Parental Leave and Mortgage: Understanding the Impact
Parental leave is an important period of financial transition for Quebec families. While the Quebec Parental Insurance Plan (QPIP) offers some of the most generous coverage in Canada, the income reduction it entails can have significant consequences for your mortgage situation. Understanding these impacts and planning accordingly is essential for maintaining your financial stability.
QPIP Benefits and Your Income
QPIP offers two plans to choose from. The basic plan pays approximately 70% of insurable earnings during the 18 weeks of maternity leave, then approximately 55% during the 32 weeks of parental leave. The special plan pays 75% for 15 weeks of maternity and 75% for 25 weeks of parental leave. In both cases, the income reduction is substantial and directly affects the debt service ratios used for mortgage qualification.
- Maximum insurable earnings (QPIP)
- The maximum amount of employment income on which QPIP benefits are calculated. This ceiling is revised annually by the Conseil de gestion de l'assurance parentale. For 2026, consult the QPIP website for the current amount. Benefits are not increased beyond this ceiling.
Impact on Mortgage Qualification
Under OSFI Guideline B-20, lenders must use the borrower's actual income at the time of application to calculate GDS (maximum 39%) and TDS (maximum 44%) ratios. During parental leave, available income is based on QPIP benefits, which can significantly reduce the eligible mortgage amount. For example, a household with combined income of $120,000 will see that income drop to approximately $90,000 during the maternity period under the basic plan, then to approximately $76,000 during parental leave.
Proactive Planning Strategies
- Complete your transactions before leave: If you plan to buy, refinance, or switch lenders at renewal, do so while both household incomes are at their full level. Pre-approvals are valid for 90 to 120 days depending on the lender.
- Build an emergency fund: Save the equivalent of three to six months of mortgage payments, property taxes, and insurance before leave begins. This financial cushion will help cover the months when the budget is tightest.
- Reduce your debts before leave: Pay down your credit card balances, car loans, and lines of credit as much as possible. Every dollar of monthly debt reduces your TDS ratio and can make the difference in qualification.
- Explore flexible payment options: Check whether your mortgage contract allows temporarily reducing payments (interest only), changing payment frequency, or deferring a payment. Discuss these options with your lender before leave starts.
Renewal During Leave
If your mortgage term matures during parental leave, note that renewal with your current lender generally does not require formal requalification. The lender will send you a renewal offer that you can accept directly. However, if you wish to transfer your mortgage to another lender for a better rate, requalification will be required and your reduced income will be factored in. The optimal strategy is to negotiate your renewal rate and compare market offers at least four months before your term expires, ideally before parental leave begins.