My Rates

6 Months 5.49%
1 Year 4.99%
2 Years 4.44%
3 Years 4.34%
4 Years 4.39%
5 Years 4.24%
7 Years 5.14%
10 Years 5.49%
6 Months Open 9.75%
1 Year Open 9.75%
*Rates subject to change and OAC
AGENT LICENSE NUMBER
M19002425
BROKERAGE LICENSE NUMBER
10252
Bharat Batra

Bharat Batra

Mortgage Broker


Address:
1305 Matheson Blvd E, Mississauga, Ontario L4W1R1
AGENT LICENSE NUMBER
M19002425
BROKERAGE LICENSE NUMBER
10252
BROWSE PARTNERS

Bharat Batra

Mortgage Broker | Ontario

Your Mortgage - My Aim !

 

🏠 Mortgage Solutions for Self-Employed & Business Owners in Ontario

 

If you’re self-employed, a business owner, or an entrepreneur in Ontario and you’ve been told
“you don’t qualify” — you’re not alone, and you’re not out of options.

 

🤝 Bharat Batra is the mortgage broker who listens first, understands your story, and builds a solution that works for your real financial life.

 

With 🕰️ over 20 years of experience in the financial sector, Bharat brings deep industry knowledge, strong lender relationships, and a calm, empathetic approach to every client interaction. He specializes in mortgage solutions for self-employed individuals and business owners whose income, credit, or structure doesn’t fit traditional lending models.

 


 

💼 Mortgages Designed for Business Owners — Not Bank Checklists

 

Bharat understands that business owners don’t always pay themselves in neat pay stubs — and that doesn’t mean they’re not financially strong.

 

🔍 Areas of Expertise:

🏢 Self-Employed & Business Owner Mortgages (Ontario)
📊 Low Personal Income / Strong Business Income Solutions
🧾 Stated Income & Bank Statement Mortgages
💳 Bruised Credit & Credit Rebuilding Strategies
💰 Down Payment Support 
🏦 B-Side Mortgages with Excellent Rates & Flexible Terms
🔐 Private Mortgages with Clear Exit & Long-Term Planning
🔄 Refinancing, Equity Take-Outs & Debt Consolidation
Fast Approvals & Time-Sensitive Mortgage Solutions

 

Whether you’re purchasing a home, refinancing, or restructuring debt, Bharat focuses on
what can be done — not what can’t.

 


 

❤️ A Compassionate Approach Backed by Strategy

What sets Bharat apart is not just access to lenders — it’s how he advocates for his clients.

Empathetic, Judgment-Free Guidance
Clear, Honest Advice — No Pressure
Access to Prime, B-Lenders & Private Funding
Fast Turnarounds When Timing Matters
Long-Term Credit & Mortgage Planning

 

Many clients start with alternative or private mortgage solutions and
📈 strategically transition into stronger credit, better rates, and prime lending over time.

Every recommendation is made with your future in mind, not just today’s approval.

 


❌ Declined by the Bank? Let’s Talk.

 

If you’ve been told:

🚫 “Your income doesn’t qualify”
🚫 “Your credit needs work”
🚫 “Your business structure is too complex”
🚫 “You need more time before approval”

 

It doesn’t mean your goals are out of reach.
It simply means you need a mortgage broker who understands self-employed realities.

 


 

🎯 Your Mortgage. My Aim.

 

Bharat Batra combines experience, compassion, and problem-solving expertise to help Ontario’s business owners and entrepreneurs secure mortgages with confidence and clarity.

 

📞 Book a confidential consultation today and take the next step toward your mortgage solution.

 

 


BLOG / NEWS Updates

CREA: Canadian Home Sales Edge Higher in April

CMHC: Spring 2026 Housing Supply Report

Canada’s housing starts made meaningful gains in 2025. Record rental construction and more missing middle housing added important new supply, building on the momentum highlighted in the Fall 2025 Housing Supply Report.

At the same time, ownership-oriented construction weakened overall. Short-term imbalances continued in several markets. Rising unsold inventories suggest today’s supply may not align well with buyers’ needs, while tighter financing conditions and project cancellations threaten future supply.

This report focuses on both sides of that story: where Canada is succeeding in expanding housing options and where further progress is needed to ensure long-term supply and affordability.

Highlights

  • Canada’s housing starts rose 6% in 2025, driven by record rental and expanding missing middle construction. Building timelines improved. High completion levels added important supply, especially in Vancouver, Calgary and Edmonton.
  • Major vulnerabilities lie underneath this progress. Condominium presales collapsed, unsold inventory surged and financial conditions tightened. These pressures threaten the future pipeline of ownership-oriented housing supply, particularly in Toronto and Vancouver.
  • Slower population growth, cautious buyers and elevated construction costs shaped supply decisions, pushing developers towards smaller apartments while limiting family-sized, ground-oriented homes.
  • Looking ahead, near‑term supply imbalances are expected to ease as new supply is absorbed, helping affordability in the long run.

https://www.cmhc-schl.gc.ca/professionals/housing-markets-data-and-research/market-reports/housing-market/housing-supply-report

Scotiabank: Canadian Home Sales (March 2026): Housing News Flash

CANADA HOUSING MARKET: STILL WAITING FOR A NATIONAL HOUSING MARKET RECOVERY

National housing sales and the MLS Home Price Index continued to decline in March, reflecting continued weakness in market conditions.

The number of national housing sales posted its fifth consecutive monthly decline last month, edging down by -0.1% (sa figures) from its February level, while it declined by -2.3% (nsa) since March 2025. From February to March, sales declined in 17 of the 31 local markets we track. National new listings also edged down by -0.2% (sa) between February and March and posted a -4.9% (nsa) decline since March 2025.

With almost identical monthly declines (in %) in both sales and new listings, the national sales-to-new listings ratio stayed constant at 47.8% (sa) from February to March, still in the lower half of the estimated balanced conditions range. This indicator of market conditions has hovered in this lower-half range since December 2024, and also frequently since Spring of 2022. From February to March and according to this indicator, market conditions eased in 14 of the local markets we monitor and tightened in 17 of them. It also suggests 14 of these local markets were balanced in March and the same number were favouring buyers, all in B.C. and Ontario. Only 3 markets—Regina, Saskatoon and St. John’s (NL)—were assessed as sellers’ favourable.

The other indicator of market conditions we report—months of inventory—stayed unchanged at 5.0 from February to March, very close to its long-term pre-pandemic average of 5.2, hence also suggesting balanced conditions. But despite being essentially balanced at national level, this indicator continues to mask significant divergences across provinces with British Columbia and Ontario showing figures above their long-term average and the other provinces showing below average figures.

The national MLS House Price Index (HPI) declined -0.4% (sa) from February to March, continuing its downward trend that started in the second half of 2023. As in many previous months, all unit types contributed to both the monthly and 12-month declines in the national MLS HPI. Over the 12-month period ending in March of this year, this price index declined -4.7% (nsa). Its trend profile reflects the weakening market conditions mainly coming initially from the lagged effects from the rise in interest rates until Fall of 2023, and subsequently from slower population growth and the rise in global trade and geopolitical tensions since early 2025.

https://www.scotiabank.com/ca/en/about/economics/economics-publications/post.other-publications.housing.housing-news-flash.april-16--2026.html

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