The most common question we get is also the one that's hardest to answer in a tagline: "How much does a reverse mortgage actually cost?"
The honest answer has three parts: setup costs, interest rate, and how compounding plays out over your lifetime. Let's walk through each.
Setup Costs: $2,500–$3,500
You don't pay anything out of pocket — all setup fees are deducted from your loan proceeds at closing. Typical breakdown:
- Appraisal fee: $400–$600. The lender requires an independent appraiser to confirm your home's value.
- Independent legal advice: $400–$700. Canadian law requires you to meet with your own lawyer (not the lender's) before signing. This protects you.
- Lender administration fee: $1,795 with HomeEquity Bank (CHIP). Equitable Bank's fee structure varies by product.
- Title insurance and registration: $300–$500.
Total: roughly $3,000–$3,500 on most files. On a $300,000 reverse mortgage, you'd receive approximately $296,500–$297,000 in your hands after fees.
Interest Rates: Higher Than Regular Mortgages
Reverse mortgage rates are typically 1.5%–3% above regular mortgage rates. Why? The lender doesn't get paid for years (sometimes decades), so they price for that risk and the cost of capital.
As of late 2025, rates ranged from approximately 7% to 9% depending on the lender, the term length (1–5 years fixed available), and whether you choose fixed or variable.
How the Balance Grows: A Worked Example
Let's take a realistic scenario: a 70-year-old in Mississauga with a $1,000,000 home and no existing mortgage. They take out $250,000 as a lump sum at 8% fixed for 5 years.
Here's what the balance looks like over time (assuming 8% throughout for simplicity):
- Year 0: $250,000
- Year 5: $367,300
- Year 10: $539,700
- Year 15: $793,000
- Year 20: $1,165,400
That's the rough math of compounding. After 20 years, the balance has grown roughly 4.6x.
But Here's the Other Side: Home Appreciation
Over the same 20 years, that $1,000,000 home is unlikely to stay at $1,000,000. Even at a conservative 3% annual appreciation:
- Year 0: $1,000,000
- Year 5: $1,159,300
- Year 10: $1,343,900
- Year 15: $1,557,900
- Year 20: $1,806,100
So at year 20, the home is worth $1.8M and the loan balance is $1.17M — leaving roughly $640,000 in remaining equity for the homeowner or their estate.
If home appreciation runs at 5% (closer to Ontario's long-term average), the home would be worth $2.65M, leaving nearly $1.5M in equity.
The No-Negative-Equity Guarantee
Here's the critical safety feature: if home prices stagnate or fall, and the loan balance ends up exceeding the home's value, you and your heirs owe nothing more. The lender absorbs the difference. You can never owe more than the home is worth.
This is a legal requirement of Canadian reverse mortgages — built into the contract.
Reducing the Cost: Voluntary Payments
Most reverse mortgage borrowers don't realize they CAN make voluntary payments. There's no requirement to, but the option exists.
Many financially comfortable borrowers pay just the interest annually, keeping the balance flat. On a $250,000 balance at 8%, that's $20,000/year — affordable for many retirees who use the loan for occasional needs rather than ongoing income.
The Bottom Line
A reverse mortgage is more expensive than a regular mortgage or HELOC over the same time period. That's true and unavoidable. The right comparison isn't "is this expensive?" but "what's the alternative?"
If the alternative is selling the home you love and moving into a condo or rental, the reverse mortgage may cost more on paper but win on quality of life. If the alternative is a HELOC you can't qualify for or afford, there is no alternative — the reverse mortgage is the only path.
For a personalized cost projection on your specific situation, book a free 15-minute call.
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