-discharge timeline at most institutions.
  • Taking a private mortgage with a 3-year closed term — if the private lender's penalty structure locks you in, you cannot migrate to a B-lender at the 24-month mark without paying a substantial IRD or flat-fee penalty that erodes the equity you need for the B-lender's LTV requirement.
  • Neglecting to obtain the absolute discharge certificate from the Licensed Insolvency Trustee. Without this document, lenders cannot confirm the discharge date, and the file stalls in underwriting. Obtain and store this document before beginning any mortgage application.
  • Co-signing for someone else's debt during the credit-rebuild period — any co-signed obligation appears on your bureau as a full liability and increases your TDS ratio, potentially disqualifying you from the mortgage you are rebuilding toward.

Action steps

  1. 01Obtain your absolute discharge certificate from your Licensed Insolvency Trustee and pull both your Equifax and TransUnion reports to confirm the discharge date is correctly recorded and the bankruptcy notation is accurate.
  2. 02Open two secured credit cards within 30 days of discharge if you have not already — use each for one recurring charge monthly and pay the full balance. This is the fastest compliant path to two active trade lines.
  3. 03At the 12-month post-discharge mark, apply for a small auto loan or personal installment loan through a credit union or alternative lender to add an installment trade line to your bureau profile.
  4. 04Begin saving toward a 20–25% down payment immediately — the larger the down payment, the more B-lender options open to you and the lower the rate premium you will face at the 24-month mark.
  5. 05At 18 months post-discharge, engage a mortgage broker with documented B-lender and alternative-lender access to run a soft pre-qualification. This gives you 6 months to correct any documentation gaps before the 24-month application window opens.
  6. 06Model the full cost of the B-lender rate premium over a 5-year term against the cost of renting for an additional 2 years to reach prime-lender eligibility — for many borrowers in high-rent markets, the B-lender path is cheaper in total even with the rate premium.

Adjacent situations

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Last verified: 2026-04-20