The Niagara Falls Review

Ottawa to allow 30-year mortgages

First-time buyers qualify on new homes, making them ‘more affordable for young Canadians’

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The federal government will allow 30-year amortizati­on periods on insured mortgages for first-time homebuyers purchasing newly built homes.

Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland made the announceme­nt in Toronto on Thursday, saying it will take effect Aug. 1.

“Faced with a shortage of housing options and increasing­ly high rent and home prices, younger Canadians understand­ably feel like the deck is stacked against them,” Freeland said in a news release.

“By extending amortizati­on, monthly mortgage payments will be more affordable for young Canadians

who want that first home of their own.”

Under the current rules, if a down payment is less than 20 per cent of the home price, the longest allowable amortizati­on — the length of time a homeowner has to repay their mortgage — is 25 years.

The Canadian Home Builders’ Associatio­n has advocated for longer amortizati­on periods, saying five more years would help with affordabil­ity and spur more constructi­on.

Freeland also said the government will raise the amount firsttime homebuyers can withdraw from their RRSPs — to $60,000 from $35,000 — to buy a home. That will take effect April 16, the day the federal budget is set to be released. The government said the change reflects the reality that the size of a down payment and the amount of time needed to save up for one are much larger than they used to be.

People who have made or will make withdrawal­s between Jan. 1, 2022, and Dec. 31, 2025, are also getting more time to begin repayment — up to five years in total rather than two.

Ottawa said those changes are meant to work in tandem with the First Home Savings Account, which it launched last year. The rules governing that program allow prospectiv­e homebuyers to start saving for up to 15 years once they open an account, with an annual $8,000 deposit cap and a lifetime contributi­on limit of $40,000.

Freeland said more than 750,000 Canadians have opened an FHSA to date. While the program came online April 1 of last year, most Canadian financial institutio­ns only began offering the account as of last summer or fall.

Ottawa also announced changes to the Canadian Mortgage Charter that will include an expectatio­n that financial institutio­ns offer permanent amortizati­on relief to protect existing homeowners who meet certain eligibilit­y criteria. That would allow eligible homeowners to reduce monthly mortgage payment to a number they can afford for as long as needed.

The change reflects the reality that the size of a down payment and the amount of time needed to save up for one are much larger than they used to be

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