No jargon. No marketing fluff. Here's the step-by-step breakdown of what happens, who's involved, what it costs, and how the loan ultimately gets repaid.
Eligibility is based on three things:
Notice what's NOT on that list: income, employment, credit score (mostly), or debt ratios. Reverse mortgages are explicitly designed for people who can't qualify for traditional credit.
The maximum loan amount is calculated using:
Most borrowers qualify for between 20% and 55% of their home value. The free calculator gives you a realistic estimate in 10 seconds.
You have flexibility on how the money comes to you:
Both Canadian reverse mortgage lenders require you to meet with your own lawyer (not the lender's lawyer) before signing. This is a federal regulatory requirement designed to protect borrowers.
Your lawyer reviews the contract, explains the terms, and confirms you understand what you're signing. Their fee is typically $400–$700 and is paid from the loan proceeds at closing.
You don't pay anything out of pocket. All setup costs come from the loan proceeds at closing. Typical breakdown on a $300,000 reverse mortgage:
Total setup: roughly $3,000–$3,500. You receive the loan amount minus these fees.
Interest is added to the loan balance monthly — but you don't pay it. The balance grows over time. As long as you live in the home and meet your obligations (property taxes, insurance, maintenance), the lender takes no action.
You CAN make voluntary payments if you want to limit how much the balance grows. Many borrowers pay just the interest annually to keep the balance flat.
The reverse mortgage becomes due in one of three situations:
The "no negative equity guarantee" means if the loan balance ever exceeds the home's sale value, the lender absorbs the difference. You and your heirs never owe more than the home is worth.