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How Maternity Leave Impacts Your Mortgage

by | October 16, 2025

… Babies, Bottles, and Bank Commitments

If you’re thinking about buying a home, refinancing, or renewing your mortgage and there’s a baby on the horizon, you might be wondering how maternity or paternity leave fits into the picture. The truth? Lenders love stability — and nothing signals “change” quite like stepping away from your full-time salary to focus on your family, even temporarily.

But don’t worry. Having a baby doesn’t mean you can’t have a mortgage. You just need to understand how lenders view maternity leave so you can plan ahead and avoid last-minute surprises.

In this article, I’m going to walk you through what you need to know about maternity leave, mortgage pre-approvals, commitments, and how to navigate it all without losing your mind.

Here’s what I’ll cover:

Maternity Leave and Mortgage Pre-Approval

Maternity Leave and Mortgage Commitment

What Lenders Need to See from You

Real-World Examples: Why Timing and Communication Matter

How I Can Help: Planning Your Mortgage Around Your Growing Family

Maternity Leave and Mortgage Pre-Approval

When you apply for a mortgage pre-approval, lenders base your borrowing power on your current income. If you’re already on maternity leave (or about to go on leave and disclose it), your reduced income — typically Employment Insurance (EI) or an employer top-up — is what lenders will use unless we take steps to show otherwise.

If you’re returning to work after leave, a letter from your employer confirming:

  • Your return-to-work date
  • Your guaranteed salary
  • Your position remains secure

…will allow lenders to use your full, future income for the pre-approval, even if you’re not back at work yet.

If you don’t disclose that leave is coming and your income situation changes later, it can complicate things mid-process — so honesty really is the best policy.

Maternity Leave and Mortgage Commitment

Here’s where things get serious:
A pre-approval isn’t a firm commitment. A mortgage commitment — the formal approval — is when lenders get extra cautious.

Most mortgage commitments include a condition like:

“You must notify us of any material change to your income or employment before funding.”

If you go on leave after receiving your commitment, but before funding, the lender might re-evaluate your file.
If you can provide a return-to-work letter confirming your income and date of return, most lenders will proceed without issue.

If you can’t provide this, or if your return-to-work plans are uncertain, they might adjust your approval, lower your amount, or in extreme cases, withdraw the commitment altogether.

What Lenders Need to See from You

If you’re planning to buy or refinance during maternity leave, be prepared with:

  • A detailed employer letter confirming your return and salary.
  • Confirmation of your EI or employer top-up income.
  • Proof of savings to cover payments during your leave, if needed.
  • Full disclosure of household income (spouse’s income, rental income, etc.).

The more clarity you provide upfront, the smoother the approval process.

Real-World Examples

Meet Sophie and Mark — The Pre-Approval Surprise

Sophie and Mark got pre-approved before Sophie’s maternity leave started. They didn’t mention the upcoming leave, thinking it wasn’t relevant. By the time they found a home, Sophie was receiving EI, and the lender re-ran their numbers at commitment stage. Their borrowing power dropped.

Had they told me earlier, I could’ve secured a lender who would accept Sophie’s return-to-work income upfront with a proper letter. Instead, they had to settle for a smaller home than planned.

How to Put This Into Practice

  • Communicate openly with your mortgage agent.
  • Get your paperwork organized early.
  • Understand timing — buying during maternity leave can work, but needs planning.
  • Be flexible on budget if your income is temporarily reduced.

How I Can Help: Planning Your Mortgage Around Your Growing Family

My job isn’t just to get you a mortgage — it’s to help you plan strategically around real-life events like parental leave. I’ll help by:

  • Reviewing your income now and post-leave
  • Guiding you to lenders who are flexible and parent-friendly
  • Ensuring your approval is built around your actual situation, not just what looks good on paper
  • Coordinating with your realtor so everyone’s on the same page

Your growing family deserves a home and a mortgage that fit your future, not just today.

Allen’s Final Thoughts

Babies change everything — and so does maternity leave when it comes to your mortgage. The good news is, with the right planning and the right advice, you can absolutely buy a home, refinance, or renew without stress during this exciting chapter.

It’s all about timing, transparency, and having the right team behind you. If you’re a parent-to-be, a realtor working with young families, or just curious how this all fits together, let’s chat.

I’ll make sure your mortgage is one less thing to worry about while you focus on what really matters.

Reach out anytime — I’m here to 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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