
The holiday season is full of joy — and spending. But for Canadians planning to buy, refinance, or renew a mortgage, holiday spending can quietly hurt mortgage approval chances if not managed carefully. Lenders look closely at your financial behaviour leading up to an application, and December habits can influence decisions well into the new year.
Here’s how holiday spending affects mortgage approval — and how to protect yourself.
Holiday shopping often leads to higher credit card balances. Even if you pay on time, high utilization can reduce your credit score.
Lenders prefer utilization below 30% of your credit limit
Maxed or near-maxed cards signal higher risk
A lower score can mean higher rates or outright decline
A drop of even 20–40 points can change which lenders approve you.
Mortgage approval is heavily based on Gross Debt Service (GDS) and Total Debt Service (TDS) ratios.
Holiday debt increases:
Monthly minimum payments
Total liabilities
TDS ratio — a key approval metric
Even small monthly payments from holiday purchases can push you over lender limits.
Many buyers forget that:
Afterpay
Klarna
Affirm
PayBright
…are still considered liabilities.
Lenders see these as:
Installment debt
Monthly obligations
A sign of short-term cash-flow strain
Multiple BNPL accounts can negatively affect approvals.
Opening new credit during the holidays — even store cards — can trigger:
Credit inquiries
Lower credit scores
Lender concerns about borrowing behaviour
Mortgage underwriters prefer stable credit activity for at least 90 days before approval.
Lenders often review:
90 days of bank statements
Down payment sources
Spending consistency
Large unexplained purchases may prompt questions about:
Financial discipline
Available savings
True affordability
This is especially important for first-time buyers.
Holiday spending can drain:
Emergency funds
Closing cost reserves
Down payment buffers
Lenders want to see:
Funds left after closing
Financial resilience
Ability to handle unexpected costs
Low remaining savings can weaken an application.
For self-employed buyers, holiday spending can:
Lower average account balances
Distort cash-flow analysis
Raise questions during underwriting
Consistency is key — especially in the final quarter of the year.
Even small adjustments can preserve your approval strength.
Holiday spending is less impactful if:
Your credit score is already strong (720+)
You maintain low utilization
You have strong income and savings
You’re months away from applying
Timing matters — spending closer to application dates has greater impact.
Holiday spending doesn’t mean you can’t enjoy the season — but it does mean being mindful if a mortgage is on your horizon. Credit utilization, debt ratios, and spending patterns all play a role in mortgage approval decisions.
A little planning now can mean better rates, smoother approvals, and fewer surprises in the new year.
If you’d like, I can turn this into a RateShop buyer checklist, holiday finance guide, or Instagram carousel.

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