High-Ratio Mortgage for Self-Employed Workers: Complete Guide
Self-employed workers represent a growing share of the Canadian workforce, but obtaining a high-ratio mortgage remains a more complex process than for salaried employees. The main difficulty lies in income verification: self-employed workers legitimately optimize their tax deductions, which reduces their declared net income and, consequently, the loan amount for which they can qualify under standard lender criteria.
The B-20 Guideline and the Stress Test
OSFI's B-20 guideline applies uniformly to all borrowers, including self-employed workers. For an insured loan (high ratio), the borrower must qualify at the higher of the contract rate plus 2% and the floor rate set by the Bank of Canada (currently 5.25%). This stress test ensures the borrower can withstand future rate increases. For the self-employed, the challenge is that this test is applied to an income that is often lower than their actual financial capacity due to tax deductions.
- High-Ratio Mortgage
- A mortgage loan where the down payment is less than 20% of the purchase price, bringing the loan-to-value ratio above 80%. This type of loan mandatorily requires mortgage insurance (CMHC, Sagen, or Canada Guaranty), with the premium added to the loan amount. The minimum down payment is 5% on the first $500,000 and 10% on the portion above that.
Specialized Programs for Self-Employed Workers
- Standard Declared Income Program: The lender uses the average of CRA notices of assessment from the last two or three years. This is the most common approach among Category A lenders. The qualifying income is the net income after business deductions, as declared on T1 returns.
- Reasonable Stated Income Program: Some lenders allow the self-employed worker to declare an income consistent with their industry, verified by the lender as reasonable. This program generally requires excellent credit (score of 700+), a minimum of two years of proven business activity, and a stable income history.
- Expense Add-Back Program (Gross-Up): Some lenders add a portion of non-recurring business expenses (dépréciation, home office costs, vehicle expenses) to net income to better reflect the self-employed worker's actual financial capacity. The add-back percentage varies by lender.
- Alternative Lender Option (B-Lender): If qualification with an A lender is not possible, Category B lenders offer more flexible criteria but generally require a minimum 20% down payment (no high ratio). Rates are 1% to 3% higher, with additional application fees.
Essential Documents for the Application
- CRA notices of assessment for the last two or three fiscal years, confirming declared income and no outstanding balance.
- Complete T1 tax returns with all relevant schedules (T2125 for sole proprietorships, T4 if corporate income is distributed).
- Business financial statements (balance sheet and income statement) prepared by a chartered professional accountant, if available.
- Proof of business registration with the Quebec Enterprise Registrar (NEQ) or certificate of incorporation, demonstrating a history of at least two years.
- Bank statements for business and personal accounts for the last three to six months to confirm cash flow.
- Current business contracts or agreements demonstrating continuity of anticipated revenue.