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Credit Recovery · Ontario Mortgage

Bankruptcy vs. Consumer Proposal:
How Each One Affects
Your Mortgage Application

📅 June 24, 2026 🕐 10 min read 👤 Paul Hunjan, Mortgage Broker #M09001187

You filed a consumer proposal or went bankrupt. You got through it. Now you want to own a home — or keep the one you have. The question every lender is going to ask: how long ago, and what have you done since?

This guide gives you the straight answer. No sugarcoating — lenders are strict about insolvency history, the timelines are real, and the path back to mortgage qualification requires deliberate steps. But it is absolutely achievable, and plenty of Canadians do it every year.

📌 The Short Answer
  • Consumer proposal on credit file: 3 years after completion (rated R7)
  • First bankruptcy on credit file: 6 years after discharge (rated R9)
  • A lender mortgage after either: typically 2 years post-completion/discharge + rebuilt credit
  • B lender mortgage after either: often 1–2 years post-completion/discharge
  • Private mortgage during or after either: possible immediately, equity-based

What Is a Consumer Proposal vs. Bankruptcy?

Both are formal insolvency proceedings administered by a Licensed Insolvency Trustee (LIT) in Canada. They are not the same thing — and the difference matters significantly for your mortgage future.

A consumer proposal is a negotiated settlement. You offer to repay a portion of what you owe — often 30 to 50 cents on the dollar — over a period of up to 5 years. Creditors vote on it. If accepted, you make fixed monthly payments to the trustee, who distributes funds to creditors. You keep your assets. The moment the proposal is filed, collection calls stop and legal proceedings against you are stayed.

Bankruptcy is more severe. Your non-exempt assets are surrendered to the trustee for distribution to creditors. In Ontario, certain assets are exempt (primary residence equity up to a limit, RRSP contributions older than 12 months, basic household furnishings). A first-time bankrupt with no surplus income is typically discharged in 9 months. If you have surplus income above the threshold, the process extends to 21 months. A second bankruptcy is 24 months minimum.

💡 This Article Is About Mortgages — Not Which Option to Choose

The decision between a consumer proposal and bankruptcy involves many factors beyond mortgage timing — asset protection, income, total debt, type of creditors, and more. That decision belongs to a Licensed Insolvency Trustee, not a mortgage broker. What this article covers is what happens to your mortgage options after each one. If you haven't filed yet and are weighing options, consult a LIT first.

How Each Shows Up on Your Credit File

Canada has two major credit bureaus: Equifax and TransUnion. Both record insolvency proceedings using a rating system. The key ratings to understand:

Rating What It Means Associated With
R7 Making payments through a special arrangement Consumer proposal, debt management plan
R9 Bad debt, placed for collection, or bankruptcy Bankruptcy, debt written off

The R9 rating (bankruptcy) is the worst possible credit rating. R7 (consumer proposal) is one step better — it signals you attempted to repay, which lenders view more favourably.

Factor Consumer Proposal First Bankruptcy Second Bankruptcy
Credit bureau rating R7 R9 R9
Stays on Equifax/TU 3 years post-completion 6 years post-discharge 14 years post-discharge
Typical duration Up to 5 years to complete 9 months (no surplus income) 24 months minimum
Total credit impact window Up to 8 years from filing ~6 yrs 9 months from filing ~16+ years from filing
Keep home equity? Yes Depends on equity vs. exemption Depends on equity vs. exemption
Lender perception Attempted repayment — more favourable Full discharge — less favourable Repeat — most difficult

The Mortgage Timeline: When Can You Qualify Again?

There are three tiers of lenders in Canada — A (chartered banks), B (alternative lenders), and private. Each has different tolerance for insolvency history.

During an Active Proposal or Undischarged Bankruptcy

A and B lenders: Will not approve a mortgage. Full stop.

Private lenders: May approve if you have substantial home equity — typically requiring the combined loan-to-value (CLTV) to be 65% or less. Private lenders are asset-based, not credit-based. The property secures the loan, not your credit score.

After Completion / Discharge — The Road Back

1
Immediately after discharge/completion Private lenders available with sufficient equity (65% CLTV or less). Rates higher than B lender — typically 10–14%+. Use as a bridge, not a long-term solution. OAC.
2
Year 1 post-discharge/completion Begin rebuilding credit immediately. Get 2 secured credit products (secured credit card, car loan, or RRSP loan). Minimum $2,500 limits. Pay on time, every time. Some B lenders will review at this stage with strong compensating factors.
3
Year 2 post-discharge/completion Most B lenders (Equitable, Home Trust, MCAP, etc.) will consider an application with 2 years of re-established credit, minimum 2 active trade lines, and a strong down payment (typically 20%+). Rates above A lenders but manageable. OAC.
4
Year 2+ with strong credit file Some A lenders (chartered banks, monoline lenders) will review applications. Requirements: 2+ years post-discharge/completion, minimum 2 trade lines with $2,500+ limits each, no missed payments since insolvency, stable employment, and usually 20% down payment. OAC.

What "Re-Established Credit" Actually Means

This is the piece most people miss. Lenders don't just look at how long ago your insolvency occurred — they look at what you've done since. "Re-established credit" has a specific meaning in mortgage underwriting:

💡 Start Day One

The clock on re-established credit starts the day you open your first new account post-insolvency. Get a secured credit card the week your proposal is complete or your bankruptcy is discharged. Charge $50 a month to it. Pay it in full. That 24-month runway starts now — not whenever you get around to it.

Down Payment Requirements After Insolvency

Even if the timeline and credit re-establishment boxes are checked, you typically cannot access the minimum 5% insured mortgage programs after insolvency. Expect:

Real Scenario: Consumer Proposal — Mississauga Homeowner

The Situation

Homeowner filed a consumer proposal in 2022 with $68,000 in unsecured debt. Proposal completed in 2025 — paid creditors 40 cents on the dollar over 3 years. Home retained throughout (owned jointly with spouse who was not part of the proposal). Now in 2026, wants to refinance to consolidate a remaining car loan.

Outcome: 1 year post-completion with 2 rebuilt trade lines. R7 still showing on bureau — 2 more years until it falls off. B lender approved the refinance at 80% LTV with 2 years of clean payment history post-proposal. Rate higher than A lender but deal closed. Plan: reapply to A lender in 2027 when bureau clears and refinance again at lower rate. OAC — numbers illustrative.

Can a Private Mortgage Help You Bridge the Gap?

Yes — and this is where a broker adds real value. If you own a home during or after insolvency, a private mortgage can:

Private mortgages are not a long-term strategy — the rates are higher, the terms are short (typically 1 year), and the fees are real. But used deliberately as a bridge to B and then A lender financing, they are a legitimate and effective tool.

⚠ What to Avoid
  • Missing a single payment post-insolvency — this resets lender confidence and can extend your timeline significantly
  • Applying to multiple lenders at once — multiple hard pulls damage the credit you're trying to rebuild
  • Taking on high-interest consumer debt to build credit — secured credit cards and small RRSP loans are sufficient
  • Waiting to start rebuilding credit — every month you delay is a month added to your mortgage timeline

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes — but timing matters. Most B lenders require the proposal to be fully completed and discharged, plus a minimum of 2 years of re-established credit. Some A lenders require the same. Private lenders can often approve during or immediately after a consumer proposal if you have sufficient equity (typically 65% CLTV or less). OAC — subject to change.
An R7 rating from a consumer proposal stays on your Equifax and TransUnion credit files for 3 years after the date of completion. If the proposal takes 4 years to complete, the total credit impact runs 7 years from filing. This is significantly shorter than a first bankruptcy, which remains on file for 6 years post-discharge.
A first bankruptcy stays on your credit report for 6 years from the date of discharge. Discharge typically takes 9 months for a first-time bankrupt with no surplus income — so the total impact is roughly 6 years and 9 months from filing. A second bankruptcy remains for 14 years. Most A lenders require 2 years post-discharge with rebuilt credit. B lenders may approve in 1–2 years. Private lenders can often approve immediately after discharge with sufficient equity. OAC.
Generally yes — the R7 rating is less damaging than R9, lenders view attempted repayment more favourably, and the bureau reporting period is shorter. The practical waiting period to access A or B lender mortgages is similar (roughly 2 years post-completion with rebuilt credit), but the consumer proposal gives you a shorter total credit impact window. OAC — subject to change.
A and B lenders will not approve while you are actively in a proposal or undischarged bankruptcy. Private lenders lend based on equity — not credit. If you own a home with sufficient equity (typically 65% CLTV or less), a private lender may approve even while the proposal or bankruptcy is active. OAC. Consult a Licensed Insolvency Trustee before making financial decisions during proceedings.

Already Through It? Let's Map Your Path to Mortgage Approval

The timeline is mechanical — but navigating which lender to approach, when, and with what credit profile is where a broker earns their keep. I work with A lenders, B lenders, and private lenders. I know exactly what each one needs to see post-insolvency and when to approach them.

Book a Free Assessment 📞 416-820-8601

Disclaimer: This article is general information only and does not constitute financial, legal, or insolvency advice. Credit bureau reporting timelines are approximate and may vary by bureau and individual circumstance. Mortgage terms OAC and subject to change. If you are considering a consumer proposal or bankruptcy, consult a Licensed Insolvency Trustee (LIT). Paul Hunjan is a licensed Mortgage Broker (#M09001187) under MA Mortgage Architects #12728, FSRA regulated — not a lender and not an insolvency trustee.

Paul Hunjan — Mortgage Broker Brampton Ontario
Paul Hunjan
Mortgage Broker #M09001187 · MA Mortgage Architects #12728 · 15+ Years Ontario Experience · FSRA Licensed
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