Power of Sale & Mortgage Enforcement — Property Counsel
Power of Sale & Mortgage Enforcement
Ontario power of sale lawyers.
Property Counsel represents homeowners, lenders, and subsequent mortgagees across Ontario in power of sale proceedings, Notice of Sale disputes, mortgage enforcement, and deficiency claims under the Mortgages Act.
In Ontario, power of sale runs on a 35-day clock. Don’t spend it waiting.
How We Help
Power of sale and mortgage enforcement services across Ontario.
The redemption period is short
Power of sale in Ontario moves quickly under the Mortgages Act
Under Part III of Ontario’s Mortgages Act, a lender exercising power of sale must serve a Notice of Sale and wait at least 35 days — the statutory redemption period — before listing the property. Inside that window, the borrower can stop the sale by paying out the arrears and costs. Whether you have received a Notice of Sale, are enforcing a mortgage, or hold a second or third mortgage on a property going to sale, contact us immediately to confirm your deadlines and protect your position.
01
Defending Homeowners Served With a Notice of Sale
If you have received a Notice of Sale Under Mortgage in Ontario, you have a narrow window to act. We review the notice for defects — improper form, defective service, miscalculated arrears, premature acceleration, or non-compliance with the Mortgages Act — and advise on every option to stop the power of sale, from reinstatement to refinance to an emergency motion to restrain the sale. A defective Notice of Sale is unenforceable.
02
Stopping a Power of Sale During the Redemption Period
During the 35-day redemption period, the borrower has an absolute right to reinstate the mortgage by paying the arrears, costs, and any properly accelerated balance. We negotiate the correct payout figure with the lender, dispute inflated legal and administrative charges, and coordinate the funds — refinance, private bridge, sale of another asset, or family resources — to bring the mortgage current before the deadline expires.
03
Court Motions to Extend the Redemption Period
Where 35 days is not enough — to close a refinance, list and sell privately at fair market value, or resolve a dispute over the amount owing — the Superior Court can extend the redemption period in appropriate cases. We bring urgent motions for relief, supported by evidence of the homeowner’s ability to cure the default and the equity at stake, preserving value that would otherwise be lost to a rushed sale at undervalue.
04
Challenging a Lender’s Sale Price — The Duty to Obtain Fair Market Value
A lender exercising power of sale owes the borrower a duty to act in good faith and obtain the best price reasonably available. Where the lender sold too quickly, with inadequate marketing, at an undervalue, or to a related party, the borrower can sue for damages equal to the difference between the sale price and fair market value — and raise the same conduct as a defence to any deficiency claim. We assess the sale, retain appraisal evidence, and bring claims against lenders who have breached the duty.
05
Defending Deficiency Judgments After a Power of Sale
Where sale proceeds fall short of the mortgage balance, lenders sue borrowers, guarantors, and covenantors for the shortfall — a deficiency judgment. We defend these claims by attacking the validity of the original Notice of Sale, the conduct of the sale (was the duty to obtain best price met?), and the inflated default interest, legal fees, and administrative charges typically packed into the deficiency. Personal guarantors of corporate mortgages face the same defences.
06
Power of Sale Enforcement for Lenders
We represent institutional lenders, private lenders, and Mortgage Investment Corporations enforcing mortgages on residential and commercial property in Ontario. We confirm default, calculate the correct payout, draft and serve a compliant Notice of Sale, manage the redemption period, instruct the listing agent to satisfy the duty to obtain best price, and close the sale and distribute proceeds in proper priority. Done correctly, a residential power of sale closes in 90 to 120 days.
07
Second & Third Mortgage Enforcement
Enforcing a second or third mortgage in Ontario raises distinct priority issues. A subordinate mortgagee can pay out the first mortgage to preserve equity, monitor a senior lender’s sale to ensure the duty to obtain best price is met, or exercise its own power of sale subject to the first charge. We advise private second and third lenders on the strategic decision to enforce, and act for subordinate mortgagees prejudiced by a senior lender’s conduct.
08
Private Mortgage Enforcement & MIC Defaults
Private mortgages and Mortgage Investment Corporation (MIC) loans carry shorter terms, higher rates, and more aggressive default provisions than bank financing — and they default more often. On the lender side, we move quickly to crystallize default and close the sale before further interest accrues. On the borrower side, we scrutinize the mortgage for unenforceable rates, hidden fees, and breaches of the Interest Act, and negotiate workouts that allow refinance or private sale.
09
Judicial Sale & Foreclosure Applications
Power of sale is the dominant remedy in Ontario, but judicial sale and foreclosure remain available under the Mortgages Act and the Courts of Justice Act — particularly where title issues complicate a power of sale, multiple subsequent encumbrancers require court supervision, or a lender wishes to take title rather than sell. We bring and defend applications for judicial sale, final orders of foreclosure, and orders to open foreclosure in the Superior Court of Justice.
What You Need to Know
Common questions about power of sale
and mortgage enforcement in Ontario.
I received a Notice of Sale Under Mortgage — what do I do?
Treat it as urgent. A Notice of Sale starts the 35-day redemption period under Part III of the Mortgages Act, after which the lender can list and sell. Within the first few days, confirm the arrears in writing, gather your mortgage and any default correspondence, and get legal advice on whether the notice is valid. Options include paying arrears to reinstate, refinancing with a new lender, selling privately at fair market value, or, where the notice is defective, applying to restrain the sale. The earlier you act, the more options you have.
How long is the redemption period for a power of sale in Ontario?
Under section 22 of the Mortgages Act, the lender must wait at least 35 days from service of the Notice of Sale before listing the property. Many mortgages contractually require a longer notice period — check the mortgage instrument. Until the redemption period expires, the borrower has an absolute right to reinstate the mortgage by paying the arrears, costs, and any properly accelerated amounts.
Can I stop a power of sale in Ontario?
Yes, in several ways. Reinstate the mortgage during the redemption period by paying the arrears and costs — typically funded by a refinance or private bridge. Sell privately at fair market value before the lender does, capturing any equity above the mortgage. Where the Notice of Sale is defective, apply to restrain the sale. Where 35 days is not enough time, the court can extend the redemption period in appropriate cases. The right path depends on your equity, finances, and the conduct of the lender.
What is the difference between power of sale and foreclosure in Ontario?
Power of sale is a contractual remedy under the Mortgages Act — the lender sells the property, applies the proceeds to the mortgage and any subordinate encumbrances, and pays any surplus to the borrower. Foreclosure is a court order vesting title in the lender, extinguishing the borrower’s equity of redemption — the lender keeps the property and any surplus value, but cannot sue for a deficiency. Foreclosure is rare in Ontario because power of sale is faster and preserves the right to a deficiency judgment.
What happens if my house is sold under power of sale for less than it’s worth?
The lender owes the borrower a duty to act in good faith and obtain the best price reasonably available. Where the lender sold too quickly, with inadequate marketing, at an undervalue, or to a related party, the borrower can sue for the difference between the sale price and fair market value — and raise the same conduct as a defence to any deficiency claim. We assess the listing duration, asking price, marketing program, and offers received, and retain appraisal evidence to quantify the loss.
What is a deficiency judgment after a power of sale?
A deficiency judgment is a judgment against the borrower (and any guarantor or covenantor) for the shortfall after the property is sold and the proceeds applied. Deficiency claims are commonly defended by attacking the validity of the Notice of Sale, the lender’s duty to obtain best price (which often eliminates the deficiency entirely), and the inflated default interest, legal fees, and administrative charges packed into the claim. Personal guarantors of corporate mortgages regularly face deficiency claims long after the sale has closed.
How long does the power of sale process take in Ontario?
A typical residential power of sale closes in 90 to 120 days from default: the 35-day redemption period, plus 30 to 60 days of marketing, plus a normal closing period after an accepted offer. Complications — a contested sale, a defective Notice of Sale, multiple subordinate encumbrancers, title issues, or occupants who will not vacate — can extend the process. On the borrower side, the 35-day window is what matters: every option to keep the home compresses into that period.
I’m a second mortgage holder — what are my rights when the first lender starts a power of sale?
As a subordinate mortgagee, your charge ranks behind the first mortgage — only proceeds remaining after the first mortgage is paid out are available to you. Your options: pay out the first mortgage to stop the sale and preserve the equity for your own enforcement, monitor the senior sale to ensure the duty to obtain best price is met (a sale at undervalue prejudices you directly), or exercise your own power of sale in parallel subject to the first charge. Where the senior lender’s conduct has prejudiced your security, you may have a claim against it.
Will a power of sale affect my credit and my ability to buy a home in the future?
Yes. Mortgage arrears, default, and the resulting power of sale are reported to the credit bureaus by most institutional and many private lenders, and the impact on a credit score is significant and long-lasting — typically six to seven years. The credit consequences are one reason that resolving the default during the redemption period — through reinstatement, refinance, or private sale — is almost always preferable to allowing the lender to sell.
Can I sell my house myself to avoid a power of sale?
Yes, and it is often the best outcome where there is meaningful equity. Selling on the open market at a properly marketed asking price almost always yields a higher price than a lender-controlled power of sale — lenders are motivated to close quickly, not to maximize the surplus paid to the borrower. List the property, accept an offer that closes before the redemption period expires, and use the proceeds to pay out the mortgage at closing. Where timing is tight, we coordinate with the lender’s counsel to hold the power of sale in abeyance pending the private sale.
The Property Counsel Standard
“A Notice of Sale is a deadline, not a verdict. With time and the right strategy, a default may still be resolved on the homeowner’s terms.”
Real estate law, only
We litigate exclusively in real estate — our knowledge of the law and the market is focused and current.
We act quickly
Real estate disputes are time-sensitive. We move without delay to protect your legal position from day one.
Direct access to your lawyer
Your file is handled by a licensed lawyer from start to finish — not a paralegal or junior clerk.
Transparent on cost
We discuss fees before we start. You know what you are committing to before the work begins.
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Disclaimer: The content on this page is for general information purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Reading this page does not create a lawyer-client relationship. For advice specific to your situation, contact Property Counsel or your own legal counsel. Property Counsel makes no representations as to the accuracy, completeness, or currency of the information provided. Content reflects the law as of its publication date and may not reflect subsequent legal developments.