Should You Keep the House After Divorce? What Your Lawyer Isn't Telling You

Sabina Bubber • July 10, 2026

One of the most emotionally charged decisions in any divorce is the question of the family home. For many people — especially parents — keeping the house feels like the right thing to do. It represents stability, continuity, and a sense that not everything has to change at once.


But wanting to keep the house and being able to keep it — financially and strategically — are two very different things.


In a recent episode of The Divorce Circle, host Sabeena Bubber, Mortgage Broker for Xeva Mortgage sat down with Luisa Hough, Mortgage Broker for Xeva Mortgage, to break down the realities of mortgage qualification during and after divorce. What emerged was a frank, practical conversation that every separating homeowner in Canada needs to hear.


Watch the full episode here: Should You Keep the House After Divorce?


The Emotional Trap: Treating a Financial Decision Like a Personal One

The desire to keep the family home is completely understandable. Parents want their children to stay in the same school, sleep in the same bedroom, and feel some sense of normalcy during an upheaval. But as both Sabeena and Luisa make clear in this episode, keeping the house must be treated as a business decision, not an emotional one.


Stretching your finances to hold onto a property you cannot comfortably afford can have consequences that ripple outward for years. It can prevent you from saving for retirement, building an emergency fund, or investing in your future. The question is never just "Can I qualify for this mortgage today?" — it is "What does my financial life look like in five, ten, or fifteen years if I take this on?"


The Critical Mistake: Signing Before Consulting a Mortgage Broker

Perhaps the most important piece of advice in the entire episode is this: consult a mortgage broker before you sign your separation agreement.


This is a step that is routinely skipped — and it can be catastrophic. Family lawyers are experts in the law, but they are not mortgage underwriters. A lawyer can draft a separation agreement that is perfectly sound from a legal standpoint but completely impossible to execute financially. If the agreement requires one spouse to buy out the other, but that spouse cannot actually qualify for the mortgage needed to do so, the entire agreement can unravel.


Knowing what you can qualify for — before you commit legally — is not just helpful. It is essential.


Why Your Bank May Not Be the Right Answer

When people think about getting a mortgage after divorce, they typically think about going to their bank. But as Luisa explains, traditional banks are highly transactional. They plug numbers into a system, and if those numbers do not fit neatly into their qualification criteria, the answer is often no — without any further exploration. The transactional approach can often miss the planning and guidance that a person may require on making the right decisions, understanding affordability, planning beyond the transaction and setting new goals for the future. This is the role that Sabeena provides as a mortgage broker.


This is a significant problem for divorcing individuals, who frequently have financial profiles that do not fit the standard mold:

  • Child support and spousal support as income: Traditional banks generally will not use child support as qualifying income if the child will reach the age of majority within the 5-year mortgage term. In British Columbia, for example, where the age of majority is 19, a bank will not count child support for a 15-year-old child.
  • Income ratios: Most traditional lenders require that at least 30% of a borrower's household income comes from an outside employment source — meaning you cannot rely solely on support payments to qualify.
  • Self-employed borrowers: If you are self-employed and have optimized your tax returns to minimize what you owe, your stated income on paper may not reflect your actual financial capacity.


A mortgage broker, by contrast, looks at your entire financial picture — your investments, your retirement assets, your business income, your long-term goals — and finds the lender and product that actually fits your life.


The Power of Alternative Lenders

One of the most valuable parts of this episode is the honest, myth-busting conversation about alternative lenders — sometimes called B-lenders.


Alternative lenders carry an undeserved stigma. Many people associate them with bad credit or financial desperation. In reality, they are regulated financial institutions that simply use more flexible income qualification criteria. For divorcing individuals and self-employed borrowers, this flexibility can be transformative.


Luisa shared a compelling real-world example: a self-employed borrower who uses an alternative lender might pay slightly more in interest — roughly $280 to $300 more per month, or approximately $3,600 per year. But by qualifying through an alternative lender rather than a traditional bank, that borrower can keep money inside their corporation rather than pulling it out as personal income. The tax savings from doing so can reach up to $50,000 per year — making the slightly higher mortgage rate an extraordinarily sound financial decision.


Alternative lenders can also accept non-traditional income sources, including foster care income and billet income, which traditional banks will not consider. For many clients, the right alternative lender is not a last resort — it is the smartest path forward.


Protecting Your Credit During a Separation

Divorce creates a period of financial vulnerability that many people do not anticipate. One of the most important — and most overlooked — risks is what happens to a joint mortgage when one spouse moves out.


If a vindictive or financially irresponsible ex-spouse stops making mortgage payments after moving out, both parties' credit scores take the hit. Even the innocent party — the one who had nothing to do with the missed payments — can find themselves unable to qualify for a new mortgage as a result.


The moment you separate, Luisa and Sabeena advise taking two immediate steps:

  1. Separate your joint credit cards and open individual bank accounts. This protects your financial independence and prevents your ex-spouse's financial decisions from affecting your credit.
  2. Monitor joint mortgage payments closely. If you are not the one making the payments, verify that they are being made — every month.


A Note on Separation Agreements and AI

With the rise of AI tools, some separating couples are tempted to use them to draft separation agreements in order to save on legal fees. This episode offers a clear caution: do not use AI to draft a separation agreement.


AI-generated documents lack the legal nuance that lenders require. A separation agreement that a lender will not accept is not a separation agreement at all — it is a document that will delay and potentially derail your ability to move forward financially.


If the cost of a family lawyer ($250 - $700 per hour) feels prohibitive, consider working with a divorce coach or mediator to work through the financial realities first. This can significantly reduce the time you spend with a lawyer and bring the overall cost down considerably. Not consulting a lawyer could cost you hundreds of thousands if a separation agreement gets revisited in the future due to lack of proper counsel.


Key Takeaways

Topic What You Need to Know
Consult a broker first Always speak to a mortgage broker before signing a separation agreement
Emotional vs. financial decisions Keeping the house must be a business decision, not an emotional one
Traditional banks have limits Support income, self-employment, and non-standard profiles often require a broker
Alternative lenders are strategic B-lenders offer flexibility and can result in significant tax savings for self- employed borrowers
Protect your credit Separate finances immediately and monitor joint mortgage payments
Avoid AI for legal documents AI-drafted separation agreements are not accepted by lenders
Long-term planning matters Think 5, 10, and 15 years ahead — not just the immediate aftermath

Ready to Understand Your Mortgage Options?

Whether you are in the early stages of a separation, working through a settlement, or rebuilding after a divorce, your mortgage situation deserves expert attention. Every file is different, and the right strategy for you depends on your full financial picture — not just what a bank's system says.


Connect with Sabeena Bubber at sabeenabubber.ca for a confidential, no-obligation conversation about your options. Together, we can build a plan that works for your life — not just today, but for the years ahead. For more articles and episodes from the Divorce Circle, please visit at www.divorcecircle.ca

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