Later-life separation is rising in Canada, making home buyout decisions more important for retirement planning, especially when finances shift from joint to solo.
Keeping the family home can offer stability during transition, but it may reshape long-term savings, borrowing needs, lifestyle choices, and retirement flexibility.
A buyout may require redirecting retirement savings, taking on new debt, or both, with mortgage qualification based only on current solo income.
Before committing, test whether revised income comfortably covers taxes, insurance, maintenance, repairs, possible adult-child support, and the lifestyle you want in retirement.
Build a short-term transition plan and long-term retirement plan together, so trade-offs are clear and the decision fits your new direction well.