Using Your RRSP To Help Buy A Home
Michael Hallett • July 16, 2019

Did you know that you can use your RRSP to help buy a home? In fact, you can, it’s called the RRSP Home Buyer’s Plan (or HBP for short). Here are a few things you need to know!
It needs to be your first home (with some exceptions).
Technically, you must not have owned a home in the last four years or have lived in a home that your spouse owned in the last four years. There’s an exception to this: those with a disability OR those helping someone with a disability can withdraw from an RRSP for a home purchase at any time.
You have 15 years to pay back the RRSP
- and you’ll start the second year after the withdrawal. While you won’t pay any tax on this particular withdrawal, it does come with some conditions. You’ll have to pay back the full amount you withdrew over 15 years - the CRA will send you an HBP Statement of Account every year to advise how much you owe the RRSP that year. Your repayments will not count as contributions - you’ve already received the tax break from those funds.
The funds you withdraw from the RRSP must have been there for 90 days.
This is a rule not many people are aware of, but it’s pretty important. You can still technically withdraw the money and use it for your down-payment, but it won’t be tax deductible, and won’t be considered to be part of the HBP. Any funds contributed within 90 days changes nothing - the contribution was completely meaningless. For most people, just a little bit of pre-planning would have given a decent tax deduction in a year they could have really used it.
You can access up to $25,000 ($50,00 per couple).
But that amount is increasing.
According to the CRA website,
the 2019 budget plans to increase the total amount for individual withdrawal to $35,000 after March 19th, 2019.
If you would like to know more about how the HBP could work for you, please don't hesitate to contact me anytime!
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A guarantor and a co-signer both help strengthen a mortgage application, but their roles and responsibilities differ in important ways: Co-signer On the title: A co-signer usually goes on both the mortgage and the property title (ownership). Shared ownership: Since they’re on the title, they legally own part of the home. Shared responsibility: They’re equally responsible for making the payments. When it’s used: Often added when the borrower needs help with income qualification (e.g., a parent helping their child qualify for a bigger mortgage). Guarantor Not on the title: A guarantor is on the mortgage but not on the property title. They don’t own the home so don’t have claim to the asset. Back-up payer: They promise to step in and make payments if the borrower defaults. Liability: They’re legally liable for the debt, even without ownership rights or claim to the asset. When it’s used: Usually when the borrower qualifies on income but needs support for fall back/assets or credit reasons (e.g., poor or short credit history). Who can be a guarantor? Guarantors are to be an immediate relative (spouse or common-law partner, parent, grandparent, child or sibling). Typically guarantors occupy the property, in cases where the guarantor does not occupy a rationale for reasonability and ILA is required Quick Example Co-signer: Think of it like a tag-team partner — both are on the mortgage and the deed. If one can’t pay, the other must, but both are on the title. Guarantor: More like a safety net — they don’t share the house, but the lender can still go after them for money if the borrower defaults. When can you use income from a guarantor on a file? Guarantor's qualifying income may be considered under the following circumstances: Uninsurable loans & CMHC Insured/Insurable loans: guarantors must occupy the subject property and be a spouse or common law partner of the borrower Sagen and Canada Guaranty Insured/Insurable loans: immediate family member who may or may not occupy the subject property with documented rationale

If you’ve missed a payment on your credit card or line of credit and you’re wondering how to handle things and if this will impact your creditworthiness down the road, this article is for you. But before we get started, if you have an overdue balance on any of your credit cards at this exact moment, go, make the minimum payment right now. Seriously, log in to your internet banking and make the minimum payment. The rest can wait. Here’s the good news, if you’ve just missed a payment by a couple of days, you have nothing to worry about. Credit reporting agencies only record when you’ve been 30, 60, and 90 days late on a payment. So, if you got busy and missed your minimum payment due date but made the payment as soon as you realized your error, as long as you haven’t been over 30 days late, it shouldn’t show up as a blemish on your credit report. However, there’s nothing wrong with making sure. You can always call your credit card company and let them know what happened. Let them know that you missed the payment but that you paid it as soon as you could. Keeping in contact with them is the key. By giving them a quick call, if you have a history of timely payments, they might even go ahead and refund the interest that accumulated on the missed payment. You never know unless you ask! Now, if you’re having some cash flow issues, and you’ve been 30, 60, or 90 days late on payments, and you haven’t made the minimum payment, your creditworthiness has probably taken a hit. The best thing you can do is make all the minimum payments on your accounts as soon as possible. Getting up to date as quickly as possible will mitigate the damage to your credit score. The worst thing you can do is bury your head in the sand and ignore the problem, because it won’t go away. If you cannot make your payments, the best action plan is to contact your lender regularly until you can. They want to work with you! The last thing they want is radio silence on your end. If they haven’t heard from you after repeated missed payments, they might write off your balance as “bad debt” and assign it to a collection agency. Collections and bad debts look bad on your credit report. As far as qualifying for a mortgage goes, repeated missed payments will negatively impact your ability to get a mortgage. But once you’re back to making regular payments, the more time that goes by, the better your credit will get. It’s all about timing. Always try to be as current as possible with your payments. So If you plan to buy a property in the next couple of years, it’s never too early to work through your financing, especially if you’ve missed a payment or two in the last couple of years and you’re unsure of where you stand with your credit. Please connect directly; it would be a pleasure to walk through your mortgage application and credit report. Let’s look and see exactly where you stand and what steps you need to take to qualify for a mortgage.