Can I sell my home if I still have a mortgage?
Want to sell your home while you still owe money? Here’s the fast, no-bs playbook.
Quick answer
Yes. You can sell a home with an existing mortgage. The mortgage (and any liens) stay attached to the title until they’re paid or legally removed. At closing, the sale proceeds normally pay off the mortgage balance, release the lien, and transfer a clean title to the buyer.
How it actually works — step by step
- Get your mortgage payoff amount. Contact your lender and request a payoff statement. It shows the exact total due on the day of closing, including interest and fees.
- Order a title search. This reveals mortgages, liens, judgments, or other encumbrances on the property.
- Calculate net proceeds. Sales price minus mortgage payoff, liens, realtor fees, and closing costs = what you keep (or owe).
- Close the sale. The title company or lawyer pays off the lender from sale proceeds, records the mortgage release, and transfers title.

Practical options depending on your situation
- Enough equity: List the house, accept an offer, and use proceeds to pay the mortgage at closing. Simple.
- Low equity or underwater: Consider a short sale (requires lender approval) or negotiate a bridge loan to cover the gap.
- Second liens: Junior liens must be paid or negotiated. Sometimes sellers roll costs into the transaction if the buyer agrees.
What about liens and judgments?
A lien blocks a clean title. It must be resolved before transfer. Typical fixes:
- Pay the lien from sale proceeds.
- Get lienholder agreement to release at closing.
- Negotiate payoff terms or settlement with the lienholder.
Common pitfalls and how to avoid them
- Using an estimated payoff: Always use a written payoff statement with an effective date.
- Not checking for hidden liens: Order a full title search early.
- Ignoring lender requirements: Some mortgages have prepayment penalties or demand clauses. Ask your lender.
Predictive insight — why this matters now
Interest rates and market shifts create movement. Sellers with mortgages should expect faster closings to avoid rate volatility. Lenders are faster at issuing payoff statements digitally. Short sales remain an option but face tighter lender scrutiny. Expect more automated title clearance in the next 12–24 months.

Why work with a local expert
A local realtor and closing specialist coordinates the lender payoff, negotiates with lienholders, and speeds up title clearance. They prevent surprise shortfalls and costly delays.
If you want a direct assessment, I’ll run numbers, order a title check, and map the fastest path to close. Contact Tony Sousa at tony@sousasells.ca or call 416-477-2620. Visit https://www.sousasells.ca to book a free consultation.



















