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If you've received a power of sale notice, call me directly.

Timing matters. The faster we can put solutions in place, the more options you have. Call (289) 452-0927 — I'll pick up, or get back to you within the hour.

First, a deep breath. Power of sale is stressful and time-sensitive, but it's a procedure with rules, not a verdict. Most of the GTA homeowners who reach me at this stage still have options, and the lenders involved are people who answer phones. My job is to know which lender to call, in what order, with what story, and to handle the conversation so you can focus on the rest of your life. Below is what's actually happening, what we can do about it, and how the timeline really works in Ontario.

What's actually happening, in plain language

Power of sale is the Ontario lender's right to sell your home on the open market to recover what's owed on the mortgage. It's distinct from foreclosure (which transfers title to the lender) and it leaves you with any equity remaining after the mortgage, penalties, legal fees, and costs are paid. If the sale doesn't cover everything owed, you may still be on the hook for the shortfall, which is why doing nothing is the worst option.

The Ontario timeline, stage by stage

Here's the sequence from missed payment to lender sale, with the windows where action still saves the home and the windows where it doesn't.

Stage What it means Can we still fix it?
1. One to three missed payments Phone calls and letters from the lender's collections team. No formal action yet. Yes, easily. A-lender options often still on the table.
2. Formal default (90+ days) Statement of Claim and Notice of Sale under Mortgage are served. A 35 to 45 day cure window opens. Yes. This is the critical window. B-lender or private refinance most common.
3. Statutory cooling (redemption) period Your statutory right to redeem the mortgage by paying full arrears plus legal costs. Yes, but tighter timeline. Move fast.
4. Statement of Defense (optional) Filing pushes the matter into the court system, buying more time to arrange financing. Yes, with a real estate lawyer's help. Can buy weeks or months.
5. Court application by lender Lender applies for judgment and possession order from Ontario courts. Possible but expensive. Options narrowing fast.
6. Judgment granted Court issues possession order to lender. Very limited. Usually only sale-with-soft-landing remains.
7. Sheriff eviction and lender sale Sheriff executes possession order, lender lists and sells. No. Game over.

The honest summary: stages 1 through 4 are where the real work happens. By stage 5 the math gets ugly. By stage 7 it's done. Every week you can move us up the table is real money saved and real options preserved.

The three real exits, ranked by typical fit

Three paths get most of the homeowners I see out of a power of sale situation. Which one applies depends on the equity in the home, the credit profile, and how much of the timeline above has already elapsed. We figure out which fits in the first phone call.

Exit 1: Private or B-lender refinance to pay out the existing lender

The most common solution when there's meaningful GTA equity (typically 15 to 20 percent or more clear). The new lender pays out the existing one, including all arrears, accrued interest, prepayment penalty, and accumulated legal fees, in a single closing. The power of sale process stops cold. Rates on private and B-lender money are higher than A-lender pricing, but they're a fraction of what a forced lender sale would cost you in lost equity, and the refinance is a stopgap, not a permanent home. Typical timeline back to A-lender pricing after stabilization: twelve to eighteen months.

Exit 2: Second mortgage to cure the arrears

If your regular monthly payments are still affordable but you fell behind during a temporary crisis (a job gap, a medical emergency, a tax bill), a second mortgage or bridge loan can cover just the arrears and legal fees, stopping the process without restructuring your whole first mortgage. This preserves the existing rate (especially valuable if you locked in low) and is cheaper overall than a full refinance. Best fit when the underlying mortgage was healthy before the disruption hit.

Exit 3: Controlled sale, on your terms instead of the lender's

When the math truly doesn't work, the third exit is selling the home yourself, on the open market, on a timeline you control, before the lender does it for you. You'll typically net meaningfully more from a market sale than a forced lender sale, because the lender's mandate is to recover the debt, not to maximize your equity. You also keep control over timing, closing date, and where you go next. This is the hardest conversation, but it's the right one when the others don't pencil. I'll lay out the comparison honestly and let you decide.

Equity is everything (a typical Scarborough scenario)

Take a Scarborough homeowner whose detached is worth $1,050,000 with a $410,000 first mortgage in arrears. Even with a few months of arrears, penalties, and legal fees rolled in, that's well over $500,000 in real equity. With that much cushion, a private or B-lender refinance is straightforward, the existing lender gets paid out, the power of sale process stops, and we have time to plan the path back to A-lender pricing. If you're underwater or close to it, options narrow but still exist. The first call I make is always to figure out which scenario you're in.

Pull these documents before we talk (and call anyway if you can't)

The faster I have these, the faster the call moves from triage to action. But genuinely, if you don't have them all, just call. We'll start with what you know.

  • Any Notice of Sale, Statement of Claim, or other formal lender notice
  • Your most recent mortgage statement: lender name, current balance, arrears amount
  • Your property address and a rough estimate of what it would sell for today
  • Approximate monthly income from each source, plus a list of other debts (cards, lines of credit, vehicle loans)

If you have access to them, the full document checklist covers everything we'll eventually need. We don't need it all on day one.

Four things to avoid right now

The mistakes that turn a stressful situation into a much worse one. None of these are exotic. All of them happen.

  • Don't go silent on the lender's notice. Every day the file ages is a day options narrow. The lender's collections team becomes more aggressive on a quiet file, not less.
  • Don't try to catch up on credit cards. Maxing out remaining credit to make the missed mortgage payments feels productive but it makes the eventual refinance harder, because high credit utilization tanks your score precisely when we need it intact.
  • Don't engage with anyone offering "guaranteed" rescue or upfront-fee solutions. Scammers target distressed homeowners in the GTA aggressively. A licensed mortgage broker doesn't charge you up front. If someone is asking for a fee before any mortgage closes, walk away.
  • Don't sign anything without a real estate lawyer's eyes on it. Including from your existing lender. I work with several Toronto real estate lawyers who specialize in this kind of file and can review documents within 24 hours.

Questions clients ask in their first call

I haven't received a notice yet but I'm two payments behind. What do I do?
Call me before the lender does. The cleanest fix at this stage is usually a refinance that catches up the arrears and gives you breathing room, before the file gets transferred to the lender's collections team and a Statement of Claim becomes the next move. The earlier we engage, the more A-lender (or near-A) options stay on the table. Wait three more months and the menu shrinks.
I just got a Notice of Sale. How much time do I have, and what's the first thing to do?
In Ontario, you typically have 35 to 45 days from the date of the Notice to cure the default (pay arrears and legal costs). That's your window. The first thing to do is gather the Notice, your most recent mortgage statement, and a rough sense of your home's current value, then call me. I'll triage on the phone and tell you which path is realistic before any paperwork starts.
My credit took a serious hit. Is refinance even possible?
Yes. The lender pool narrows from A-lenders to B-lenders or private lenders, and the rate is higher and the LTV limit tighter, but a path almost always exists. The goal at this point isn't pretty pricing, it's stopping the active bleeding. Once stabilized at the higher rate, we work the credit-rebuild plan over the next twelve to eighteen months and then refinance back into A-lender pricing at the next renewal. Same broker for both moves.
Does stopping the power of sale show up on my credit, and for how long?
The missed payments leading up to it already showed up; that damage is done. Stopping the process and refinancing actually starts the repair process, because the new mortgage replaces the delinquent one and you're back to making on-time payments. The long-tail damage comes from a completed power of sale, which stays on your credit file for six to seven years and makes the next mortgage application materially harder. Resolving before that point is the whole game.
What does this cost me, dollar-by-dollar?
My broker fee is paid by the new lender at closing, not by you. Where the costs do show up: legal fees for the new mortgage (usually $1,500 to $2,500), appraisal ($400 to $600), the new lender's setup or commitment fee (varies), and any legal fees the existing lender is owed for the work they've already done on the power of sale file. These are typically rolled into the new mortgage so they don't come out of pocket on closing day. I disclose every dollar in writing before you commit, so there are no surprises in the closing statement.

The earlier you call, the more options stay alive

If you've missed a payment, even one, and you can see it heading toward more, that's the call to make. Not at the Notice of Sale, not after the cure window opens. Now. Pick up the phone. We'll triage on the call and have a plan inside the same conversation.

Call (289) 452-0927 Or Send a Message