Secured lending against a house maxes out at 80% LTV for conventional mortgages (subject to lender's sliding scale rules). You can have a mix of revolving (HELOC - up to 65% of the home value) and installment (mortgage - up to 80% including HELOC borrowings ) credit . TDS of 40% of income for most borrowers,.
I highly doubt there will be restrictions on how one can use their HELOC monies, banks don't care and I'll bet they really don't want the burden of policing the use of funds.
If you want easy quick money off your equity, borrow against it and buy safe dividend stocks (banks?). Even better is to arrange a HELOC that has the flexibility to convert a portion from revolving to installment as the interest is lower. I do this because I'm getting older and there is very little risk to my overall equity. Imagine borrowing $200K on a conventional mortgage at 1.5% then dumping it into you and your partner's TFSA as bank stock. The monthly interest would be about $250, the dividend about $583. Over 5 years the shares appreciated by 35%.
So... for just moving equity from your house into your TFSA with a conservative investment in a bank stock, you could have made $125K.
| | Annual | 5 year |
Investment | $200,000.00 | | |
Shares (TD Bank) | 3077 | | 3077 |
Share Price | $65.00 | | $100.00 |
Share Value | $200,000 | | $307,692 |
| | | |
Interest (1.5%) | 250 | $3,000 | $15,000 |
Dividend (3.5%) | $583 | $7,000 | $35,000 |
Net | $333 | $4,000 | $20,000 |
| | | |
Gain | | | $127,692 |
Could you have bested that with real estate? Sure, but you'd have capital gains to pay and you're probably going negative cashflow and taking on considerable risk.