RefinanceVerified 2026-04-20

Mortgage Options When Separating or Divorcing in Canada

CMHC, Sagen, and Canada Guaranty all offer a 'spousal buyout' insured refinance allowing up to 95% loan-to-value — essentially treating the buyout like a purchase — provided there's a written separation agreement. Without that program, refinances are capped at 80% LTV, often making a single-income buyout impossible. Selling the matrimonial home is the other main path, and in most provinces requires both spouses' consent regardless of whose name is on title.

Who this is for

Separating or divorcing couples where one party wants to keep the home, or both need to exit cleanly. Emotionally difficult; financially and legally structured.

Worked example
Assume a matrimonial home worth $750k with $300k mortgage remaining. One spouse wants to buy the other out at $225k (half the equity). Without the spousal buyout program, a conventional refinance is capped at $600k (80%), which covers only $300k to the leaving spouse — short by $75k at 80% LTV. With the spousal buyout program, up to $712k (95%) refi is possible.
Standard refinance LTV cap
80%
Spousal buyout LTV cap
95% (with insured program)
Documentation required
Written separation agreement, signed
Insurance premium
Standard insured premium applies, can be added to mortgage

Framework

Spousal buyout insured refinance

Available through CMHC, Sagen, and Canada Guaranty. Allows refinance up to 95% of current appraised value — treating the buyout as equivalent to a purchase. Requires a signed separation agreement detailing the division of assets including the home. The remaining spouse must qualify on their own income under standard B-20 rules. The departing spouse is removed from title and the mortgage at closing. Insurance premium applies and can be added to the mortgage.

Selling the matrimonial home

In most provinces, the matrimonial home has special legal status — both spouses have a right of possession regardless of whose name is on title, and both must consent to sell. Proceeds are typically distributed per the separation agreement. If there's no agreement yet, the home cannot usually be sold without court intervention. In Quebec, the concept of 'family residence' plays a similar role.

Key considerations

  • The matrimonial home has unique status in family law — different from investment or other properties. Equal spousal rights apply regardless of title.
  • Some lenders will agree to a 'spousal release' without a full refinance if the remaining spouse qualifies alone — rare, but cheaper than a full refi. Worth asking.
  • Legal fees for a separation-driven refinance are higher than standard refi — include title insurance, separation agreement review, and sometimes parallel family law work.
  • If children are involved, child support obligations may affect the remaining spouse's GDS/TDS ratios — include this in the pre-qualification.

Common mistakes

  • Signing a separation agreement before verifying the remaining spouse can qualify to buy out. Agreements can be revised, but renegotiation is painful.
  • Removing the ex-spouse from title without removing them from the mortgage. Lender's consent is required for mortgage release — title change alone doesn't end mortgage liability.
  • Assuming a separation agreement signed informally between spouses is enough. Lenders typically want a formalized agreement signed by both parties, sometimes court-filed.

Action steps

  1. 01Before finalizing any separation agreement, get a written pre-qualification for the remaining spouse on their own — the house only goes to them if they can carry it.
  2. 02If the buyout math doesn't work at 80% LTV, engage a broker familiar with the spousal buyout insured program early.
  3. 03Retain a family lawyer and a mortgage broker in parallel — the two decisions are deeply linked and separating them costs time and money.

Adjacent situations

Sources

Frequently Asked

Recommended Research

Legal

Divorce & Separation Mortgage Guide Canada 2026: Buyouts, Refinancing & Your Rights

Navigating a mortgage during separation or divorce in Canada involves far more than splitting equity. This 2026 guide covers spousal buyouts at 95% LTV (loan-to-value), stress test implications when refinancing solo, how child and spousal support payments affect your GDS (Gross Debt Service) and TDS (Total Debt Service) ratios, what happens when your home is underwater, Quebec civil law vs. common law provincial rules, and the mandatory role of a separation agreement. Whether you're buying out your ex, selling the family home, or trying to qualify for a new mortgage on a single income, this guide gives you the clarity to make informed decisions.

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Canada Spousal Buyout Mortgage 2026: Refinance Up to 95% LTV During Separation

The Spousal Buyout Program is a specialized insured mortgage product that allows one partner to buy out the other's home equity during a separation or divorce — without being subject to the standard 80% loan-to-value (LTV) refinance cap. In 2026, this remains the only federally recognized pathway to refinance up to 95% of your home's appraised value, provided a signed legal separation agreement is in place and the mortgage is insured through CMHC (Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation), Sagen, or Canada Guaranty. Ratellow's research confirms this program is governed by OSFI (Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions) Guideline B-20 stress test rules and insurer-specific eligibility criteria. (Sources: OSFI Guideline B-20; CMHC; Sagen; Canada Guaranty)

Last verified: 2026-04-20