When your credit score keeps a traditional bank or A-lender from approving your mortgage, alternative and private lending partners can look at the equity in the property as the primary qualifier.
Mississauga's broad mix of detached homes, freehold towns, and condo apartments — particularly in Port Credit and around Square One — gives homeowners a wide range of equity-based options.
Mississauga market context
Mississauga detached avg ≈ $1.32M (TRREB Peel reports, 2026)
TRREB Peel data shows Mississauga detached prices have largely stabilized in the low-$1.3M range through 2026. CMHC's residential mortgage arrears rate for Ontario sits below 0.20% — historically low, but B-lender and private referrals are still rising as banks tighten on income documentation.
Source: CMHC Housing Market Information
When Mississauga homeowners use a bad credit mortgage
Common situations we hear from Mississauga homeowners include:
- Rebuilding after a consumer proposal, missed payments, or collections
- Refinancing when a bank declined a renewal
- Stopping legal action by paying out arrears or judgments
- Buying time to recover your score before returning to an A-lender
Approvals are weighted heavily toward equity and property type; credit history is reviewed but not the gatekeeper it is at a chartered bank.
How equity-based qualification actually works
Banks lead with credit score and income ratios. Alternative and private lending partners lead with equity. As a rough Ontario rule of thumb, lending partners look at the combined balance of every mortgage that will sit against the property — first, second, and so on — and want that total to land at roughly 75%–80% of the appraised value. The federal stress test that gates A-lender approvals is administered by OSFI; private and many B-lender programs operate outside it.
The math is simple. Take your home's current appraised value, multiply by 0.75 or 0.80, then subtract the balance of any mortgage you're keeping. What's left is, broadly, the maximum loan amount you can qualify for on an equity basis. That figure is a possibility, not an approval — lending partners review the property, your exit strategy, and your overall picture before issuing a commitment.
Ontario rate & fee range — Bad Credit Mortgage (last updated June 2026)
The table below shows the typical Ontario market range for a bad credit mortgage in 2026. These are general market figures, not Future Lending Group's rates — we are a referral service, not a lender. Final pricing is set by the licensed lending partner based on your specific file. For a deeper breakdown by lender tier, see our Ontario Private-Lending Rate & Fee Index (2026).
| Interest rate (typical) | 8.99%–12.99% (1st) · 10.99%–14.99% (2nd) |
|---|---|
| Lender fee (one-time) | 1.5%–4% |
| Max loan-to-value | Up to 80% LTV |
| Term | 12 months |
| Payment structure | Interest-only, monthly |
Plus typical legal and appraisal costs of roughly $1,500–$3,000 combined. Mortgage brokering activity in Ontario is regulated by FSRA; all lender and brokerage fees must be disclosed in writing before you sign.
Anonymized Mississauga scenario
Illustrative scenario based on a typical Mississauga file referred to a licensed lending partner. Details have been anonymized; numbers are representative, not a quote. A bad credit mortgage would follow the same equity-first logic.
Erin Mills detached · $1.40M value · $560k first · $200k second to consolidate + renovate
An Erin Mills family carried $1.40M in equity, a $560,000 first mortgage at a low locked-in rate, and roughly $120,000 in unsecured debt at 19–22% interest. A $200,000 second mortgage at ~10.5% (2% lender fee) consolidated the unsecured debt, funded a $70,000 basement renovation, and dropped their monthly carrying cost by more than $1,800 — combined LTV came in at ~54%.
What happens after you inquire
The process is built to be quick and equity-first:
- You submit an inquiry with your home value, mortgage balance, and the amount you need.
- We match you with a licensed lending partner whose program fits your situation in Mississauga.
- You receive a written commitment with the rate, fees, term, and conditions to close.
- Appraisal and lawyer close out the file, typically within 5–10 business days.