The Honest Question to Ask Yourself
Most retirees in Ontario have between $400,000 and $1.5 million in home equity. That equity does nothing for you while it sits there. Meanwhile:
- Property taxes go up every year
- Healthcare costs creep higher as you age
- Home maintenance gets harder to afford on a fixed income
- Travel, family, and quality of life all cost money
- Your kids may need help with their first home or your grandchildren's education (research neighbourhoods together and compare local school rankings)
A reverse mortgage doesn't make sense for everyone. But if any of those situations apply, it deserves a real look — not a 30-second dismissal based on something you read in 2008.
What's Changed Since Reverse Mortgages Got a Bad Reputation
Most negative coverage of reverse mortgages comes from the U.S. market in the early 2000s, where loose regulation led to predatory products. Canada is different:
- Only two regulated lenders exist in Canada — both federally regulated banks (HomeEquity Bank and Equitable Bank).
- Mandatory independent legal advice — every borrower must consult their own lawyer before signing.
- No-negative-equity guarantee — you can never owe more than the home is worth.
- You retain title — the lender does not own your home, ever.
- You can sell anytime — early prepayment charges may apply, but you're never trapped.
When a Reverse Mortgage Actually Makes Sense
You want to age in place
You love your home, your neighbours, your routines. Selling and downsizing isn't appealing — but you need cash flow.
Your income is fixed but your home appreciated
Pension and OAS cover the basics, but home values doubled and your equity is locked up where you can't access it.
You want to help family now
Helping kids with a down payment or grandkids with education means more during your lifetime than after.
You have no inheritance pressure
Your kids are doing fine. You'd rather enjoy the equity yourself than pass it on intact — and they support that choice.
When a Reverse Mortgage Is the WRONG Choice
We'll be honest with you about this — because honest advice is what you actually need:
- You plan to move within 2–3 years. Setup costs make short-term reverse mortgages expensive.
- Leaving the home to your children is your top priority. The compounding interest can significantly reduce inheritance — there are alternatives that preserve more.
- You qualify for a regular HELOC and can comfortably make payments. A HELOC is usually cheaper if you can manage the monthly cash flow.
- You're under 60 and just want easier access to cash. Younger borrowers qualify for less and pay more in compounded interest over time.