Canada will loosen the rules on mortgages to allow first-time buyers to take out 30-year loans when they purchase newly-built homes.
The change will come into effect on Aug. 1, Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland said Thursday. It’s a move that’s primarily aimed at younger voters who have been squeezed by soaring housing prices and high interest rates.
“First-time homebuyers will now have 30 years to pay off their mortgage instead of 25,” Freeland said in Toronto. “That translates to lower monthly payments so more younger Canadians can afford to pay that monthly mortgage on a new home.”
Canada is dealing with a huge shortage of homes to accommodate its rapidly growing population. Housing starts rose in the early part of the COVID-19 pandemic, but construction activity softened when interest rates began to rise. The government’s housing agency has estimated that at the current pace of activity, by 2030 Canada will be millions of homes short of what is needed to create a more affordable market.
Canada saw housing starts of an annualized 253,468 units in February, the most in five months, according to Canada Mortgage & Housing Corp. But the population grew by about 1.3 million last year.
The slow pace of building has heaped pressure on Justin Trudeau’s government to try to boost development. The prime minister hinted last week that mortgage reforms were coming in Freeland’s April 16 budget.
Canada briefly experimented nearly two decades ago with allowing insured mortgages as long as 40 years, but reversed course when poor mortgage underwriting by U.S. lenders led to cascading defaults that contributed to the global financial crisis in 2008.
The current 25-year limit on amortizations applies to mortgages where default
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