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Nearly 1 in 4 homeowners say they'd have to sell home if interest rates rise more, according to survey

Nearly one in four homeowners say they will have to sell their home if interest rates go up further, according to a new debt survey from Manulife Bank of Canada.

Bank of Canada expected to continue raising interest rate as inflation sits at record high

Two homes with a "For Sale" sign out front.
A new survey from Manulife found that one in four Canadians say they will have to sell their home if interest rates continue to rise. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

Nearly one in four homeowners say they will have to sell their home if interest rates go up further, according to a new debt survey from Manulife Bank of Canada.

The survey, conducted between April 14 and April 20, also found that 18 per cent of homeowners polled are already at a stage where they can't afford their homes.

More than one in five Canadians expect rising interest rates to have a "significant negative impact" on their overall mortgage, debt and financial situation, the survey found.

The Bank of Canada remains on a rate-hike path as it tries to tame inflation, which is now at a 31-year high of 6.8 per cent. On June 1, the central bank increased its key interest rate by half a percentage point, to 1.5 per cent.

Low interest rates during the pandemic fuelled a surge in real estate demand that led housing prices to soar. 

"Some Canadians made decisions to take their mortgages out based on what they could be approved for and maybe didn't get some financial advice to say, well, 'I know I can get approved for a mortgage at this particular level, but what can I actually afford?'" said Lysa Fitzgerald, vice-president of sales at Manulife. 

WATCH | Warning for homeowners:

Bank of Canada warns homeowners of increasing mortgage rates

2 years ago
Duration 6:50
Personal finance columnist Rubina Ahmed-Haq says the Bank of Canada is making sure people are prepared for higher mortgage payments in the years to come.

But Fitzgerald says it's important to remember that the survey is an indication of how Canadians feel about their financial situation rather than a reflection of their actual financial risk.

"There is a lot of speculation that is going on out there," she said. "I would just encourage Canadians to find themselves a really good certified financial adviser who's used to dealing with these types of scenarios." 

The Manulife survey also found that two-thirds of Canadians do not view home ownership as affordable in their local community.

Additionally, close to half of indebted Canadians say debt is impacting their mental health, and almost 50 per cent of Canadians say they would struggle to handle surprise expenses.

With files from the CBC's Meegan Read

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