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Credit Bands Explained

by | January 24, 2026

… How Banks, Alternative Lenders, and Private Mortgages Really Decide Your Fate

If you’ve ever looked at your credit score and thought, “I’m close enough — this should work,” you’re thinking like a consumer, not like a lender. And that disconnect is where a lot of Canadians get burned.

In mortgage lending, credit isn’t judged on a smooth curve. It’s assessed in bands — hard ranges that trigger different rules, different rates, and sometimes completely different lenders. Those bands determine whether you’re approved or declined, insured or uninsured, and whether your mortgage comes from a major bank, an alternative lender, or a private lender.

The tricky part? Most borrowers never see those bands until it’s too late.

This article pulls back the curtain. We’ll walk through real numbers, how banks, alternative lenders, and private lenders actually think about credit, and why being “a few points off” can cost you tens of thousands of dollars over time.

What I’ll Cover

What credit bands really are and why lenders use them

How Canadian banks structure credit bands

Insured vs uninsured mortgage cutoffs and why they matter

Where alternative lenders fit — and their credit bands

How private lenders look at credit very differently

Why small score gaps create big rate differences

An Example

How I help clients navigate credit bands across all lender types

Most people think credit scores behave like volume knobs — turn it up a bit, things improve; turn it down a bit, things worsen.

Lenders don’t see it that way.

They see zones. Each zone has:

  • Minimum credit requirements
  • Maximum risk tolerance
  • Preset pricing rules

As long as you’re inside the zone, you’re fine. Step outside it, and the entire lending framework changes. Not gradually — instantly.

That’s a credit band.

How Canadian Banks Use Credit Bands

Canada’s major banks — TD Canada Trust, RBC, Scotiabank, BMO, and CIBC — don’t publish their exact internal cutoffs, but in practice their underwriting bands tend to cluster closely.

Typical Bank Credit Bands (Industry Norms)

  • 760+
    Top-tier borrowers. Best pricing, maximum flexibility, fastest approvals.
  • 720–759
    Strong borrowers. Excellent rates, broad lender choice.
  • 680–719
    Acceptable for uninsured mortgages at most banks, but with less forgiveness.
  • 600–679
    Commonly acceptable for insured mortgages, but often outside bank uninsured guidelines.
  • Below 600
    Typically outside prime bank lending altogether.

These aren’t guarantees — they’re decision thresholds. And the closer you are to the bottom of a band, the less flexibility the bank has.

Insured vs Uninsured: The Most Important Credit Band Line

This is where most borrowers feel the shock.

Insured Mortgages (Less Than 20% Down)

  • Common minimum credit score: ~600
  • Risk is backstopped by mortgage default insurance
  • Banks can be more forgiving
  • Rates are often lower because risk is shared

Uninsured Mortgages (20%+ Down)

  • Common minimum credit score: ~680
  • No insurance safety net
  • Bank carries 100% of the risk
  • Credit standards tighten sharply

If your lender-grade score comes in at 679 instead of 681, the bank doesn’t see “almost the same.” It sees a different risk bucket.

Why Small Score Differences Create Big Rate Gaps

Inside a band, a 10–15 point swing might not matter at all.

Cross a boundary, and you may:

  • Lose access to certain bank products
  • See rate premiums of 0.30%–1.00%
  • Be pushed into insured, alternative, or private lending
  • Face tighter ratios and stricter conditions

Mortgage underwriting isn’t forgiving at the edges. It’s binary.

Where Alternative (B-Lenders) Fit In

When borrowers fall outside bank credit bands, alternative lenders step in.

These include:

  • Monoline lenders
  • Trust companies
  • Some credit unions
  • Schedule B lenders

Typical Alternative Lender Credit Bands

  • 620–679
    Common sweet spot for alternative lending with reasonable rates.
  • 600–619
    Often workable with strong income, equity, or compensating factors.
  • Below 600
    Possible, but pricing and conditions escalate quickly.

Rates with alternative lenders are often 0.75%–2.00% higher than bank rates, and terms are usually shorter (1–3 years). But they serve a critical role: bridging borrowers back into bank bands.

How Private Lenders Look at Credit (Very Differently)

Private lenders don’t really use credit bands the same way banks do.

They focus on:

  • Equity
  • Exit strategy
  • Property value
  • Marketability

Credit scores still matter — but they’re not the primary decision driver.

Typical Private Lending Parameters

  • Credit score: often irrelevant below a certain point
  • Rates: commonly 8%–12%+
  • Fees: 1%–4% upfront
  • Terms: usually 6–24 months

Private lending isn’t “bad lending.” It’s situational lending — best used intentionally, not accidentally.

An Example

Two buyers — Sarah and Mark — apply for mortgages on similar homes.

  • Purchase price: $750,000
  • Down payment: $150,000
  • Mortgage amount: $600,000

Sarah’s lender-grade score: 690
Mark’s lender-grade score: 665

Sarah qualifies for an uninsured bank mortgage at 5.19%.

Mark falls just outside the bank’s uninsured band. His options:

  • Insured mortgage at 5.59%
  • Alternative lender at 6.29%
  • Private lender at 9%+

That 25-point difference can mean:

  • $150–$400 more per month
  • $30,000–$100,000+ more over time
  • Or a completely different lending strategy

Mark didn’t suddenly become risky. He just crossed a band boundary.

For Clients

Treat credit bands like planning tools:

  • Avoid new credit before applying
  • Keep utilization under 30% (under 20% is better)
  • Let balances age
  • Build a buffer — don’t aim for the minimum

For Realtors

When a client says, “My credit is good,” ask:

“Good for which lender?”

Early mortgage conversations:

  • Prevent last-minute surprises
  • Protect closing timelines
  • Strengthen offers

How I Help Clients Navigate Credit Bands

I don’t just look at your score — I look at:

  • Which band you’re actually in
  • Which lenders fit that band
  • Whether bank, alternative, or private lending makes sense
  • How to move you up a band, not just get you approved

Sometimes the right move is a bank mortgage.
Sometimes it’s a short-term alternative solution.
Sometimes private lending is the smartest bridge.

The key is intentional structure, not panic decisions.

Allen’s Final Thoughts

Credit bands are the invisible lines that shape mortgage outcomes in Canada. They explain why bank-app scores can mislead, why “close enough” doesn’t count, and why two borrowers with similar numbers can end up on very different paths.

Banks, alternative lenders, and private lenders all play roles — but each operates in different bands, with different costs and expectations.

My job is to help you understand those bands before you apply, choose the right lane, and build a strategy that saves you money instead of surprises you.

If you’re not sure which band you’re in — or which lender type makes the most sense — that’s exactly where I can help.

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Allen Ehlert

Allen Ehlert

Allen Ehlert is a licensed mortgage agent. He has four university degrees, including two Masters degrees, and specializes in real estate finance, development, and investing. Allen Ehlert has decades of independent consulting experience for companies and governments, including the Ontario Real Estate Association, Deloitte, City of Toronto, Enbridge, and the Ministry of Finance.

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