Equity take-out on rental properties in BC & Alberta

Access rental equity with real numbers—limits, rent math, and a clean Plan A / Plan B.

You can access equity from an investment property, but two gatekeepers decide what's possible: loan-to-value limits and how the lender counts rental income for qualification. We'll map the cleanest tool (cash-out refinance, HELOC/combined plan, or second mortgage) and the tradeoffs before you commit.

30-minute call. Bring your estimated property value, current mortgage details (rate/term/maturity), current rent/lease (or market rent estimate), and what you want the funds for (next purchase / renos / consolidation / buffer).

Licensed Mortgage Agent (BC, AB) • Funded over $200M • 5-star Google rating

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What I can Help With

  • Cash-out refinance (lump sum)

    Best when you need a larger amount (buy the next property, major renos, debt consolidation). Typically involves appraisal + full underwriting, and if you're mid-term, penalty/break-even math matters.

  • HELOC or combined mortgage + HELOC plan (flexibility)

    Best when you want revolving access and only pay interest on what you use. Public guidance commonly anchors HELOC borrowing up to 65% of the property value, and many combined plans describe up to ~80% total when the amount above the HELOC portion is structured as an amortizing segment. Important nuance: not every lender offers a HELOC on rentals, so we confirm availability early.

  • Second mortgage (avoid breaking the first mortgage)

    Best when breaking your current mortgage is expensive or timing is tight. Tradeoff: second mortgages are usually priced higher because they're riskier for lenders.

About Michael Browne

I help business owners and investors in BC and Alberta make clean financing decisions when there are moving parts—rental income treatment, portfolio debt service, lender policy, and refinance timing.

You'll get clarity first (what's realistic and why), then an organized process to funding with a Plan A / Plan B so you're not relying on one lender interpretation.

Michael Browne, Mortgage Agent serving BC and Alberta

What working with me looks like

You can start two ways, depending on how sure you are.

Option 1: Full review upfront

Best if you're pulling meaningful equity, buying another property, or qualification is tight. We review the rent documentation, confirm realistic limits, and build an executable lender path.

Option 2: Start light, then go deeper

Best if you're exploring. We start with the minimum needed to answer: Is it worth it? What's realistic? Which tool fits your timeline? Then we go deeper only if the upside is real.

Ready for real options?

Don't pull rental equity until the rent math and limits are clear.

If it works, we'll structure a clean path you can execute. If it doesn't, you'll know why—and what the better move is (different tool, different timing, or different target).

Why this works

Most rental equity take-outs go sideways for predictable reasons:

  • People treat “up to 80%” like a promise (it's a ceiling, and rentals can be capped lower depending on lender and property profile).
  • They assume rent counts dollar-for-dollar (many programs use methods like up to ~50% of gross rent or net rent).
  • They don't model qualification under the uninsured stress-test framework before committing to the plan.

We remove uncertainty by confirming the constraints early, choosing the right tool, and giving you a clean Plan A / Plan B.

Investor situations that often need proper translation:

  • Pulling equity to fund the next down payment (and still qualifying with both properties)
  • Multiple rentals and debt-service sensitivity
  • Renovation/value-add plans that need staged funding
  • Rent documentation gaps (lease vs market rent vs tax history)
  • Mid-term fixed mortgages where penalty risk can change the decision
  • Choosing HELOC vs refinance vs second mortgage based on timeline and discipline

Not sure where you stand? Let's get you clarity.

Book a 30-minute call and I'll tell you what looks realistic for rental equity, how rent will likely be treated, what it would really cost (penalty + fees), and the cleanest next step.

Common questions about accessing equity from a rental property

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How much equity can I access from an investment property?+
It depends on the property value, what you already owe, and lender policy. Many plans reference up to ~80% as a ceiling for total borrowing, but rentals can be capped lower depending on property and file strength.
Why is a HELOC capped at 65%?+
Because HELOCs are revolving credit. Public Canadian guidance commonly states you may borrow up to 65% of the property value on a HELOC.
Can my mortgage + HELOC go higher than 65%? How does the ~80% structure work?+
Often, yes—in structure. The revolving portion is commonly capped around 65%, and borrowing above that (up to ~80% total in many standard frameworks) is typically structured as an amortizing mortgage segment, lender-dependent.
How do lenders count rental income when I'm accessing equity?+
Common approaches include using up to ~50% of gross rent as an add-back, or using a net rental approach (rent minus operating expenses). The exact method and documentation varies by lender.
Will I need to re-qualify, and what rate do I qualify at?+
Often yes. For many uninsured refinances, the minimum qualifying rate is the greater of contract rate + 2% or 5.25%.
What documents do I need to support rental income?+
Usually some combination of: executed lease, appraiser market rent, and—if you already own rentals—tax documents and statements supporting rental history.
Can I access equity without breaking my current mortgage term?+
Sometimes. If breaking your mortgage is expensive, we may look at a HELOC/combined plan (if available) or a second mortgage behind the first—then compare the tradeoffs.
What fees should I expect?+
Commonly appraisal and legal/notary work, plus discharge/registration depending on structure and lender. If you're mid-term, a prepayment penalty may also apply.

Still have a question?

Send a quick note and we’ll reply within one business day.

65% vs 80% still confusing? Let's make it simple.

Get a clean rental equity plan that matches your goal.

Either we confirm a clear path (refi, HELOC/combined, or second mortgage)—or we map what needs to change so you can access equity predictably and responsibly.

Or call 672-699-6459