A contractor, mortgage broker, and realtor explain the options that actually get used here. Real costs, real products, what each side requires.
Instead of coordinating construction, financing, and real estate decisions separately and hoping they line up, the three roles work to the same plan from day one.
This post is written together by reVISION Design + Build, a Metro Vancouver design-build firm operating since 2004, and Payam Roshani, a dual-licensed Vancouver realtor and mortgage broker working through Oakwyn Realty and DLC A Better Way. We work on renovation projects together regularly. What follows is what we tell our clients on the first call.
You will find a product-by-product description of the financing options that actually get used here in Vancouver, the renovation cost ranges they map to from our published renovation cost guide, and a section nobody else writes: what your lender needs from your contractor, and what your contractor needs from your financing plan.
The most common mistake we see is homeowners approaching a lender before they know what the renovation will actually cost. The result is one of three problems: they qualify for an amount that does not cover the scope, they borrow more than the project needs, or they choose a financing product that does not match how the project will actually run.
Order matters. Define the scope first. Get a credible budget. Then choose the financing product that fits the scope, the timeline, and your situation.
Two reVISION outputs feed directly into a lender conversation:
Add 15 to 20 percent contingency, plus 10 to 15 percent for design, permits, and project management. A $100K construction budget realistically lands at a $130K to $150K total project budget.
Five products cover almost every renovation financing scenario in Metro Vancouver. They are listed here in the order they actually get used, not in the order they get marketed.
Private lending is the option homeowners most often dismiss too early. In Vancouver, it solves a real and common problem: short-term capital to complete a renovation while waiting on a sale or while a longer-term financing plan settles into place.
Private lenders move faster than banks, accept properties and income situations that fall outside conventional criteria, and price short-term capital based on the project rather than a credit score template. A private mortgage is more expensive on a headline rate basis than a bank refinance, but on a total-cost-of-borrowing basis it can come out lower depending on the loan amount, the time horizon, and other costs like break penalties on the existing mortgage if you refinance mid-term. The strategy is to use private capital only with a clear exit: refinancing once the renovation is complete and the property reappraises higher, or paying out from a sale.
Where private lending is genuinely the right tool: renovating before selling, mid-construction situations where a traditional lender will not advance, time-sensitive opportunities, and complex income situations that bank underwriting cannot accommodate quickly. Done with a clear plan, private financing is faster and often more cost-effective than the alternatives. Another positive attribute is that a private mortgage can be fully open, meaning it can be paid off at any time without penalty. It is not a last resort.
Reverse mortgages are not a fit for most renovation files, but for one specific group of Vancouver homeowners they solve a problem no other product solves cleanly.
If you are 55 or older, own a home in Metro Vancouver that has appreciated significantly, and your income no longer qualifies you for a conventional refinance, a reverse mortgage lets you access up to 55 percent of your home's value depending on age, location, and property type. There are no required monthly payments. Interest accrues against the loan, and the balance is repaid when the home is sold or through the estate. The funds are tax-free and do not affect Old Age Security or Guaranteed Income Supplement.
Rates are higher than conventional mortgage rates, and the compounding interest matters over a long time horizon.
Where this works: long-term Vancouver homeowners whose homes need updating to remain liveable through retirement, where conventional refinancing has been declined on income, and where the alternative is selling and moving. The renovation lets them stay.
A budget estimate is sufficient, similar to a refinance file. The Financial Consumer Agency of Canada publishes a clear overview of how reverse mortgages work.
A Purchase Plus Improvements mortgage rolls the purchase price and the planned renovation cost into a single mortgage at the time of purchase. The mortgage is sized against the as-improved value of the property, the lender holds back the renovation portion, and funds are released after the work is verified complete.
The constraints are tight: a detailed contractor quote at application (not a budget estimate), the improvement amount is capped at 20 percent of the as-is property value on most uninsured and Sagen-insured files (10 percent of as-improved on CMHC-insured files), renovations must be completed within 120 days, and PPI does not cover making a home liveable, correcting deficiencies, structural repairs, or additions.
For a buyer purchasing a home that needs a defined cosmetic refresh and can move quickly, PPI works. For most other purchase-and-renovate scenarios, the cleaner path is to close on the property with conventional financing and refinance once the scope is settled. The Sagen PPI program page has the program-level detail.
A detailed contractor quote with line-item pricing, plans or sketches, and a full cost breakdown. This is reVISION's paid design and preconstruction output.
Construction mortgages are designed for projects where the property does not exist in its final form yet. Funds release in stages as each construction milestone is verified.
The scenarios where construction financing is the right tool: tear-down-and-rebuild projects, buyers purchasing a property mid-construction, properties where traditional lenders will not finance the current condition, and custom new builds and multiplexes.
For a typical renovation of an existing, occupied home, a construction mortgage is rarely the right structure. The draw administration is heavier than a refinance and built around milestones that map to new construction, not to renovation phasing.
A draw schedule aligned to construction milestones, contractor qualifications and insurance, and a fixed-price contract or a fully scoped cost-plus structure.
This is the section that almost no Vancouver renovation guide covers, and it is where most projects get unnecessarily stuck. When the contractor and the mortgage broker are not coordinated, scope documents get written for the contractor's process and then have to be rewritten for the lender's requirements. That rework eats weeks.
The reason reVISION and Payam Roshani work together is exactly this coordination gap. When the renovation scope and the financing plan are built in one conversation, the scope document is structured to satisfy both the construction requirements and the lending requirements from the start. No rework. Fewer surprises at application.
Two of the most-cited federal renovation programs have closed to new applicants. Any blog post from 2024 or earlier that lists them as active is out of date.
None of these programs finances a kitchen or bathroom renovation on its own. They reduce the net cost of specific energy-efficiency or accessibility components within a larger renovation. Treat them as a stack on top of your primary financing, not as a substitute for it.
Three variables drive the right financing product.
Buying: PPI works for cosmetic upgrades on a defined budget within 120 days. Otherwise, close conventionally and refinance once the scope is settled.
Already own: refinancing is the default.
Under $50K: a HELOC under an existing or new refinance, or savings if available.
$50K to $200K: refinancing, possibly with a smaller HELOC component.
$200K and up: refinancing as the primary structure for major or whole-home renovations.
Outside conventional credit profile, or time-sensitive: private lending with a defined exit.
A typical bank refinance closes in four to six weeks. A HELOC can close faster if added to an existing mortgage with the same lender. Private lending is fastest at one to three weeks. PPI's clock starts at possession and runs out at 120 days. A reverse mortgage takes four to six weeks plus the required independent legal advice step.
Buying a Vancouver condo with $40K of cosmetic upgrades: PPI candidate, within the 20 percent of as-is value cap, requires a detailed contractor quote at application.
Owning a condo, planning a $50K bathroom renovation:
HELOC under the refinance umbrella, typically funded from existing equity. Confirm strata bylaws first. (See our condo renovation services in Vancouver.)
Owning a home, planning a $300K major renovation:
Refinance with the renovation amount built in, possibly split with a HELOC for contingency draws.
65 years old, long-term Vancouver homeowner, conventional refinance declined on income:
A reverse mortgage is the cleanest path.
Time-sensitive renovate-to-sell, six-month window, scope outside bank criteria:
Private mortgage with a sale exit.
Yes. Through refinancing or a second private mortgage if you already own, or through Purchase Plus Improvements if you are buying. Refinancing is the more flexible and more commonly used path.
You need at least 20 percent equity remaining after the HELOC is in place. OSFI rules cap combined loan-to-value (mortgage plus HELOC) at 80 percent of appraised value, with the HELOC portion alone capped at 65 percent.
It depends on the product. Refinances, HELOCs, and reverse mortgages typically accept a budget estimate. Purchase Plus Improvements requires a full contractor quote with line-item pricing and plans. Construction mortgages require a fixed-price contract or a fully scoped cost-plus structure with a draw schedule.
120 days from the first advance is standard. Some lenders may extend depending on the project, but 120 days is the figure you should plan against.
Yes, the financing products are the same. The difference is on the strata side: condo work usually requires strata approval before construction begins, which can add four to eight weeks to the front of the project. Plan the financing draw timing around the strata approval window, not just the construction schedule.