Close X
Thursday, September 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

Many Canadians Would Struggle If Mortgage Payments Grew Slightly: Poll

Darpan News Desk, 16 Jun, 2015 11:48 AM
  • Many Canadians Would Struggle If Mortgage Payments Grew Slightly: Poll
TORONTO — A survey by Manulife Bank of Canada says nearly half of Canadian homeowners are taking steps to whittle down their mortgage debt, but many would be in trouble if their monthly payments grew even slightly.
 
Manulife says 18 per cent of homeowners made extra lump-sum payments towards their mortgages in the past year, while 17 per cent increased their regular payments. Another five per cent of respondents did both.
 
In total, 40 per cent of the homeowners polled made extra mortgage payments during the past year, while 60 per cent did not.
 
The average amount of additional mortgage payments was $6,300.
 
Manulife Bank of Canada's president and CEO Rick Lunny said it's encouraging that many homeowners are taking steps to reduce their mortgage debt.
 
However, the survey also found that more than a third of homeowners polled would face financial hardship if their mortgage payments increased by just 10 per cent.
 
"Having your payments go up 10 per cent sounds like a lot, but if you have a $200,000 mortgage and interest rates go up one per cent, that's a 10 per cent increase in your mortgage payments," Lunny said. "So there's not much room here for those people."
 
Meanwhile, another 15 per cent of homeowners said they couldn't handle any increases at all in their mortgage payments.
 
"It's inevitable that interest rates will go up, because they're at historical lows and have been for some time," Lunny said.
 
However, Lunny noted that 79 per cent of those polled said they would be willing to cut back on discretionary spending, such as eating out, in order to get out of debt — an indication that there is more wiggle room in their budgets than they may realize.
 
"These people probably, better than they think, would have the ability to make their mortgage payments, but it would have an impact on their lifestyle," Lunny said.
 
Manulife polled 2,372 Canadian homeowners in all provinces between Feb. 10 and 27. Respondents were all between the ages of 20 and 59 and had a minimum household income of $50,000.
 
The polling industry's professional body, the Marketing Research and Intelligence Association, says online surveys cannot be assigned a margin of error because they do not randomly sample the population.
 
The Manulife survey found that Canadian homeowners are carrying an average of $190,000 in mortgage debt, with Albertans carrying the heaviest debt load — an average of $242,300.
 
That's followed by $217,300 in British Columbia, $196,900 in Manitoba and Saskatchewan and $193,000 in Ontario.
 
Atlantic Canada has the lowest average mortgage debt, at $127,300.

MORE National ARTICLES

Stephen Harper Lands In Kyiv Amid Tension As Ukraine Pushes Canada To Push G7

Stephen Harper Lands In Kyiv Amid Tension As Ukraine Pushes Canada To Push G7
KYIV, Ukraine — Stephen Harper arrived in Kyiv early Saturday as Ukraine's envoy urged the prime minister to push his fellow G7 leaders into a strong political stand against the latest Russian aggression.

Stephen Harper Lands In Kyiv Amid Tension As Ukraine Pushes Canada To Push G7

Food Safety Agency Working With Game Farmers To Develop Rules Against Disease

Food Safety Agency Working With Game Farmers To Develop Rules Against Disease
EDMONTON — Canada's food safety watchdog says it is developing rules with people who raise elk and deer on commercial farms to guard against animal diseases.

Food Safety Agency Working With Game Farmers To Develop Rules Against Disease

Tim Hortons Controversy Shows The Pros, Cons Of Brand Association: Experts

TORONTO — Tim Hortons is getting a crash course in brand association as the company tries to extinguish the fracas over its decision to pull ads for pipeline giant Enbridge.

Tim Hortons Controversy Shows The Pros, Cons Of Brand Association: Experts

Lying G20 Officer Who Choked, Arrested Compliant Man Demoted To Constable

Lying G20 Officer Who Choked, Arrested Compliant Man Demoted To Constable
TORONTO — A police sergeant who choked a compliant man he arrested illegally at the G20 summit five years ago and then lied about it was handed a two-month demotion to constable Friday.

Lying G20 Officer Who Choked, Arrested Compliant Man Demoted To Constable

Justin Levasseur Charged With Second-Degree Murder Of 79-Year-Old Charan Dhandwar In New Westminster

Justin Levasseur Charged With Second-Degree Murder Of 79-Year-Old Charan Dhandwar In New Westminster
A 23-year-old man has been charged with second-degree murder in the attack of an elderly woman while she was out for a walk in New Westminster, B.C.

Justin Levasseur Charged With Second-Degree Murder Of 79-Year-Old Charan Dhandwar In New Westminster

Police Call For Witnesses To Sea-to-Sky Highway Crash That Killed Cyclists, Passenger

Police Call For Witnesses To Sea-to-Sky Highway Crash That Killed Cyclists, Passenger
RCMP are appealing to the occupants of a dark or black SUV who may have witnessed an erratic driver on the Sea-to-Sky Highway near Lillooet, B.C., before three people were killed in a crash.

Police Call For Witnesses To Sea-to-Sky Highway Crash That Killed Cyclists, Passenger