
Canada’s mortgage stress test has been one of the biggest barriers to homeownership over the past few years. As interest rates rose sharply in 2022–2024, many buyers were priced out—not by payments, but by qualification rules.
Heading into 2026, the stress test is still in place, but the way it impacts buyers, renewals, and refinancing is changing. Here’s what Canadians should expect.
As of now, there are no confirmed plans to remove the stress test in 2026.
All federally regulated lenders (banks and major institutions) will continue to require borrowers to qualify at the higher of:
The contract mortgage rate + 2%, or
The Minimum Qualifying Rate (MQR) set by OSFI
This applies to:
Purchases
Refinances
Switching lenders (with some exceptions)
While the rules haven’t changed, rates have.
As mortgage rates declined through late 2025, the qualifying rate dropped as well.
Mortgage rate: 4.25%
Stress test rate: 6.25%
That’s far more manageable than the 8%+ qualifying rates buyers faced in 2023–2024.
Higher approval amounts
Fewer declined applications
Easier qualification for first-time buyers
First-time buyers benefit the most from improving rate conditions.
In 2026:
Lower stress-test rates increase buying power
Monthly affordability improves
Down payment strategies (FHSA + RRSP HBP) become more effective
Fewer buyers are forced into smaller or less desirable homes
However, income and debt ratios still matter — budgeting remains critical.
Homeowners renewing in 2026 face a different stress-test reality depending on their lender choice.
No stress test required
Renewal is simpler and faster
Full stress test applies
Qualification is required again
Many homeowners who took ultra-low rates in 2020–2021 may find switching difficult without income growth.
If you refinance in 2026:
You must re-qualify under the stress test
Increased loan amounts face stricter scrutiny
Debt consolidation must fit ratios
Even with lower rates, stress-test rules still limit how much equity can be accessed.
While there’s growing industry pressure to reform the stress test, any changes would likely be incremental, not dramatic.
Possible discussions include:
Adjusting the +2% buffer
Creating exemptions for renewals
Tweaking rules for first-time buyers
But borrowers should plan as if the current framework remains in place.
Preparation can increase approval amounts by tens of thousands of dollars.
Some alternative and monoline lenders:
Apply different qualification methods
Offer exceptions for strong equity positions
Provide better solutions for self-employed borrowers
These options are especially valuable in 2026.
The mortgage stress test will still be part of Canada’s housing landscape in 2026 — but it’s becoming less restrictive as rates normalize. Buyers, refinancers, and renewing homeowners will find more opportunity than in recent years, provided they plan strategically.
Understanding how the stress test works — and how to work around it legally — is key to success in 2026.
If you’d like, I can turn this into a RateShop buyer guide, stress-test calculator, or educational carousel.

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