When you borrow money to buy a commercial property, one of the most important but least discussed terms is whether the mortgage is recourse or non-recourse. This single distinction determines what happens if things go wrong. It decides whether the lender can come after your personal assets, your other properties, and your bank accounts if the property cannot cover the debt.
In the Canadian commercial lending landscape, most mortgages are full recourse. That means you are personally on the hook for the entire loan. But non-recourse options do exist in specific circumstances, and understanding the difference can fundamentally change how you structure your deals, protect your wealth, and manage risk as your portfolio grows.
This guide explains what recourse and non-recourse mean in Canadian commercial mortgage lending, when each type is available, how personal guarantees work, what “bad boy” carve-outs are, and how to negotiate the most protective terms possible for your situation.
Discuss Your Commercial Financing Options
What Does Recourse Mean in Commercial Lending?
A recourse mortgage gives the lender the right to pursue the borrower’s personal assets if the property’s value or sale proceeds are not sufficient to repay the loan in full. The borrower is personally liable for any shortfall.
How Recourse Works in Practice
You purchase a commercial property for $3,000,000 with a $2,250,000 mortgage (75% LTV). Two years later, the market declines, your major tenant vacates, and you can no longer service the debt. The lender forecloses and sells the property for $2,000,000.
With a recourse mortgage:
- The outstanding mortgage balance at foreclosure is $2,150,000
- The property sells for $2,000,000
- The shortfall is $150,000
- The lender can sue you personally for the $150,000 shortfall, plus accumulated interest, legal fees, and costs
- They can seize other assets, garnish income, and register liens against your other properties
With a non-recourse mortgage:
- Same scenario, same shortfall of $150,000
- The lender’s only remedy is the property itself. They take the property, sell it, and absorb the $150,000 loss
- Your other personal assets are protected
This difference is enormous for investors who own multiple properties or have significant personal wealth they want to protect.
What Does Non-Recourse Mean?
A non-recourse mortgage limits the lender’s security to the mortgaged property itself. If the borrower defaults and the property’s value does not cover the outstanding debt, the lender cannot pursue the borrower’s personal assets for the shortfall.
The lender’s risk assessment shifts entirely to the property. With a non-recourse loan, the lender must be confident that the property alone provides sufficient security, because the property is all they can rely on for repayment.
Why Non-Recourse Matters for Portfolio Investors
As your commercial real estate portfolio grows, your total mortgage exposure increases. If all of your mortgages are full recourse, a single bad deal can threaten your entire portfolio and personal wealth.
Consider an investor with five commercial properties and $10,000,000 in total mortgage debt across all of them. If one property fails catastrophically and the lender pursues a deficiency judgment, that judgment could theoretically lead to liens on the other four properties, forced sales, and cascading financial consequences.
Non-recourse financing creates a firewall. If Property A fails, only Property A is at risk. Properties B through E and the investor’s personal assets are insulated. For scaling investors, this is not just a nice-to-have. It is a critical risk management strategy.
The Reality of Canadian Commercial Lending
Here is the uncomfortable truth: the vast majority of commercial mortgages in Canada are full recourse. Unlike the United States, where non-recourse lending is widely available through CMBS (Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities) markets and other sources, Canada’s commercial lending market is dominated by chartered banks and credit unions that almost universally require personal guarantees.
Why Canadian Lenders Prefer Recourse
- Smaller market: Canada’s commercial real estate market is smaller than the U.S. market, and lenders take a more conservative approach
- Regulatory culture: Canadian banking regulators (OSFI) encourage conservative underwriting, and personal guarantees are considered a risk mitigant
- Relationship lending: Canadian commercial lending is heavily relationship-based, and personal guarantees reinforce the borrower’s commitment to the deal
- Limited securitization: Canada has a much smaller CMBS market than the United States, which means fewer non-recourse lending channels
This does not mean non-recourse commercial financing is impossible in Canada. It means you need to know where to find it and what it takes to qualify.
When Non-Recourse Is Available in Canada
Non-recourse commercial mortgage financing in Canada is available in specific circumstances:
1. CMHC-Insured Multi-Family Mortgages
CMHC-insured mortgages through the Multi-Unit Mortgage Loan Insurance program are effectively non-recourse from the borrower’s perspective. Here is why:
- CMHC insures the lender against default
- The insurance covers the lender’s losses if the borrower defaults and the property cannot cover the debt
- While the lender may technically have recourse rights, in practice CMHC pays the claim and the lender has little incentive to pursue the borrower personally
- Some CMHC-insured lenders explicitly structure these as non-recourse loans
The trade-off is that CMHC-insured financing comes with insurance premiums (typically 1.5% to 4.5% of the loan amount depending on LTV), strict eligibility requirements, and additional compliance obligations. But for qualifying multi-family properties, this is the most accessible path to non-recourse financing in Canada.
2. Life Insurance Company Loans
Some life insurance companies (Manulife, Sun Life, Canada Life, and others) offer non-recourse or limited recourse commercial mortgages on:
- Institutional-quality properties valued at $10,000,000 or more
- Properties with strong, stable cash flow and high credit-quality tenants
- Lower LTV ratios (typically 50% to 65%)
Life company non-recourse loans are underwritten almost entirely on the property’s fundamentals. The lower LTV provides the lender with a significant equity cushion that reduces their exposure to loss on default.
3. CMBS (Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities)
Canada has a small but active CMBS market. CMBS loans are typically structured as non-recourse with carve-outs (discussed below). They are available on:
- Larger commercial properties (generally $5,000,000+ loan amounts)
- Stabilized assets with strong tenant profiles
- Office, retail, industrial, and multi-family properties
CMBS non-recourse terms reflect the securitized nature of the debt. Once the loan is pooled and sold to bond investors, there is no ongoing relationship with a single lender, making personal guarantee enforcement impractical.
4. Very Large Deals With Institutional Borrowers
For commercial mortgage deals above $25,000,000 to $50,000,000, sophisticated borrowers with strong track records can sometimes negotiate non-recourse terms with major banks or pension fund lenders. These deals are individually underwritten and negotiated, and non-recourse terms are available based on the borrower’s reputation, the property’s quality, and the LTV ratio.
Personal Guarantees Explained
A personal guarantee is a legally binding promise by an individual (or individuals) to repay the mortgage if the borrowing entity (typically a corporation) cannot. Personal guarantees are the mechanism through which commercial mortgages become recourse.
Types of Personal Guarantees
Full guarantee: The guarantor is liable for the entire mortgage amount, plus interest, penalties, and enforcement costs. This is the most common type in Canadian commercial lending.
Limited guarantee: The guarantor is liable up to a specified amount, which may be less than the full mortgage balance. For example, a lender might require a personal guarantee limited to 50% of the loan amount.
Reducing guarantee: The guarantee decreases over time as the loan is paid down. For example, the guarantee might reduce by 10% of the original amount each year, eventually reaching zero.
Joint and several guarantee: Multiple guarantors are each individually liable for the full amount. The lender can pursue any one guarantor for the entire shortfall, not just their proportional share.
Who Is Required to Provide a Personal Guarantee?
In most Canadian commercial mortgage transactions, the lender requires personal guarantees from:
- All individuals who own 20% or more of the borrowing entity
- The principal operators or managers of the property
- In some cases, spouses of principal guarantors (depending on provincial family law)
Corporate guarantees from other entities controlled by the borrower may also be required, particularly if the borrowing entity is a single-purpose corporation with no other assets.
”Bad Boy” Carve-Outs
Even non-recourse mortgages are not entirely without personal liability. Nearly every non-recourse commercial mortgage includes “bad boy” carve-outs (sometimes called “springing recourse” provisions) that convert the loan from non-recourse to full recourse if the borrower engages in specific prohibited actions.
Common Bad Boy Carve-Outs
| Carve-Out | What It Means |
|---|---|
| Fraud or misrepresentation | If the borrower provided false information in the loan application |
| Voluntary bankruptcy filing | If the borrower voluntarily files for bankruptcy or receivership |
| Environmental contamination | If the borrower causes environmental damage to the property |
| Failure to maintain insurance | If the borrower allows property insurance to lapse |
| Unauthorized transfer | If the borrower sells or transfers the property without lender consent |
| Waste | If the borrower intentionally allows the property to deteriorate |
| Misappropriation of rents | If the borrower collects rent but fails to apply it to mortgage payments or operating expenses |
| Violation of single-purpose entity covenants | If the borrowing entity engages in business beyond holding the property |
Bad boy carve-outs are standard market practice and are not negotiable in most cases. They are designed to prevent borrower misconduct, not to punish borrowers for market conditions beyond their control. As long as you operate honestly, maintain the property, and comply with your loan terms, these carve-outs should never be triggered.
Protect Your Assets With the Right Mortgage Structure
Recourse vs Non-Recourse: Side-by-Side Comparison
| Feature | Full Recourse | Non-Recourse | Limited Recourse |
|---|---|---|---|
| Personal liability | Full loan amount + costs | None (except carve-outs) | Capped at specified amount |
| Lender’s security | Property + personal assets | Property only | Property + limited personal assets |
| Availability in Canada | Standard / very common | Limited (CMHC, life cos, CMBS) | Occasionally negotiable |
| Typical LTV | Up to 75% to 80% | Up to 95% (CMHC) or 50% to 65% (life cos) | 65% to 75% |
| Interest rates | Lower (less lender risk) | Slightly higher (more lender risk) | Moderate |
| Borrower qualifications | Standard | Higher bar (property must be strong) | Moderate to high |
| Bad boy carve-outs | Not applicable (already full recourse) | Yes, always included | Yes, typically included |
| Best for | Smaller deals, weaker properties | Portfolio protection, institutional deals | Negotiated middle ground |
How to Negotiate Better Guarantee Terms
Even if full non-recourse financing is not available for your deal, there are strategies to negotiate more favourable guarantee terms.
1. Negotiate a Reducing Guarantee
Ask the lender to reduce the personal guarantee over time as the loan is paid down and the property demonstrates stable performance. A common structure:
- Years 1-2: Full guarantee
- Years 3-4: Guarantee reduces to 75% of outstanding balance
- Year 5+: Guarantee reduces to 50% of outstanding balance
This approach rewards the borrower for demonstrating performance while giving the lender full protection during the riskiest early period.
2. Cap the Guarantee at a Fixed Dollar Amount
Instead of guaranteeing the full loan, negotiate a guarantee capped at a specific dollar amount. For example, on a $3,000,000 mortgage, you might negotiate a guarantee capped at $1,000,000. If the deficiency exceeds $1,000,000, the lender absorbs the excess.
3. Limit the Guarantee to Specific Assets
Negotiate to limit the guarantee to specific identified assets rather than all personal assets. This might include a pledge of a specific investment portfolio or a second property, while protecting your primary residence and other holdings.
4. Exclude Certain Assets From the Guarantee
In some provinces, certain assets are automatically exempt from creditor claims (such as RRSPs up to certain limits and primary residences in some jurisdictions). Ensure your guarantee documentation does not inadvertently waive these protections.
5. Negotiate a “Burn-Off” Based on DSCR Performance
Propose that the personal guarantee is eliminated entirely once the property achieves and maintains a specified DSCR (such as 1.40 or higher) for a defined period. This directly ties the guarantee to the property’s demonstrated ability to cover its debt without personal support.
6. Seek CMHC Insurance to Eliminate the Guarantee
If your property qualifies for CMHC multi-unit mortgage insurance, the CMHC insurance effectively replaces the personal guarantee as the lender’s risk mitigant. This is the most reliable path to eliminating personal guarantee requirements in Canada.
Asset Protection Strategies
Beyond the mortgage structure itself, commercial real estate investors use several strategies to protect personal assets from potential mortgage-related claims.
Corporate Structure
Holding each property in a separate corporation limits exposure. If Property A defaults and the lender pursues the corporate borrower, only the assets of that corporation are at risk. Other corporations holding other properties are separate legal entities.
However, this structure only works if:
- Each corporation is genuinely separate and properly maintained
- The lender does not require a personal guarantee that bypasses the corporate structure
- There is no corporate intermingling (shared bank accounts, commingled funds, etc.)
Holding Company Structure
A multi-layered corporate structure with a holding company (holdco) owning subsidiaries that each hold individual properties provides:
- Separation of assets across corporate entities
- Ability to extract equity from subsidiaries into the holdco through inter-corporate dividends (often tax-free)
- Additional layer of liability protection between the properties and your personal assets
Inter-Spousal Transfers and Family Trusts
Some investors use family trusts or inter-spousal transfers to move personal assets beyond the reach of potential creditors. These strategies are complex, must be implemented well before any financial difficulties arise (to avoid fraudulent conveyance rules), and require professional legal and tax advice.
Insurance
Commercial liability insurance, including errors and omissions coverage and umbrella policies, provides an additional layer of protection against claims arising from property ownership. While insurance does not protect against mortgage default specifically, it can protect against tenant lawsuits, environmental claims, and other liabilities that could indirectly threaten your financial position.
CMHC and Recourse: How It Works
CMHC mortgage loan insurance deserves special attention in the recourse discussion because it occupies a unique position in the Canadian market.
When a commercial mortgage is insured through CMHC, the insurance protects the lender against default. If the borrower defaults and the property is sold at a loss:
- The lender files a claim with CMHC
- CMHC pays the lender for the loss
- CMHC may then have subrogation rights to pursue the borrower for the loss
In practice, CMHC rarely pursues individual borrowers for deficiency claims on multi-family properties, particularly if the default resulted from genuine market conditions rather than borrower misconduct. This makes CMHC-insured mortgages functionally non-recourse for most borrowers, even if the legal documentation does not explicitly state this.
The benefits of CMHC-insured financing extend well beyond the recourse question. CMHC-insured mortgages offer higher LTV ratios (up to 95%), extended amortization (up to 50 years), and competitive interest rates. The CMHC MLI max loan calculator can help you model the financing available for your specific multi-family property.
CMHC Insurance Eligibility
Not all commercial properties qualify for CMHC insurance. Eligible properties include:
- Purpose-built rental buildings with 5 or more residential units
- Seniors housing facilities
- Student housing (in some cases)
- Affordable housing projects
Non-residential commercial properties (office, retail, industrial) do not qualify for CMHC insurance and must rely on conventional financing with personal guarantees.
The Risk Calculation: When Personal Guarantees Are Acceptable
Personal guarantees are not inherently bad. They are a tool that enables borrowing, and for many investors, accepting a personal guarantee is the right decision.
Guarantees Are Generally Acceptable When:
- The property has strong, stable cash flow with a DSCR well above 1.20
- The LTV is conservative (65% or lower), providing significant equity cushion
- The local market is stable with strong fundamentals
- You have thoroughly underwritten the deal and are confident in its performance
- The property is well-located with good tenant diversification
Guarantees Deserve Extra Caution When:
- The deal is highly leveraged (LTV above 80%)
- The property depends on a single tenant for the majority of income
- The market is overheated or showing signs of decline
- Your personal guarantee exposure across all deals is becoming significant relative to your net worth
- The property has significant capital expenditure requirements in the near future
The Portfolio View
Smart investors track their total personal guarantee exposure across all properties. If you have guaranteed $5,000,000 across five properties, a serious market downturn could trigger margin calls, covenant breaches, or defaults that cascade across your portfolio.
As your portfolio grows, actively seek to reduce guarantee exposure by refinancing into CMHC-insured products, negotiating reducing guarantees, or building enough equity that lenders will agree to reduced or eliminated guarantees.
Common Misconceptions
”If I hold the property in a corporation, I have no personal liability”
The corporation is the borrower, but the lender almost always requires a personal guarantee from the corporation’s principals. The corporate structure protects you from liability beyond the mortgage (such as tenant lawsuits), but the personal guarantee puts your personal assets on the line for the mortgage itself.
”Non-recourse means zero risk”
Non-recourse means no personal liability for the debt shortfall, but you still lose the property and all equity invested in it. On a $3,000,000 property where you invested $750,000 in equity, losing the property is a $750,000+ loss even if the lender cannot pursue you for additional amounts.
”Canadian lenders never offer non-recourse”
While full non-recourse is less common in Canada than in the United States, it is available through CMHC-insured financing, select life insurance company loans, and CMBS transactions. The key is knowing where to look and qualifying for the right commercial mortgage product.
”I can negotiate away the personal guarantee on any deal”
Personal guarantees are non-negotiable on most conventional Canadian commercial mortgages, especially those with major banks. Negotiating guarantee terms is possible on larger deals with stronger borrower profiles, but for a standard $2,000,000 to $5,000,000 commercial mortgage, expect a full personal guarantee requirement.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between recourse and non-recourse on a commercial mortgage?
Can I get a non-recourse commercial mortgage in Canada?
What are bad boy carve-outs on a non-recourse mortgage?
Does CMHC insurance make my commercial mortgage non-recourse?
Can I negotiate a reduction in my personal guarantee on a commercial mortgage?
Does holding a property in a corporation protect me from personal liability on the mortgage?
Next Steps
If your goal is limiting personal liability on multifamily debt, CMHC MLI Select and MLI Standard insurance often produce functionally non-recourse outcomes for sponsors with clean files. Compare program leverage, DSCR requirements, and guarantee structures at the CMHC MLI hub before you sign a conventional full-recourse term sheet.
Disclaimer: LendCity Mortgages is a licensed mortgage brokerage. Content on this page is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, investment, securities, or financial-planning advice. Rates, premiums, program terms, and regulations referenced are as of the page's last updated date and are subject to change. Any investment returns, rental yields, tax savings, or case-study figures shown are illustrative only — they are not guaranteed, not typical, and individual results will vary. Consult a licensed lawyer, Chartered Professional Accountant, or registered dealer before acting on any information above. Editorial standards.
Written by
Scott Dillingham
Published
June 9, 2026
Reading time
15 min read
Commercial Mortgage
Financing for commercial properties like retail, office, or multifamily buildings with 5+ units, with different qualification criteria than residential mortgages.
Non-Recourse Commercial Mortgage
A commercial mortgage where the lender's remedy upon default is limited to seizing the property itself — the borrower's personal assets are not at risk. Non-recourse financing is common in CMHC-insured loans and CMBS structures, but most conventional commercial mortgages in Canada are full recourse, meaning lenders can pursue the borrower personally if the property sale does not cover the outstanding debt.
DSCR
Debt Service Coverage Ratio - a metric that compares a property's [net operating income](/glossary/#noi) to its mortgage payments. A DSCR of 1.25 means the property generates 25% more income than needed to cover the debt. Lenders typically require a minimum DSCR of 1.0 to 1.25 for investment property loans. See also [Cap Rate](/glossary/#cap-rate) and [Cash Flow](/glossary/#cash-flow).
Net Operating Income
Net Operating Income (NOI) is a multifamily property's total annual revenue minus all operating expenses, but excluding debt service, capital expenditures, and income taxes. Calculated as gross rental income minus vacancy losses, property taxes, insurance, utilities, maintenance, and property management fees. NOI is the critical metric lenders use to assess a property's debt service capacity.
CMHC Insurance
Mortgage default insurance from Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation. For 1-4 unit investment properties, investors must put 20%+ down (no insurance available). However, CMHC offers MLI Select for 5+ unit multifamily properties, and house hackers can access insured mortgages with 5-10% down.
Hover over terms to see definitions. View the full glossary for all terms.