Canada's First Lifetime Fixed-Rate Reverse Mortgage: A Game-Changer or Just Another Option?

Our take on this new lifetime fixed-rate reverse mortgage

Nov 21, 2025

6 min

Sue Pimento

Every so often, a retirement product emerges that makes even a seasoned boomer take notice and remark, "Well, isn't that interesting?" The Globe and Mail reported that Bloom Finance has introduced Canada's first "lifetime fixed-rate reverse mortgage."


What’s a Lifetime Fixed-Rate Reverse Mortgage?


A Fixed Rate Reverse Mortgage is a financing option that gives you a permanently locked-in interest rate for as long as you hold the loan—not just for a typical five-year term. This could appeal to many Canadians entering retirement:


It means you can unlock tax-free equity from your home without worrying that future rate hikes will eat into your cash flow or erode your long-term plans.


What makes this even more appealing is the nature of a reverse mortgage itself.


  • You’re not required to make monthly payments
  • You retain full ownership of your home
  • Your rate simply determines how your balance grows over time.


When that rate is fixed for life, it removes one of the biggest sources of uncertainty, allowing retirees to plan confidently, protect more of their equity, and use their home as a stable financial tool rather than a source of stress.


In short, a fixed-rate reverse mortgage combines the predictability retirees crave with the flexibility they need—something increasingly hard to find in today’s jittery rate environment.



Bloom's New Lifetime Reverse Mortgage: Why People Are Talking


Reverse mortgages allow homeowners aged 55+ to access up to roughly 55% of their home's equity without taxes, without monthly payments, and without affecting OAS or GIS. In the past, concerns have centred on the compounded interest and the uncertainty of future rates.


Bloom's new Lifetime Reverse Mortgage offering aims to ease this stress by offering a fixed rate for life. Currently, that rate is 6.69%. 


The rates are a bit higher than other reverse mortgage products on the market.  For comparison here are some current rates at the time of publication:


  • Home Trust's (6.44% for a 5-year fixed rate)
  • Equitable Bank (6.54%)
  • HomeEquity Bank's (6.64%) 5-year fixed rates.


Looking Beyond the Rates of Reverse Mortgages


Bloom's real appeal with this new product is emotional: no more renewal surprises.


For retirees on fixed incomes, the stability of a fixed rate feels different. It's like a weighted blanket for your financial nervous system.


Think of it as an insurance policy against rising interest rates. And boomers love insurance. We insure our hips, luggage, vacations, eyeglasses, cell phones, and emotions (usually at the spa). So, a mortgage rate that stays stable? Yes, please.


But let’s look beyond the mechanics of this product. We need to discuss a force even greater than compound interest: luck.



Let's Talk About Luck (aka: The Retirement Wild Card)


Here's a truth many boomers seldom admit: financial success isn't only about planning. It's about timing. It's about circumstance. And yes… pure, unfiltered luck.


As humans — especially we entitled boomers — we tend to overemphasize our achievements and downplay our faults. And let's be honest: we don't like admitting when we're wrong. Society often rewards the strong and wrong more than the weak and right. (If you're unsure, just watch any political panel for 30 seconds.)


Even Warren Buffett — the patron saint of rational investing — made a spectacularly poor decision when he bought Dexter Shoe for $433 million in Berkshire stock. The company later became worthless. Buffett described it as the worst deal of his life. If the Oracle of Omaha can make a mistake, the rest of us can certainly recognize how luck has influenced our real estate stories.


And oh, did luck influence the boomer journey.


We bought homes when they were affordable; when interest rates were character-building, and avocado appliances were peak chic. Then real estate skyrocketed. Homes doubled, tripled, quadrupled. Not because we were geniuses — but because we were standing in the right place at the right time.


Let's be even more honest: A boomer's worst day in real estate is a millennial's dream day. We might not like admitting it, but it's true.


And yes — boomers get to show off a little because we also carried the burden of our failures: recessions, layoffs, 19% mortgage rates, renovation disasters, and property taxes that still make us weep into our soup. But luck? She was definitely in the room.


Now that we've named her, we can begin speaking honestly about how to use the equity we possess — wisely, deliberately, and with eyes wide open.


Let's Discuss the Numbers (Because We Ought To)


Here's where the real impact happens. Say you're 70 and you take out a $200,000 reverse mortgage at Bloom's lifetime rate of 6.69%. Over 20 years, with compounding interest and no payments, you'd owe approximately $724,000.


Now, if you took out a traditional reverse mortgage at 6.54% over those same 20 years (not including rate hikes, though they're likely), you'd owe approximately $707,000.

That's a $17,000 difference — not a high price to pay for lifelong comfort.


But There Are Trade-Offs


The early-exit penalties are steep:

· 8% in year one

· Decreasing until year five

· Then three months' interest thereafter


Penalties are waived if you downsize, move to assisted living, or pass away. But if you leave for other reasons? You're responsible for the costs.


Translation: Only select this reverse mortgage product if you genuinely plan to stay put.


Zooming Out: The Full Menu of Equity Options


This lifetime reverse mortgage is just one tool in a broad (and expanding) equity-release toolkit.


Others include:

  • ADUs (Accessory Dwelling Units): Build a suite, rent it out, house a caregiver, or create multigenerational living. Offers independence and income potential.
  • Downsizing: The classic move. Big house to small house to building a solid cash cushion. Emotionally complex, financially empowering.
  • HELOCs (Home Equity Lines of Credit): Offer flexible, interest-only repayment options.
  • Manulife One: The Swiss Army knife of HELOCs. Perfect for disciplined retirees.
  • HESA (Home Equity Sharing Agreements): No payments or interest — you exchange future house appreciation for cash today.
  • Traditional Reverse Mortgages: Similar to Bloom in structure but without the lifetime rate.


And yes — boomers have more equity-access options than any generation in Canadian history. Not arrogance. Just facts. And increasingly relevant ones.


Research shows that 91% of older adults in Canada prefer to age at home rather than move to an institution, with 92.1% of Canadian seniors currently living in private dwellings in the community.


Honest Questions to Ask Yourself Before Signing for Any Type of Loan


Wondering if you should take the leap?  Before you even consider signing anything, pour yourself something warm (or stronger) and ask a few honest questions.


· Am I emotionally ready, or just tired of worrying about money?

· Am I genuinely content to remain in this home forever, or am I romanticizing the past?

· Where are interest rates heading — and how will that affect my comfort level?

· What exactly do I need cash flow for — income, essentials, opportunities, legacy, or "finally something for ME"?

· Have I thought about how this decision might affect my children and inheritance?

· What future choices could this create — or prevent?

· And the biggest question of all: if Plan A fails, is Plan B truly realistic… or just wearing yoga pants and pretending?


Because here's the real truth: the happiest retirees aren't the ones who got lucky — they're the ones who used their luck with purpose, timing, and emotional clarity.


Bloom's lifetime reverse mortgage isn't a miracle cure, nor is it a trap. It's simply one tool — and for the right person, it provides emotional stability and financial predictability.


Here's What Matters


Before you sign for a reverse mortgage, HELOCs, or anything else with an acronym and a sales commission attached, here's my professional advice: Get the full picture so you can make decisions that truly work for your life — not merely to meet someone else's sales quota. 


The "best" financial move isn't the one that appears impressive on a spreadsheet. It's the one that allows you to sleep peacefully at night. The one that grounds you emotionally and supports you financially.


Retirement isn't the end of the story. It's the chapter where you finally get to blend strategy with self-awareness, confidence with clarity, and luck with a bit of laughter.


And if life insists on being unpredictable? Then outsmart it, outlaugh it, and choose the equity tools that help your future self say, "Nice move."


Love,


Aunt Equity"

aka Sue

"Don't Retire… ReWire!!!"


Want to become an expert on serving the senior demographic? Just message me to be notified about the next opportunity to become a "Certified Equity Advocate" — mastering solution-based advising that transforms how you work with Canada's fastest-growing client segment.



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Sue Pimento

Sue Pimento

Founder | CEO

Writer, author & presenter focused on financial literacy and retirement strategies. I advocate for the health, wealth & purpose for retirees

Pension ReformInterest RatesHome EquityMortgagesReverse Mortgages
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The real user may be older, living alone, and quietly determined to remain independent. That determination deserves to be supported, not complicated. Modernization, With a Memory Home delivery is not just a legacy feature. For many seniors, it remains a small but meaningful part of how life stays organized and manageable. When that support disappears, the burden does not disappear with it. It shifts to individuals, to families, and to systems that will eventually feel the impact. If the greatest disruption falls on those least able to absorb it, the design needs a second look. And About That Cheque... We may be moving toward a world where fewer things arrive by mail. That is probably inevitable. But before we retire the idea entirely, it is worth remembering why that old line worked in the first place. “The cheque is in the mail” was believable because the system behind it was dependable. It showed up. It connected people. 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