In Canada it is not possible to make the mortgage interest on your primary residence tax deductible. Sorry, but; you can make a few maneuvers using your primary residence mortgage as a starting point and the successive mortgages, if being used for income and or investment, will have tax deductible interest. It is pretty simple, but the legalities are very fine and court cases have upheld in some cases that the homeowner had committed tax evasion not clarifying the line between the residence mortgages. Your best bet is to get a good financial planner, being paid by you and work for you.
A good financial planner is well aware of the methods available to get the best use of mortgage monies. We as consumers still think like our parents, believing that the only thing that can be done with a mortgage is to get good terms, make a large down-payment with open terms and low interest rates, and pay the mortgage off as soon as possible. Most often the mortgage took at least 15-20 years to pay off. Hence, another reason that financial stability seems to only happen to people over thirty.
If you have the money to pay off the mortgage, do it. Borrowing money should not be a life plan unless you are certain to make more money than you are borrowing. There are a few ways to make this happen; beginning with the original mortgage on the primary residence which remember, is not tax deductible. The capital that would have gone into the residence can then be invested in securities comfortably to build wealth, but a rate that is not going to put your future wealth in jeopardy.
If you are interested in opening your own business you can use those monies to pay off the non-tax deductible interest mortgage and the only mortgage remaining is the mortgage with the tax deductible interest. The money that is accrued with the deductions can be used to pay down the mortgage early. This capital can be used for down-payment on loans at a lower interest rate to purchase securities, or expand the business, either way the tax deduction is there and something to accrue more capital.
Do you own stocks or bonds? Sell the securities and pay off the primary mortgage, in turn borrow the capital to purchase more investment/income property and with a lower interest rate and shorter term the money saved added to the tax deductions gained from the income bearing mortgage can be accrued to further strengthen your personal wealth.
These types of plans are different from leveraging. Leveraging is the concept that had our American neighbors in such a financial conundrum in 2008; it requires that you increase your debt to take a chance on increasing wealth. It would mean borrowing more that the amount of the non-tax deductible interest mortgage and using the difference from the borrowed capital to purchase the securities. Securities seldom pay the interest that will be spent on the mortgage tax deductible or not in time for the average consumer to make a profit before the next economic downturn.
Although the two plans above are not as risky as leveraging: DO NOT TRY THIS AT HOME. Get the financial planner to assist with these maneuvers to lower risk and to assist with getting the best rate of return on any capital that may be interest bearing and increasing your wealth.
Gurmit Singh
Mortgage Expert, Author and Real Estate Investor
M08009905
http://www.gurmitsingh.ca
email: gurmit@gurmitsingh.ca
Dominion Lending Centres Mortgage Villa (11574)
Gurmit Singh Toor http://www.gurmitsingh.ca





