Canada Mortgage Debt 2025 Nears $2 Trillion as Renewal Wave and Starter Home Crisis Intensify

Feb 25, 2026

Canada mortgage debt 2025 has climbed close to the $2 trillion mark, reflecting growing financial strain on households amid a large-scale mortgage renewal cycle and deteriorating housing affordability.

According to Equifax Canada, total outstanding mortgage balances reached approximately $1.95 trillion in the fourth quarter, marking a 2.6% increase from the previous year. While interest rate stabilization has offered some relief, affordability challenges persist, particularly in high-demand housing markets.

A Massive Mortgage Renewal Wave

Canada is currently in the middle of one of the largest mortgage renewal cycles in its history. The Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC) estimates:

  • At least 1.5 million households renewed mortgages by the end of 2025
  • Roughly 1 million additional households are expected to renew in 2026

Renewals dominated mortgage activity in the final quarter of 2025. However, many households experienced what analysts describe as “payment shock” — a sharp increase in monthly payments after renewing at higher rates.

This has prompted some borrowers to switch lenders in search of better terms. At the same time, Equifax noted rising missed payments on higher-value mortgages in Ontario, suggesting that some households are struggling to absorb post-renewal costs.

Borrowing Levels Continue to Rise

High mortgage balances remain a significant barrier for new entrants into the housing market.

  • The average new mortgage loan increased 4.1% year-over-year to $363,778
  • First-time homebuyers saw average new loan amounts rise 5% to $441,301

Even with rate stability, elevated loan sizes mean that debt burdens remain heavy for new buyers.

Starter Home Affordability Crisis

Beyond mortgage costs, affordability at the entry level of the housing market has deteriorated sharply.

A recent analysis from the University of Ottawa’s Missing Middle Initiative highlights a dramatic divergence between income growth and housing prices:

  • Since 2004, Canadian incomes have risen 76%
  • Entry-level new home prices have surged 265%

Economist Mike Moffat noted that brand-new family-sized starter homes are now more than twice as expensive relative to income compared to 20 years ago.

Even if home prices were to stop rising entirely, the price-to-income ratio would take an estimated 25 years to return to 2004 levels. Without meaningful reductions in construction costs, affordability challenges could persist for decades.

Structural Solutions Needed

Moffat argues that addressing affordability requires more than temporary measures. Policy priorities should include:

  • Reducing homebuilding costs
  • Reforming zoning regulations to allow more infill development
  • Reviewing building codes that may unnecessarily increase construction expenses
  • Expanding housing types suited to today’s demographic realities

The “starter home” of the next decade may need to look fundamentally different from that of the early 2000s.

The Bigger Picture

Canada mortgage debt 2025 reflects two parallel pressures:

  1. Existing homeowners adjusting to higher renewal payments

  2. Prospective buyers facing entry-level housing prices far outpacing income growth

While interest rate stabilization offers short-term relief, the underlying structural imbalance between wages, debt and housing costs remains unresolved.

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