The mortgage stress test is the single most important calculation in Canadian homebuying — and one of the least understood. It determines not the rate you'll pay, but the rate at which you must prove you can afford to pay. Getting this number wrong at the start of your search leads to budgets built on false assumptions.
What is the mortgage stress test?
Introduced by the Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions (OSFI) and required by all federally regulated lenders, the mortgage stress test forces every mortgage applicant to qualify at a higher rate than their actual mortgage rate. The purpose is to ensure Canadians can afford their mortgage even if interest rates rise after they sign.
The qualifying rate is the higher of:
- Your actual contract rate + 2%, or
- The government floor rate of 5.25%
In practice: if you negotiate a mortgage at 4.9%, you must prove you can afford payments at 6.9%. If your rate is 3.1%, the floor applies — you qualify at 5.25%.
How the stress test works in practice
The stress test uses two key ratios to evaluate your application:
Gross Debt Service (GDS) ratio
GDS measures your housing costs against your gross income. It includes: your monthly mortgage payment (calculated at the stressed rate), property taxes, heat, and 50% of condo fees if applicable. The maximum GDS for most lenders is 39%.
Total Debt Service (TDS) ratio
TDS adds all your other debt payments — car loans, student loans, credit card minimums — to your GDS housing costs, divided by gross income. The maximum TDS for most lenders is 44%.
Both ratios must fall within limits at the stressed rate, not your actual rate. This is why debt reduction before applying significantly improves your qualifying amount.
The 30-year amortization — and what changed in August 2024
As of August 1, 2024, first-time buyers and buyers of new construction homes became eligible for 30-year amortization on insured mortgages (down payment under 20%). Previously, the maximum insured amortization was 25 years.
The effect on the stress test: a 30-year amortization produces a lower monthly payment than 25 years at the same rate. When the GDS/TDS ratios are calculated at the stressed rate with a 30-year amortization, the monthly payment is lower — which means a higher qualifying amount. In expensive markets like Vancouver and Toronto, this rule change meaningfully expands what first-time buyers can qualify for.
| Amortization | Stressed rate | Monthly payment (per $100K) | Effect on GDS |
|---|---|---|---|
| 25 years | 6.9% | ~$699 | Higher GDS → lower qualifying |
| 30 years | 6.9% | ~$657 | Lower GDS → higher qualifying |
What you can do to improve your qualifying amount
Pay down existing debt. Every dollar of monthly debt payment you eliminate adds roughly $3–4 of qualifying mortgage per month at a standard TDS ratio. A $400/month car payment eliminated before applying could increase your qualifying mortgage by $30,000–$40,000.
Increase your income. Adding a co-borrower (a partner, family member, or spouse) increases the income used in the calculation. Even a modest income addition can shift the qualifying amount significantly.
Use a mortgage broker. Brokers can access multiple lenders with slightly different qualification criteria. Lenders use the same stress test rate but may apply GDS/TDS limits differently for strong-credit applicants.
Stress-test yourself before meeting a lender. The Turning Keys affordability calculator lets you run the GDS/TDS math yourself — so you walk into the pre-approval conversation knowing your own numbers.
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Disclaimer: This article is educational content only — not financial, mortgage, legal, or real estate advice. Rules and figures are current as of 2024–25 and may change. Always consult a licensed professional for advice specific to your situation. Turning Keys is operated by Wise Victoria Mortgages (BCFSA Lic. #MB600614) and Nick Wise Personal Real Estate Corporation.