Tag Archive for: home equity

The Financial Gut Punch — And How Smart Homeowners Fight Back


Yesterday was a good day. I picked up a commission cheque from one of my private lending files, swung by the bank to deposit it, and was feeling the kind of quiet satisfaction that comes from doing good work and getting paid for it. Then, on the way home, my 2015 Nissan Pathfinder decided it had other plans. Check engine light flashing. Bad vibration. The kind of feeling in your gut that tells you this isn’t a loose gas cap.

This morning a tow truck came and took it away. Funny how that works.

I’m not telling you this for sympathy. I’m telling you this because it happens to all of us — and it almost always happens at the worst possible time.


The Financial Gut Punch Doesn’t Care About Your Timing

It’s never a leaky roof in a good month. It’s never a transmission when you have a fully funded emergency account and zero stress. It shows up when you’re building momentum, when you finally feel like things are moving in the right direction, when you had plans for that money.

My clients go through versions of this all the time. A furnace. A job interruption. A separation. And then there’s the one nobody sees coming — your favourite cousin just announced her destination wedding. In Bora Bora. Of all places. Now you’re looking at airfare, a hotel, a wedding gift, and apparently a new outfit because you can’t show up to Bora Bora looking like that. Does she think you’re a Rockefeller? But it’s your favourite cousin. So obviously you’re going.

The details change but the feeling is the same — sudden, stressful, and expensive.

The difference between people who recover quickly and people who spiral isn’t luck. It’s knowing your options before you need them. And if you own a home, you likely have more options than you think.


Four Ways Homeowners Fight Back

1. The HELOC — Your Financial Fire Extinguisher

A Home Equity Line of Credit is one of the most powerful and underused tools a homeowner has. It sits quietly in the background, costs you nothing until you use it, and gives you access to your equity on demand. Think of it as a financial fire extinguisher — you hope you never need it, but you really want it on the wall when the kitchen catches fire. If you have equity and you don’t have a HELOC, that’s a conversation worth having before the next gut punch arrives.

2. Refinancing to Reset

Sometimes a surprise expense is actually the nudge you needed to look at the bigger picture. If you’re carrying high-interest debt alongside a mortgage, a refinance can roll everything together, lower your monthly payments, and give you room to breathe again. It’s not giving up — it’s restructuring. Smart people do it all the time.

3. Private Lending as a Bridge

This one surprises people. Private mortgages aren’t just for clients who can’t qualify traditionally — they’re also a legitimate short-term tool for homeowners who need to move fast. When timing matters and traditional financing is too slow, a private bridge can solve a problem in days instead of weeks. Short term, higher cost, but sometimes exactly the right move.

4. Strategic Use of Investments

RRSPs and TFSAs can play a role in a financial recovery plan — but this one requires care. The timing, the tax implications, and the long-term cost of withdrawing early all matter. Used thoughtfully, they can be part of the solution. Used impulsively, they can create a new problem. This is where having the right conversation makes all the difference.


There’s Always a Path Forward

I’m still waiting to hear whether my Pathfinder needs a valve body or a full transmission rebuild. Either way, there’s a solution. It might not be the one I wanted, and it might cost more than I’d like — but there’s a path forward.

There always is.

If life just handed you an unexpected bill and you own your home, don’t sit on it. You may have options you haven’t considered yet. That’s exactly the kind of conversation I have every day.

Let’s talk.

Patrick Sawler — Mortgage Broker, Craigburn Capital Licensed in Nova Scotia and Ontario | Private Financing in NB and PEI craigburn.wysework.net/

Why you will not see mortgage rates on this site!

At least two-dozen times a week we have people call us and ask, “What’s your rate on a 5 year fixed rate?” Most times when we try to get additional information from the potential borrower. Unfortunately, for both the caller, and us they don’t want to tell us anything. “I already know what I want, just give me a rate,” is the usual response.

Now, I’m not encouraging you not to shop-around for the best rate.

But, asking for a rate without giving more information is a bad idea. Why? Because frankly, anybody can give you any rate quote they want to over the phone, there is no way you can hold them to that rate. You see, there are two kinds of mortgage companies out there, those that are only interested in you as a loan customer and those that look at you as a client for life.

Those companies that want a fast buck know that they can quote you anything they want to just to get you in the door, then they can use whatever excuse to “convert” you to a different loan with a different rate.

Those companies that want you as a client for life, will take the time to ask for as much information as possible, up-front, so they can not only give you the best rate possible, but they can also quote you the best loan program for your situation.

Additionally, far too many people think they already know what loan program is best for them.

You may think you already know what you what, but unless you know all of the options in the marketplace you may miss an opportunity for a better loan program or situation that you didn’t know existed.

Let me ask you, have you ever gone into a store to buy a specific product, but came out with something entirely different?  If you did it was probably because you didn’t know the new product even existed or a knowledgeable person in the store gave your new information that helped you make a better decision.

That’s they job of a competent loan officer, to use their years of expertise to help you select the best option for your situation.

Please, don’t assume you know what’s best for you.

Now, I’m not saying that you shouldn’t make the final decision. After all, it is your money, your home and your financial future. However, there is no harm at all in letting a competent, well trained mortgage professional give you several options, then you select which you believe is best for you.

Cheers,

Pat