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5 Alternatives to a Reverse Mortgage You Should Consider First

A reverse mortgage isn't the only way to access your home equity. Sometimes it's the right tool. Often, one of these alternatives is better. Here are the five most common alternatives Canadian homeowners 55+ should consider before signing anything.

1. Home Equity Line of Credit (HELOC)

The most common alternative. A HELOC gives you a revolving credit line secured against your home, with interest-only minimum payments and rates around prime + 0.5–1.5%.

Better than a reverse mortgage when:

Worse than a reverse mortgage when:

The HELOC is almost always cheaper if you qualify. If you don't, it's not an option at all.

2. Downsizing

Selling your current home and buying a smaller, less expensive one frees up the equity directly — no loan required. If your $1.2M home becomes a $700K condo, you've extracted $500K (minus selling costs and taxes) with no interest, no fees, and no compounding.

Better when:

Worse when:

Downsizing is the most underrated alternative. The math often beats both HELOCs and reverse mortgages — but only if moving fits your life.

3. Sale-Leaseback

You sell your home to an investor and lease it back as a tenant. You get the equity in cash; they get a long-term tenant and the property's appreciation.

Better when:

Worse when:

This market is small in Canada compared to the US. Quality counterparties are limited. Proceed with significant legal advice.

4. Family Loans

Your adult children advance you funds against the eventual inheritance. Documented properly with a promissory note and registered against the home, this can be a legitimate option for families with sufficient liquidity.

Better when:

Worse when:

If you go this route, treat it like any other lending transaction. Lawyer drafts, registered mortgage on title, clear repayment terms.

5. Refinancing Your Existing Mortgage

If you have an existing mortgage with substantial equity, a traditional refinance might let you extract some equity at standard mortgage rates — much cheaper than a reverse mortgage.

Better when:

Worse when:

How to Choose

The right choice depends on three things: whether you can qualify for traditional credit, whether you can comfortably make monthly payments, and how attached you are to staying in your current home.

If you can qualify and can afford payments: HELOC or refinance.

If you can't qualify and want to stay: reverse mortgage.

If you're flexible on location: downsizing usually wins on math.

We'll walk through all of these honestly in a free 15-minute call. If a reverse mortgage isn't your best option, we'll tell you that.

Talk to Someone Who'll Be Straight With You

Free 15-minute consultation. No sales pitch. If a reverse mortgage isn't right for your situation, we'll tell you that.

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