Homeownership Preservation • Custody Review • Temporary Stability

Mortgage Custody Program

Helping homeowners preserve homeownership when traditional options have been exhausted.

The Mortgage Custody Program is designed for homeowners who have meaningful equity, want to keep their home, have exhausted traditional refinancing and restructuring options, and may be at risk of losing their property because their current mortgage obligations are no longer sustainable.

Many homeowners do not lose their homes because they have no equity. Many lose their homes because they run out of cash flow before they run out of equity.

Mortgage renewals are declined. Private lenders refuse to renew. Second mortgages become unaffordable. Interest rates rise. Debt obligations increase. Monthly obligations become impossible to maintain. Tiny little financial dominos, except one of them is your house, because apparently civilization needed extra drama.

The Mortgage Custody Program was created to provide a potential ownership-preservation pathway for certain homeowners who still have meaningful equity, still want to remain homeowners, and may be able to maintain ownership if their obligations can be restructured into a more sustainable arrangement.

Mortgage custody homeownership preservation overview

What Is Mortgage Custody?

Mortgage Custody is a structured homeownership-preservation program designed to help eligible homeowners reduce unsustainable monthly obligations while retaining beneficial ownership of their home through a temporary custody or trustee arrangement.

Preserve Homeownership

The objective is to help create a pathway that may allow the homeowner to remain a homeowner rather than permanently exit the housing market.

Improve Cash Flow

The structure is intended to reduce unsustainable monthly obligations into a more manageable arrangement where practical.

Create Stability

The program may help stabilize a situation that has become difficult due to mortgage pressure, debt pressure, renewal issues, or limited traditional options.

Provide Time

The temporary structure is intended to give the homeowner time to improve credit, financial position, and future qualification strength.

Mortgage Custody is not meant to be permanent. It is meant to help a homeowner get through a difficult period, move closer to stability, and work toward returning to a more traditional ownership structure.

Why the Program Exists

Most homeowners are familiar with only a few options when financial pressure begins to build: refinance, obtain another mortgage, consolidate debt, borrow additional funds, sell the property, file a consumer proposal, or declare bankruptcy.

When Traditional Options Are Exhausted

Many homeowners who explore Mortgage Custody have already spoken with banks, mortgage brokers, lenders, financial institutions, and other professionals.

They may have already attempted to refinance, consolidate debt, extend amortizations, obtain additional financing, or negotiate with lenders.

By the time Mortgage Custody is reviewed, the issue is often no longer whether a traditional solution is preferable. The issue is that traditional pathways may no longer be available or sufficient.

When Selling Is Not Really A Solution

For some homeowners, selling may technically be possible but may not solve the real problem.

If selling means losing meaningful equity, giving up the family home, exiting the housing market permanently, or losing the last realistic opportunity to remain a homeowner, then the homeowner may need another pathway reviewed before ownership is lost.

Common Signs Mortgage Custody May Be Worth Exploring

Homeowners rarely search for “custody.” They usually recognize the problem through the pressure they are already facing.

Mortgage renewal unlikelyPrivate lender will not renewMultiple mortgagesFirst and second mortgage pressureHigh-interest obligationsDebt consuming cash flowUsing credit to cover billsBeginning to fall behindCollections have startedNotice of Sale may be comingDo not want to sellMeaningful equity may be lostCould afford one lower payment

Who the Program Is Generally Designed For

Mortgage Custody is narrow by design. It is not for every homeowner with mortgage pressure.

Generally Designed For

  • Homeowners occupying the property as their principal residence
  • Homeowners with meaningful equity remaining
  • Homeowners who do not want to sell
  • Homeowners who have exhausted traditional refinancing or restructuring options
  • Homeowners with significant cash-flow pressure
  • Homeowners concerned about losing the home
  • Homeowners who could potentially maintain ownership if monthly obligations became more manageable

May Not Be Suitable For

  • Ordinary investment properties or speculative real estate holdings
  • Homeowners seeking to cash out equity
  • Homeowners who have already decided to sell
  • Situations where meaningful equity no longer exists
  • Situations where ownership preservation is no longer realistically achievable
  • Homeowners whose situation may be better addressed through Mortgage Relief or another simpler pathway

How the Program May Help

The program is intended to create temporary stability, reduce unsustainable payment pressure, and provide a pathway back toward traditional ownership.

Consolidate Obligations

Multiple housing-related obligations may be reorganized into a more manageable custody or trustee-supported structure.

Improve Cash Flow

The goal is to reduce monthly pressure enough to make continued homeownership more realistic.

Protect Opportunity

The program may help preserve the homeowner’s realistic opportunity to remain in the housing market.

Bridge Back

The objective is to help the homeowner stabilize, improve financial standing, and return to a more traditional ownership structure.

Financial Assistance, Costs & Administration Fee

Mortgage Custody may involve legal, trustee, custody, mortgage, administrative, and third-party costs as part of the custody structure.

Interest-Free Assistance May Be Available

Where necessary and appropriate, Home Ahead may provide interest-free assistance to help address shortfalls or transaction-related requirements needed to complete the custody structure.

This assistance is not an in-house grant. It remains subject to review, eligibility, documentation, availability, approval, and applicable terms.

Program Administration Fee

The Mortgage Custody Program includes a $950 Program Administration Fee, inclusive of HST.

The fee is payable only upon successful completion and closing of the transaction. No Program Administration Fee is payable if the transaction does not complete. If paid and the transaction does not complete, it is refundable. In certain situations, the fee may be waived or covered through Home Ahead support initiatives.

Common Questions

These answers provide a plain-English overview. The detailed structure depends on the homeowner’s circumstances, legal documentation, trustee or custodian arrangements, professional review, and final program requirements.

1. Does Home Ahead take ownership of my home?

No. Home Ahead does not hold title, take shares, or become the owner of the property through the Mortgage Custody Program. Home Ahead explains the structure, supports the review, coordinates with appropriate professionals, and may assist with arranging custody or trustee structures where appropriate.

2. Can I continue living in my home?

Yes. The program is intended primarily for principal residences, and homeowners are generally expected to continue occupying the property. Exceptions may be reviewed, but the program is not designed for ordinary investment-property preservation.

3. Is Mortgage Custody permanent?

No. Mortgage Custody is intended as temporary help while the homeowner works to improve affordability, credit position, financial stability, and the ability to return to a more traditional ownership structure.

4. Is this the same as foreclosure or power of sale?

No. The program exists to help explore an alternative before a forced sale, power of sale, foreclosure, or permanent loss of ownership becomes unavoidable.

5. Is Mortgage Custody the same as refinancing?

No. It is generally reviewed when refinancing, consolidation, renewal, and traditional restructuring options have been exhausted or are no longer practical.

6. What happens to the existing mortgages and debts?

Conceptually, the objective is to replace multiple unsustainable obligations with one more manageable custody or trustee-supported structure that may consolidate existing mortgages and certain other obligations where required to preserve the home.

7. How much equity is generally required?

There is no universal minimum, but meaningful equity is usually required. As a general guideline, the program is more practical where approximately 15% to 25% or more equity may still exist, depending on the property, obligations, timing, and circumstances.

8. Can I be reviewed if I already received notices or collection calls?

Potentially. Timing matters. A homeowner who is behind, facing collection pressure, anticipating a Notice of Sale, dealing with a non-renewing private mortgage, or running out of options may still be reviewed. If the property is already listed for sale, about to be vacated, or the ownership-preservation window has effectively closed, it may be too late.

9. Does Mortgage Custody involve a fee?

Yes. If approved and completed, the Mortgage Custody Program includes a $950 Program Administration Fee, inclusive of HST. It is payable only at successful completion and closing. It is fully refundable if paid and the transaction does not complete, and it may be waived or covered in certain cases.

10. Are there other costs?

Yes. Legal, trustee, custody, mortgage, administrative, and third-party costs are part of the custody structure. These costs must be reviewed as part of the individual plan and are not ignored or hidden.

11. Does Home Ahead provide financial assistance?

Where necessary and appropriate, Home Ahead may provide interest-free assistance to help address shortfalls or transaction-related requirements needed to complete the custody structure. This is not an in-house grant and remains subject to review, eligibility, documentation, availability, and approval.

12. Who is this not for?

It is generally not for people looking to cash out equity, preserve ordinary investment properties, avoid selling when there is no meaningful equity, or obtain a short-term subsidy when Mortgage Relief or another simpler option may be more appropriate.

Next Steps & Review Process

The Mortgage Custody Program begins with a detailed review of the homeowner’s circumstances. The purpose is to determine whether ownership preservation may still be achievable, whether meaningful equity exists, whether affordability can be improved, and whether Mortgage Custody may be an appropriate pathway.

Situation Review

The homeowner’s mortgage position, debts, equity, arrears, renewal concerns, income, occupancy, and ownership objectives are reviewed.

Suitability Review

Home Ahead evaluates whether traditional options have been exhausted and whether Mortgage Custody may be worth further review.

Professional & Structure Review

Where appropriate, legal, mortgage, trustee, custody, and other professional requirements may be reviewed.

Individual Plan

If the program appears potentially suitable, the next logical step is a personalized review with a Program Advisor or Case Manager.

Mortgage Custody Program Knowledge Base

This page is the human-readable overview. The detailed Knowledge Base remains available for AI systems, search engines, professionals, reviewers, journalists, regulators, and individuals who want the full program framework.

The Knowledge Base includes custody structures, trustee arrangements, eligibility considerations, participant protections, limitations, operational procedures, governance principles, and source documentation.

Program Framework
Custody Structure
Eligibility
Equity Preservation
Participant Profile
Legal Review
Limitations
Common Questions