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Self-Employed Mortgage in Canada: How to Qualify in 2026

In This Article

  1. The Self-Employed Challenge
  2. Income & Employment Requirements
  3. Documentation You'll Need
  4. Down Payment Rules
  5. Credit Score Targets
  6. Tips to Strengthen Your Application

Nearly 2.9 million Canadians are self-employed — that's about 15% of the workforce. Yet getting a mortgage as a self-employed borrower remains one of the most misunderstood parts of homebuying. The good news? With the right preparation, self-employed Canadians qualify for competitive mortgage rates every day.

The Self-Employed Challenge

Here's the core tension: as a business owner, you're incentivized to minimize taxable income through deductions. But lenders assess your borrowing power based on that reported income. The more deductions you claim, the lower your qualifying income — and the less you can borrow.

The Tradeoff: A business owner earning $150,000 who writes off $60,000 in expenses will only qualify based on $90,000 of reported income — significantly reducing their maximum mortgage amount.

Income & Employment Requirements

Most lenders require at least two years of consistent self-employment history. This applies whether you're a sole proprietor, incorporated, or in a partnership. Lenders typically calculate your qualifying income using either:

  • A two-year average of your reported income, or
  • The lower of your two most recent tax years

They want to see that your income is stable or growing — not just that you had one strong year.

Documentation You'll Need

This is where self-employed applications differ the most. Be prepared to provide:

  • Notices of Assessment (NOAs) from CRA for the last 2–3 years
  • T1 General tax returns (complete, not just summaries)
  • Financial statements — prepared by an accountant if you're incorporated
  • 6–12 months of business bank statements
  • Proof of HST/GST registration and source deductions
  • Confirmation of no CRA tax arrears — outstanding tax debt is a red flag

Pro Tip: Have your accountant prepare a "letter of reasonableness" that explains your gross income before deductions. Some lenders accept this as supporting documentation for stated-income programs.

Down Payment Rules

While employed buyers can qualify with as little as 5% down, self-employed borrowers typically have better outcomes with larger down payments.

5% Minimum (with insurance)
10–15% Recommended Sweet Spot
20%+ Best Rates & Options

With 20% or more down, you avoid mortgage default insurance entirely and gain access to more lenders and programs — including stated-income products that don't require traditional income verification.

Credit Score Targets

Since your income documentation is more complex, your credit score carries even more weight. Here's what to aim for:

Credit Score What It Gets You
720+ Best rates, most lender options, lowest insurance premiums
680–719 Good rates with A-lenders, standard approval process
600–679 B-lender territory — higher rates but still workable
Below 600 Private lending options, typically needs 20%+ down

Tips to Strengthen Your Application

  1. Plan 1–2 years ahead. If you're thinking of buying, consider reporting more income on your next tax return — the increased taxes now could save you on a better mortgage rate later.
  2. Keep personal and business finances separate. Clean bank statements make underwriting easier.
  3. Pay off CRA arrears. Outstanding tax debt will stall or kill your application.
  4. Work with a mortgage broker. Not all lenders have the same self-employed programs. A broker can match you with the right one out of 50+ options.
  5. Keep credit utilization under 30%. This is the single fastest way to protect your score.

Self-employed and ready to buy?

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