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Construction Financing

Construction Financing Ontario: How Draw Mortgages Work (And What Can Go Wrong)

By Paul Hunjan, Mortgage Broker — Updated June 2025 — 8 min read

Building your own home or a rental property in Ontario is one of the most rewarding — and financially complex — projects you can undertake. The financing works completely differently from a standard purchase mortgage, and misunderstanding how it works can cause serious cash flow problems mid-build.

Here's how construction financing actually works, what lenders require, and how to protect yourself.

What Is a Construction Mortgage (Draw Mortgage)?

A construction mortgage — also called a draw mortgage or progress advance mortgage — is a short-term loan that releases funds in stages as your build progresses. You don't receive the full loan amount upfront. Instead, funds are released at specific construction milestones after a lender-approved inspector confirms completion.

This protects the lender (and you) by ensuring money is only advanced for work that's actually been done.

Typical Draw Schedule in Ontario

Draw #StageTypical % ReleasedWhat's Inspected
Draw 1Foundation complete15%Footings, foundation walls, waterproofing
Draw 2Framing complete25%Structure, roof deck, windows/doors roughed
Draw 3Mechanical rough-in20%Plumbing, electrical, HVAC roughed in
Draw 4Drywall complete20%Insulation, drywall hung and taped
Draw 5Final completion20%Occupancy permit issued, finishes complete

⚠️ Each draw requires a lender-ordered inspection ($150–$300 per inspection). You pay for this. Budget 4–6 inspections into your total project cost.

The Interest Reserve: How You Pay During Construction

During construction, you only pay interest on the funds drawn — not the full loan amount. However, lenders typically hold back a portion of your loan as an interest reserve to cover these payments automatically. This prevents you from being required to make mortgage payments while also funding construction costs.

Example: On a $800,000 construction loan over 12 months at 7%, the interest reserve might be $28,000–$35,000 — set aside from your loan approval and drawn automatically each month.

What Lenders Require for a Construction Mortgage

  • Fixed-price construction contract — open-ended contracts are declined. The lender needs a detailed scope and firm price
  • Builder's qualifications — most lenders require a licensed contractor with $2M+ liability insurance and a track record
  • Plans and permits — approved building permit, architectural drawings
  • As-improved appraisal — an appraiser estimates the value of the finished home; the loan is based on the lower of cost or appraised value
  • 20–25% equity/down payment — based on total project cost (land + construction)
  • Construction timeline — typically funded for 12–18 months. Extensions are available but may require re-approval

Owner-Builder Construction Mortgages

If you plan to act as your own general contractor, financing becomes significantly more difficult. Most institutional lenders won't finance owner-builder projects due to completion risk. Private lenders and some specialty lenders will, but expect higher rates (10–14%) and more stringent draw release conditions.

💡 Hybrid approach: Hire a licensed GC but act as your own project manager. You get the financing of a standard construction mortgage with the cost savings of being hands-on.

Construction-to-Permanent Financing: The Cleaner Path

Rather than taking a construction mortgage and then refinancing into a regular mortgage at completion, some lenders offer a construction-to-permanent product — a single loan that converts from a draw mortgage to a conventional amortizing mortgage at completion with no new approval, no new appraisal, and no break fees.

This is the best structure when you can get it — it eliminates the risk of not qualifying for the take-out mortgage at completion (which can happen if rates have risen or your income situation has changed).

What Can Go Wrong (And How to Protect Yourself)

  1. Builder insolvency mid-project — use a lawyer to hold builder deposits in trust and use staged payments only
  2. Cost overruns beyond the loan amount — add a 15–20% contingency to your budget before applying
  3. Failing the final inspection — no occupancy permit = no final draw = you're funding gap out of pocket
  4. Rate risk at conversion — if you're in a construction mortgage and rates rise before you convert, your permanent mortgage will be at higher rates. Lock the take-out rate early if possible
  5. HST on new construction — new builds attract 13% HST. The new housing rebate covers some of this but budget carefully

Building in Ontario? Let's Structure This Right.

Paul places construction mortgages for ground-up builds, custom homes, and investor projects across the GTA. Get the right lender, the right draw structure, and no surprises.

Learn About Construction Financing →

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a draw mortgage in Ontario?

A draw mortgage releases funds in stages as construction milestones are reached and inspected. Interest is only charged on funds drawn — not the full loan amount — which keeps costs down during the build phase.

How much down payment is needed for a construction mortgage?

Most lenders require 20–25% of the total project cost (land plus construction). Some lenders base the loan on the as-completed appraised value, so a well-designed project in a strong market can reduce your cash requirement.

What happens if my builder goes over budget?

Cost overruns beyond the approved loan amount are your responsibility. Most lenders include a 10% contingency in the approved budget. Anything beyond that, you fund from your own resources — which is why a detailed fixed-price contract with your builder is non-negotiable.

Paul Hunjan Mortgage Broker
Paul Hunjan
Mortgage Broker #M09001187 — MA Mortgage Architects #12728 — 15+ years placing complex Ontario mortgages
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