- Apr 16
Using Home Equity to Pay CRA Debt
- Patricia McKean
- 0 comments
If you’re staring at a growing balance with the CRA and wondering how it got this far, you’re not alone. We sit with a lot of Alberta homeowners who started with a manageable tax bill that quietly snowballed through interest, penalties, and constant follow-ups. As a team, we help clients step back, look at the full picture, and build a plan that actually stops the bleeding.
The hard part isn’t just the money — it’s the stress. The letters keep coming, the calls don’t stop, and it starts to feel like you’re always behind.
What we’ll walk through:
Why CRA debt grows so fast
How using home equity actually works
The real cost comparison (CRA vs mortgage rates)
A practical Alberta case study
Common questions we hear
Why CRA Debt Gets Expensive Quickly
CRA debt is one of the most aggressive types of debt in Canada.
Interest compounds daily, and penalties stack on top. Unlike a credit card or loan, there’s very little flexibility once you fall behind.
Let’s keep this simple:
CRA interest can easily sit around 8–10%+ (and it changes quarterly)
Late filing penalties can add 5% upfront + 1% per month
So if you owe $40,000 and don’t deal with it quickly, that number doesn’t stay $40,000 for long.
And the bigger issue? CRA doesn’t wait.
They can:
Garnish wages
Freeze bank accounts
Place liens on your home
This is why timing matters more than anything.
How Using Home Equity to Pay CRA Debt Works
If you own a home in Alberta, you may have built up equity — even if you bought recently.
Equity is simply:
Home value – mortgage balance
We can use that equity through:
A refinance
A second mortgage
A home equity line of credit (HELOC)
The goal is straightforward:
Replace high-interest, high-pressure CRA debt with structured, lower-interest mortgage debt.
Simple Example
Let’s say:
CRA debt = $40,000 at ~9%
Monthly payment (informal or partial) = $800+ and still growing
Now compare that to rolling it into a mortgage:
$40,000 added to a mortgage at ~5.5%
Amortized over 25 years
Monthly cost ≈ $245–$260/month
That’s a huge difference in:
Cash flow
Stress
Total interest trajectory
Why This Strategy Saves More Than Just Interest
Most people focus on the rate — but the real benefit is control.
When CRA is involved:
Payments are unpredictable
Pressure is constant
There’s no long-term structure
When we move that debt into a mortgage:
Payments are fixed
Interest is lower
You regain breathing room
And just as important — the calls and letters stop once the balance is cleared.
Case Study: Calgary Homeowner with CRA Arrears
We worked with a client in Calgary who owed roughly $55,000 to the CRA.
Situation:
Self-employed income with a couple of strong years followed by a slow period
Taxes filed late → penalties added
CRA calling regularly
Home details:
Home value: $620,000
Mortgage remaining: $410,000
That left about $210,000 in equity.
We refinanced:
Paid off the full $55,000 CRA balance
Consolidated a small amount of credit card debt
New mortgage:
Slightly higher balance, but structured over 25 years
Result:
Monthly obligations dropped by over $900
No more CRA pressure
Clear plan moving forward
The biggest change wasn’t just financial — it was mental relief.
When This Strategy Makes Sense (and When It Doesn’t)
This approach works best when:
You have available equity
Your income supports the new mortgage payment
The CRA debt is actively growing or causing stress
It may not be the right move if:
There isn’t enough equity
Income is unstable without a recovery plan
The root issue (unfiled taxes, inconsistent income) hasn’t been addressed
We always look at the full picture first.
Glossary
Home Equity – The difference between your home’s value and what you owe on your mortgage
Refinance – Replacing your current mortgage with a new one, often to access equity
CRA Debt – Taxes owed to the Canada Revenue Agency, including penalties and interest
Amortization – The length of time over which your mortgage is repaid
HELOC – A home equity line of credit that allows flexible borrowing against your home
Lien – A legal claim the CRA can place on your property for unpaid taxes
Debt Consolidation – Combining multiple debts into one structured payment
FAQs
[FAQ] Can CRA actually take money from my bank account?
Yes. CRA has the authority to freeze accounts and withdraw funds if arrangements aren’t made.
[FAQ] Will paying off CRA debt with a mortgage hurt me long term?
In most cases, it improves your situation by lowering interest and creating structure — as long as spending is controlled moving forward.
[FAQ] Can I still refinance if I have CRA debt?
Yes, but it needs to be handled properly. Lenders want to see a clear plan to pay CRA in full as part of the refinance.
[FAQ] What if I haven’t filed my taxes yet?
That needs to be step one. We can’t structure a solution until all filings are up to date.
[FAQ] Is a second mortgage an option instead of refinancing?
Yes, especially if breaking your current mortgage has high penalties.
The Bottom Line
CRA debt doesn’t fix itself. It grows, it compounds, and it adds pressure quickly.
The earlier we deal with it, the more options you have — and the less it costs you over time.
Using home equity isn’t about shifting debt around. It’s about regaining control, lowering interest, and stopping the problem from getting bigger.
Call to Action
If you’re dealing with CRA debt and own a home in Alberta, let’s walk through your numbers and see what options make sense for you.