Can I combine multiple mortgages for one
property?
Can you smash multiple mortgages into a single payment and cut your stress (and maybe your interest)? Read on.
Straight answer — yes, but there’s a smart way to do it
You can combine multiple mortgages on one property, but not by magic. The usual path is a refinance: one lender pays off the existing first mortgage, second mortgage, and any lines of credit tied to the property. You end up with one loan, one interest rate, and one monthly payment. That’s called mortgage consolidation or mortgage refinancing.
Why do homeowners combine mortgages? Because it often lowers the monthly payment, simplifies finances, or frees up cash flow. But it can also cost you in breakage fees, higher total interest over time, or lost borrower benefits. Be precise — the math matters.
When combining mortgages works best
- You have high-rate second mortgages or HELOCs. Consolidating into a lower-rate first mortgage can save interest.
- You want a single monthly payment to simplify budgeting.
- You plan to stay in the property long enough to recoup closing costs.
When it’s not the right move
- Your current mortgages have large prepayment penalties or long-term benefits (e.g., locked low rate).
- Consolidating pushes you into a much longer amortization, increasing lifetime interest.

How to combine mortgages — step-by-step (actionable)
- Gather documents: current mortgage statements, payoff figures, appraisal if available, proof of income, and credit details.
- Calculate true costs: add prepayment penalties, discharge fees, legal fees, appraisal, and any broker fees.
- Shop rates from banks, credit unions, and mortgage brokers. Ask about cash-out refinance options if you want to consolidate HELOCs or second mortgages.
- Compare scenarios: new rate vs. weighted average of existing rates; monthly payment difference; break-even period.
- Apply and lock the rate. Expect appraisal and underwriting.
- Close and confirm old mortgages are paid off and discharged from the title.
Alternatives to refinancing
- Mortgage transfer or assumption (rare) — the new lender takes over existing loan terms.
- Home equity loan or HELOC to pay off the second mortgage, keeping the original first mortgage intact.
- Private or vendor take-back mortgage where buyer/seller negotiates outside the standard market.
Quick risks and red flags
- Don’t refinance just to lower monthly payment without checking total interest cost.
- Watch out for lender limits on combined loan-to-value (CLTV).
- Watch for penalties and lost discounts from closed accounts.
Want an expert to run the numbers and negotiate the best path in the Toronto market? I handle every referral, lender contact, and negotiation so you don’t overpay. Email Tony Sousa at tony@sousasells.ca or call 416-477-2620. Visit https://www.sousasells.ca for local mortgage and refinancing guidance from a top real estate professional who understands lenders and local appraisal standards.
Act now: consolidation can be a quick win — but only if you do the math first.



















