Should I get a co-signer for my mortgage?
Want mortgage approval fast? Here’s when a co‑signer saves the deal — and when it sinks both of you.
Quick answer
A co‑signer can force a yes from a lender when your credit, income, or debt-to-income (DTI) ratio falls short. It’s a useful tool. It’s not a magic fix. It transfers risk to someone else and puts their credit and cash flow on the line.
When you should use a co-signer
- You have a short credit history or thin file and need underwriting support.
- Your credit score is close to the lender’s minimum but your income doesn’t qualify alone.
- You need a stronger DTI to get a competitive rate.
A co‑signer adds their income and credit profile to the application. That increases approval odds and can lower your interest rate. For first-time buyers or self-employed borrowers, a qualified co‑signer can be the difference between an approval and a rejection.

When you should not use a co-signer
- The co‑signer can’t afford the loan if you miss payments.
- You can reasonably improve credit, add a larger down payment, or shop lenders first.
- You need to protect the co‑signer from long-term liability.
If the mortgage goes into arrears, the co‑signer is on the hook. Their credit score, borrowing capacity, and savings take the hit.
Alternatives to a co-signer (use these before asking)
- Improve your credit score 30–90 days: pay down cards, fix errors on your report.
- Increase down payment to reduce lender risk and avoid mortgage insurance requirements.
- Use a mortgage guarantor product (where available) that protects the guarantor differently than a co‑signer.
- Apply with a partner or spouse who shares the property and responsibility.
- Consider specialized lenders that work with thin-file or self-employed buyers.
Quick checklist before you ask someone to co-sign
- Run a pre-approval to see if the co‑signer is needed.
- Get a clear written agreement with the co‑signer about responsibilities.
- Confirm the co‑signer can afford full payments alone.
- Ask the lender how the co‑signer’s debt and DTI are counted.
- Explore removing the co‑signer later via refinance or lender release options.
Bottom line — how to decide fast
If you need the mortgage now and a qualified co‑signer will not be financially harmed, it’s a fast route to approval. If you can reasonably fix credit, increase down payment, or find other lenders, avoid tying someone else to long-term risk.
Tony Souza is a local mortgage and real estate expert. I help buyers decide fast, protect co-signers, and map a clear refinance path to remove them. Want a straight plan tailored to your file? Contact Tony Sousa: tony@sousasells.ca | 416-477-2620 | https://www.sousasells.ca


















