Why private mortgages can make financial sense for owner-occupied homes—when used properly
Let’s get this out of the way right up front: private mortgages are expensive. Not just the rate—everything around them.
You’re usually looking at higher interest, lender fees, broker fees, appraisal costs, legal fees, and often tougher payout terms if you exit early. On paper, it can feel like highway robbery. And in many cases, it would be… if you stayed too long or used it for the wrong reason.
But here’s the nuance most people miss:
Cost is contextual. A private mortgage can be cheaper than waiting, rushing, or doing nothing.
In very specific owner-occupied scenarios, private financing—despite its eye-watering sticker price—can actually preserve more equity, avoid bigger losses, and produce a better financial outcome than a “cheaper” mortgage that arrives too late.
Let’s walk through when that happens.
Topic I’ll Cover in This Article
The True Cost of a Private Mortgage (Beyond the Rate)
Bridge Financing When Your Old Home Hasn’t Sold
Quick Closings on Time-Sensitive Deals
Credit or Income Constraints: Buying Now vs. Waiting
Avoiding Foreclosure and Costly Debt Spirals
A Real-World Story: Expensive Money, Cheap Outcome
How Realtors and Homeowners Can Use This Strategically
How I Help Clients Use Private Mortgages the Right Way
The True Cost of a Private Mortgage (Beyond the Rate)
When people hear “private mortgage,” they fixate on the 10–15% interest rate. That’s only part of the story.
The real cost usually includes:
- Lender fees (often 2–5%)
- Broker fees (commonly 1–3%)
- Appraisal costs (higher scrutiny, higher price)
- Legal fees (sometimes for two lawyers)
- Minimum interest periods or payout penalties
All in, a private mortgage can easily cost tens of thousands of dollars over a short period.
Which is exactly why it should never be used casually.
But—and this matters—sometimes the alternative costs more.
Bridge Financing When Your Old Home Hasn’t Sold
This is one of the clearest examples of private money being the cheaper option.
You find your next home. It’s perfect. You’re ready. But your current home hasn’t sold yet.
Banks often refuse bridge financing unless your existing home is firmly sold. Even with strong credit and income, policy is policy.
Now you’re stuck with three bad options:
- Walk away from the new home
- Rush-sell your current home
- Miss the market timing entirely
Or one expensive—but strategic—option:
- Use a short-term private bridge mortgage
Yes, paying 10–15% interest plus fees hurts. But compare that to dropping your sale price by $50,000 just to force a quick sale. Suddenly, the private loan looks cheap.
With a clear exit—selling the old home—the interest for a few months becomes a controlled cost, not a permanent mistake.
Quick Closings on Time-Sensitive Deals
Sometimes the deal isn’t just good—it’s fleeting.
Estate sales, power-of-sale listings, and distressed sellers often demand fast, firm closings. Banks don’t move fast. Alternative lenders still need time.
Private lenders can fund in days, not weeks.
Here’s the real math:
- Pay a few months of high interest
- Or lose a property priced tens of thousands below market
Paying private interest for 90 days can be far cheaper than missing a rare opportunity altogether. Once the deal closes, you refinance into cheaper money and move on.
A lower rate on a house you didn’t get is still a loss.
Credit or Income Constraints: Buying Now vs. Waiting
This one trips up a lot of Canadians.
You will qualify for a prime mortgage… just not yet.
Maybe you’re:
- Recently self-employed
- Recovering from a consumer proposal
- Dealing with bruised credit after a life event
The advice you often hear is: “Wait a year or two.”
But waiting has a cost:
- Rising home prices
- Higher future rates
- Rent paid with zero equity
- Lost time in the market
A private mortgage—used temporarily—can act as a bridge to prime, not a dead end. If home values rise even modestly, the appreciation alone can outweigh the extra interest you paid.
The key is intention: this only works if there’s a defined exit.
Avoiding Foreclosure and Costly Debt Spirals
This is where private mortgages stop being theoretical and start being protective.
If you’re facing:
- Mortgage arrears
- Power-of-sale risk
- Multiple 19–29% credit card balances
A private second mortgage can stabilize the situation.
Yes, the rate is high. But compare it to:
- Legal fees
- Distress sale discounts
- Lost equity
- Credit destruction
Interest that keeps you in your home is often cheaper than losing the home altogether.
Used properly, private money buys time, and time is what allows recovery.
A Real-World Story: Expensive Money, Cheap Outcome
A homeowner going through a separation needed to refinance quickly. Credit had taken a hit. Banks said no.
Option one: sell under pressure.
Option two: private mortgage for 12 months.
They chose private financing. It cost real money—no denying it. But during that year:
- Credit improved
- Income stabilized
- The market moved up
Eighteen months later, they refinanced into prime.
Had they sold when they felt forced, the equity loss would have dwarfed the private mortgage costs.
Expensive money. Cheap outcome.
How Realtors and Homeowners Can Use This Strategically
For Realtors
- Recognize when speed matters more than rate
- Prevent panic-driven price reductions
- Keep deals alive that banks would kill
For Homeowners
- Compare total outcomes, not just interest rates
- Ask “what does waiting cost me?”
- Treat private mortgages as tools, not solutions
Private lending isn’t reckless when it’s planned. It’s reckless when it’s misunderstood.
How I Help Clients Use Private Mortgages the Right Way
This is where professional guidance matters.
When private financing is on the table, my role is to:
- Confirm it’s truly the least bad option
- Structure the shortest, cleanest term possible
- Control fees
- Protect the exit strategy before you sign
- Coordinate the move back to cheaper money
Private mortgages should solve a specific problem, for a specific period, with a specific plan.
Allen’s Final Thoughts
Private mortgages aren’t cheap. They’re not meant to be.
But neither are rushed sales, missed opportunities, foreclosures, or years stuck on the sidelines waiting for the “perfect” approval.
Used improperly, private lending can hurt.
Used intentionally, it can save equity, preserve options, and create better outcomes.
The goal is never to stay in private money.
The goal is to use it briefly, deliberately, and exit cleanly.
And that’s exactly where I come in—to help you decide whether private financing is a mistake… or the smartest move you can make in the moment.

