Energy Efficient Mortgage

Learn about energy-efficient mortgages in Canadian real estate — what they fund, their benefits, and how they support green housing.

Energy Efficient Mortgage

July 29, 2025



What is an Energy-Efficient Mortgage?

An energy-efficient mortgage (EEM) is a mortgage product that provides additional financing or preferred terms to support energy-saving home upgrades or purchases.

Why Energy-Efficient Mortgages Matter in Real Estate

In Canadian real estate, EEMs help buyers reduce long-term utility costs while promoting environmental sustainability.



Key features:
  • Extra funds for upgrades like insulation, windows, HVAC
  • May offer lower interest rates or insurance premium rebates
  • Requires energy audit or certification



Understanding EEMs helps buyers plan renovations and reduce operating costs.

Example of an Energy-Efficient Mortgage in Action

The buyer obtained an energy-efficient mortgage and used the funds to upgrade to high-performance windows and a heat pump system.

Key Takeaways

  • Supports energy-saving home upgrades
  • May lower borrowing costs or premiums
  • Requires verification of improvements
  • Reduces long-term operating costs
  • Aligns with sustainability goals

Related Terms

Additional Terms

Public Realm Improvements

Public realm improvements are enhancements to public spaces such as sidewalks, parks, plazas, and streetscapes, often funded or contributed by. more

Mortgagee in Possession

A mortgagee in possession is a lender who takes control of a property after borrower default, but before foreclosure or power of sale. The lender. more

Lease Surrender Agreement

A lease surrender agreement is a negotiated contract between a landlord and tenant that ends a lease before its scheduled expiration. Terms may. more

Green Infrastructure

Green infrastructure refers to natural or engineered systems that manage stormwater, reduce heat, and improve sustainability in developments.. more

Escrow Holdback

An escrow holdback is a portion of funds withheld at closing and held in escrow until specific conditions are met, such as completion of repairs,. more

Underused Housing Tax

The Underused Housing Tax (UHT) is a federal annual 1% tax on the value of vacant or underused residential property owned by non-resident,. more

More For You

StreetSide Proposing 35-Storey Condo Tower, 6-Storey Rental In Burquitlam

The 400-unit project is set for 602, 606, 610 Tyndall Street and 605, 611, 615 Claremont Street in Coquitlam and consists of 339 strata units and 61 rental units.

On Monday, Coquitlam City Council advanced a new rezoning application by StreetSide Developments, a subsidiary of Qualico, for a new high-rise tower in the Burquitlam neighbourhood of Coquitlam.

The site of the project is 602, 606, 610 Tyndall Street and 605, 611, 615 Claremont Street: A 1.1-acre land assembly consisting of three single-family lots on Claremont Street and three single-family lots on Tyndall Street, on the northern side of Como Lake Avenue near the intersection with Clarke Road.

Keep Reading Show less
Bank Of Canada Holds Rate At 2.25% As Housing Activity Stays Muted
Bank of Canada

The Bank of Canada held its overnight rate at 2.25% on April 29, keeping borrowing costs steady as the country navigates a turbulent global backdrop shaped by the conflict in the Middle East and ongoing US trade policy uncertainty.

For Canadian real estate, the decision offers little relief in the near term. The Bank's April outlook paints a cautious picture for housing: activity declined in the fourth quarter of 2025 and remains constrained by slow population growth, economic uncertainty, and affordability challenges that have yet to meaningfully ease. GDP growth is projected at a modest 1.2% for 2026, rising gradually to 1.6% in 2027 and 1.7% in 2028 — a trajectory that suggests any meaningful recovery in housing demand is still some distance away.

Keep Reading Show less

Virginia Avenue is a quiet residential street in Danforth Village — the kind of block where many homes have been standing for decades.

Coming up in 2022, 83 Virginia Avenue made no attempt to blend in.

Keep Reading Show less
GTA New Home Sales Climbed In March (From A Record-Low Bar)​
Toronto skyline before a storm

March new home sales in the Greater Toronto Area improved year-over-year, but the word "improved" is doing a lot of heavy lifting. There were 948 new homes sold in the GTA last month — up significantly from March 2025's historic low of 439 units, but still 64% below the 10-year average of 2,659.

In other words: second-worst March on record.

Keep Reading Show less
This Leslieville Suite Makes A Solid Case For Loft Living

The i-Zone is one of those Leslieville addresses that people know without needing to look up.

The work/live building that predates the neighbourhood's glow-up by decades, and has never needed to catch up.

Keep Reading Show less
KingSett Capital, Choice Properties REIT To Buy First Capital REIT In $9.4B Deal

(First Capital REIT)

In a landmark deal, private equity real estate investment firm KingSett Capital and retail-focused Choice Properties REIT (TSX: CHP.UN) announced last week that they had partnered and entered into an agreement to acquire First Capital REIT (TSX: FCR.UN) in a $9.4 billion transaction inclusive of debt.

Unitholders of First Capital will receive $19.24 in cash and 0.3186 units of Choice Properties per First Capital unit, which totals to $24.40 per First Capital unit based on the closing unit price of Choice Properties on April 15, according to a joint press release.

Keep Reading Show less
Canadian Housing Starts Lost Steam In March, CMHC Data Shows
Toronto homes/Shutterstock

New data from Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation shows housing construction continued to lose momentum in March 2026, even as year-over-year comparisons painted a rosier picture.

The six-month trend in housing starts fell 2.9% to 248,378 units, while the total monthly seasonally adjusted annual rate dropped 6% to 235,852 units — down from 250,961 in February. Actual housing starts in centres with a population of 10,000 or greater were up 10% year-over-year, with 16,398 units recorded compared to 14,935 in March 2025. Year-to-date starts sit at 49,206 units, up 9% from the same period last year, led by British Columbia, Ontario, and Quebec.

Keep Reading Show less
Mortgage Rates, Uncertainty Kept Canadian Buyers Sidelined In March
Paul Hanaoka/Unsplash

New data from the Canadian Real Estate Association shows national home sales were essentially unchanged in March 2026, ticking down just 0.1% month-over-month — but the stability masks a more complicated picture.

Actual (not seasonally adjusted) sales came in 2.3% below March 2025, while the national average home price landed at $673,084, down 0.8% year-over-year. The MLS® Home Price Index Composite fell 0.4% month-over-month and was down 4.7% compared to March 2025 — though the month-over-month decline was smaller than in February, and roughly half the drop recorded in January.

Keep Reading Show less