HELOC Canada 2026: Rates, Rules & How It Works | mrates.ca

HELOC Canada

If you own a home in Ontario with significant equity, a Home Equity Line of Credit (HELOC) can be one of the most flexible and cost-effective ways to access funds — for renovations, debt consolidation, investment, or emergency reserves. In 2026, with home values still elevated and lending rules tightened, here’s exactly how HELOCs work and when they make sense.

What Is a HELOC?

A HELOC is a revolving line of credit secured against your home’s equity. Unlike a second mortgage with a fixed payout, a HELOC works like a credit card — you borrow what you need, repay it, and borrow again. You only pay interest on what you’ve drawn.

2026 HELOC Rules in Canada

  • Maximum HELOC = 65% of your home’s appraised value
  • Combined HELOC + mortgage cannot exceed 80% of home value (LTV)
  • HELOC portion is always at a variable rate — typically prime + 0.50% to prime + 1.00%
  • Available from most Schedule A banks and credit unions as a standalone or bundled readvanceable mortgage product
Home Value Mortgage Balance Available HELOC Monthly Interest (Prime+0.50%)
$700,000 $350,000 $210,000 ~$978/mo on full draw
$900,000 $400,000 $320,000 ~$1,488/mo on full draw
$1,200,000 $500,000 $460,000 ~$2,138/mo on full draw

HELOC vs. Refinancing: Which Is Better in 2026?

Factor HELOC Refinance
Rate type Variable (prime-linked) Fixed or variable
Break penalty None (revolving) IRD or 3-month interest
Setup cost Low ($300–$700 appraisal) $1,500–$3,000+ legal + penalty
Flexibility Borrow/repay as needed Lump sum payout only
Best for Ongoing access, renovations, investing One-time large lump sum need

Find the best HELOC rates from Ontario lenders at mrates.ca.

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