- Private lenders approve based on property equity – credit score and income documentation are secondary considerations
- Typical terms are one year, with lender fees of 2%-4%, structured as a short-term bridge to conventional lending
- Both first and second private mortgages are available for Hamilton properties of all types
- Every private mortgage should include a clear exit strategy – your broker builds this before the deal closes
When a Private Mortgage Makes Sense
Private mortgages fill a specific gap in the lending market. They are not the first choice and are not intended to be – their higher cost reflects both the risk the lender takes and the urgency or complexity of the borrower's situation. But in the right circumstances, a private mortgage is the tool that prevents a worse outcome.
The most common scenario is credit damage that disqualifies the borrower from both A and B lending. A recent consumer proposal, discharged bankruptcy, multiple collections, or a pattern of missed payments can push a credit score below even B lender minimums. Private lenders look past the credit report and focus on equity – if the Hamilton property appraises well relative to the requested loan amount, approval is usually possible.
Self-employed Hamilton residents who cannot document income through conventional means represent another frequent case. Tradespeople, contractors, commission salespeople, and small business owners whose tax returns minimize income for tax purposes often have strong real-world earning capacity that institutional lenders won't recognize. Private lenders assess the situation holistically rather than relying exclusively on T4s and Notices of Assessment.
Time-sensitive situations also drive private lending. Stopping a power of sale, closing a purchase with a tight deadline, or accessing bridge financing when a bank won't move fast enough are all scenarios where the speed of private funding – often within days – justifies the premium.
How Private Lending Works
Private lenders are individuals or private investment groups who lend their own capital against real estate security. They are not regulated in the same way as banks or credit unions, but their mortgages are registered against the property just like any institutional mortgage, and the same legal frameworks govern the lending relationship.
The underwriting process centres on the property. A professional appraisal establishes the home's current market value. The lender evaluates the equity – the difference between the appraised value and any existing mortgages – and determines whether the loan-to-value ratio provides sufficient security. Most private lenders cap their exposure at 75% to 85% of the property's appraised value, ensuring a meaningful equity cushion.
Once approved, the mortgage is documented through a commitment letter outlining the rate, term, fees, and conditions. Your lawyer registers the mortgage on title, and funds are disbursed. The entire process from initial application to funding can be completed in one to two weeks for straightforward deals, or as quickly as three to five business days when urgency demands it.
Private First vs. Private Second Mortgage
Private lending is available in both first and second mortgage positions, and the choice between them depends on your existing mortgage structure.
A private first mortgage replaces your entire mortgage. This makes sense when your current lender won't renew, when you're purchasing a property and no institutional lender will approve the deal, or when consolidating the first mortgage and additional debt into a single private loan simplifies the structure.
A private second mortgage leaves your existing first mortgage intact and registers behind it. This is the preferred approach when your first mortgage carries a favourable rate you don't want to lose, when you need a smaller amount of additional capital, or when the prepayment penalty on breaking the first mortgage exceeds the cost of a second. Private second mortgages carry higher rates than private firsts because the lender sits in a subordinate position – repaid only after the first mortgage is satisfied.
Understanding Private Mortgage Costs
Private mortgages cost more than institutional lending. Transparency about these costs is essential so you can make a fully informed decision.
Interest rates on private mortgages exceed both A and B lender rates. The exact rate depends on the loan-to-value ratio, the property type, the complexity of the situation, and the specific lender. Lower LTV ratios – more equity securing the loan – generally produce better rates.
Lender fees of 2% to 4% of the mortgage amount are standard. On a $300,000 private mortgage, that translates to $6,000 to $12,000, typically deducted from the advance. A broker fee also applies, reflecting the work required to source, negotiate, and coordinate a private placement. Legal and appraisal fees are additional closing costs.
These costs are real and significant. But the question isn't whether private lending is expensive – it is. The question is whether the alternative is worse. Losing your home to power of sale, missing a purchase opportunity, or remaining trapped under high-interest consumer debt all carry costs that can far exceed a one-year private mortgage arrangement.
Building Your Exit Strategy
The single most important element of any private mortgage is the plan for getting out of it. Private mortgages are bridges, not destinations, and every deal Canadian Mortgage Services arranges includes a documented exit strategy.
The most common exit is credit rehabilitation. During the private mortgage term, you make every payment on time, maintain or establish revolving credit accounts with low utilization, and address any outstanding collections or errors on your credit report. After 12 months of consistent behaviour, many borrowers improve their scores enough to qualify for a B lender – dramatically reducing their interest rate and eliminating lender fees. After another 12 to 24 months at the B tier, transition to an A lender becomes realistic.
Selling the property is an alternative exit. If your Hamilton home has appreciated or if your financial circumstances suggest that a different housing arrangement is more appropriate, selling repays the private mortgage and frees your remaining equity for a fresh start.
Refinancing with an institutional lender at renewal – once income documentation has been organized, credit has improved, or the disqualifying event has aged sufficiently – is the exit that most borrowers target. Your broker monitors your progress throughout the term and initiates the transition as soon as the timing is right.
Private Lending in Hamilton's Market
Hamilton's property values create workable equity scenarios for private lending. A homeowner in a $780,000 detached home with a $500,000 first mortgage carries approximately $280,000 in equity – more than enough security for most private lenders. Even at the condo level, a $450,000 unit with a $280,000 mortgage provides $170,000 in equity, sufficient for either a private first or second mortgage depending on the capital needed.
Hamilton's market also supports private lending through its diverse economy. The city's employment base – anchored by Hamilton Health Sciences, McMaster University, ArcelorMittal Dofasco, and a growing technology sector – provides borrowers with realistic paths to income stabilization that make exit strategies credible. A private lender evaluating a Hamilton file sees not only property equity but also a local economy that supports eventual repayment through conventional channels.
Getting Started
Contact Canadian Mortgage Services for a confidential assessment. We review your property, your financial situation, and the reason conventional lending hasn't worked. If private lending is the right fit, we source terms from our network of vetted private lenders and present you with options – including the complete cost picture and a detailed exit plan. If private lending isn't the right tool, we'll tell you that too and suggest the path that serves you best.
Since 1988, we've helped borrowers across the GTA navigate every type of mortgage situation. Our FSRA-licensed team understands private lending thoroughly – the costs, the benefits, and the critical importance of never treating a short-term product as a long-term solution. Contact us to explore your options.
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I had a fantastic experience working with Neil Drepaul. He helped me navigate the entire mortgage process from start to finish with incredible professionalism. What really stood out was his kindness and patience; no matter how many questions I had, he took the time to answer every single one thoroughly.
It would be an understatement to say that Neil went above and beyond in guiding my family through the journey to homeownership. He was always available to inform, support, and present us with the best options possible.
Neil was fantastic, he went above and beyond to help us get our mortgage. He was swift with communication and made the process easy.
Privately Funded Mortgages in Hamilton: your questions.
When does a private mortgage make sense for Hamilton homeowners?
Looking for the bigger picture? See our complete guide to Private Mortgages.
How do private mortgage rates compare to bank rates?
Can I get a private first mortgage or only a second mortgage?
What is the exit strategy from a private mortgage?
How quickly can a private mortgage close in Hamilton?
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Looking for the bigger picture? See our complete guide to Private Mortgages.