Brampton is young, fast, and full of full houses. It's one of Canada's youngest big cities and one of its most multigenerational — homes where parents, adult children, in-laws, and sometimes a cousin or two all share a roof and, quietly, a wallet. Money flows between those households constantly, and most of it is never written down. That works beautifully right up until it doesn't: someone marries, someone separates, someone dies, or two siblings simply remember a long-ago handover differently. This guide is about the one mistake that trips up Brampton families most — blurring the line between a gift and a loan — and how a few minutes of writing protects both the money and the people.
Example: overseas family money, done properly
Brampton’s most common — and most mishandled — loan: money arriving from family abroad toward a house.
Borrower: N. Patel (son, Brampton)
Principal: $80,000
Interest: 0% (interest-free)
Repayment: $1,000/month × 80 months
Governing law: Ontario · Both parties e-sign · Sealed PDF + signing certificate
| Month 1 | $79,000 |
| Year 1 | $68,000 |
| Year 4 | $32,000 |
| Month 80 | $0 — repaid |
For illustration — the builder puts your real numbers on the page.
Signing a bank gift letter while privately treating the money as a loan is the trap: it undermines both stories. Deciding — gift or loan — and documenting that one decision protects the sender, the buyer, and the mortgage application alike. Both parties e-sign from their own country; no couriered paperwork.
That one fee, the borrower's by default, covers certification and both e-signatures. Law offices bill $450+ for the same page.
Create my Brampton loan agreement — free → or create an Ontario family loan agreementA city where money lives between households
To understand lending in Brampton, picture the household. With around 687,000 residents at the last census and a median age well below the national average, this is a city of young families and large, often multigenerational homes. A great many properties here are bought, paid down, and lived in by more than one generation at once — and that shapes how money moves. It rarely travels as a single, clean loan from one person to another. It travels as a parent topping up a child's down payment, a sibling covering a shortfall, an uncle fronting cash for a car, all swirling through a household where nobody keeps a ledger.
That informality is a strength — it's how families get ahead faster than they could alone. But it's also why Brampton lending produces a particular kind of dispute: not "you didn't pay me back," but "was that even a loan?" When everyone chips in and nothing is recorded, the difference between a gift and a debt dissolves — and years later, when circumstances change, two people can reach into the same memory and pull out opposite stories.
The "gift letter" trap — Brampton's signature mistake
Here's a scenario that plays out across Brampton constantly. A parent helps an adult child buy a home. The mortgage lender asks for proof the down-payment money won't have to be repaid — because a secret loan would change the buyer's debt picture — so the family signs a gift letter stating the money is a non-repayable gift. The deal closes. Everyone's happy. Then, years later, a relationship shifts — a separation, a falling-out, a parent who now needs the money back — and suddenly the parent says it was a loan all along.
The problem is that you can't have it both ways. You cannot tell the bank "this is a gift" to get the mortgage approved and then tell a court "it was actually a loan" when you want it back. Ontario judges have seen this exact manoeuvre and they don't reward it. A signed gift letter is treated as strong evidence of what you intended at the time — and your later change of heart doesn't override the document you signed when it mattered.
So which is it — and how do you lock it in?
The fix is almost embarrassingly simple, and it's the same whether you're the one giving or receiving: decide which it is, and write down the one you mean. If it's a gift, a gift letter does the job and protects the recipient forever. If it's a loan — even a soft, no-rush, "pay me when you can" loan — then it needs a loan agreement, not a gift letter and not silence. The danger zone is the in-between: money handed over with a warm feeling and no label, which each side is then free to define later to suit themselves.
A written loan agreement doesn't have to be cold or rigid. It can say the loan is interest-free, that repayment starts whenever the borrower is able, that it's forgiven if the lender dies — whatever the family actually intends. The point isn't to harden the arrangement; it's to make sure both people are describing the same arrangement. Our guide to family down payments, gifts, loans, and the mortgage and CRA rules digs into exactly how the gift-versus-loan choice interacts with your mortgage.
The Ontario rules behind all of this
None of the machinery that makes a loan enforceable is special to Brampton — it applies right across the province. The questions of whether an agreement stands up, how you may charge and disclose interest, and how long you have before the clock runs out on a claim are answered the same way everywhere in Ontario. We park that detail in one spot rather than repeating it: the Ontario loan agreement guide handles enforceability, interest, and the limitation period, while the complete guide to family loan agreements takes the national view. The thing to carry away for Brampton in particular is the gift-versus-loan point above — because in a city this multigenerational, that's the line crossed most often.
Don't overlook the tax side
A family loan carries tax questions alongside the legal ones (general information only, not tax advice):
- Zero-interest loans can backfire. Lend to a spouse or a minor child charging nothing, and the CRA's attribution rules can push the investment income that money earns back onto your own return.
- The prescribed rate is a planning tool. Lending at the CRA's published rate to move investment income to a relative in a lower bracket is a recognized strategy — our prescribed-rate guide and spousal loan guide explain it.
- Gift or loan reshapes the filing — one more reason to settle which it is, on paper.
- Hold onto the paperwork. A signed agreement, evidence the funds changed hands, and a repayment log are what survive an audit.
If it ends up in court, it ends up in Brampton
Brampton is the seat of Peel Region's courts, so a Brampton loan dispute is heard right in the city — at the A. Grenville & William Davis Courthouse on Hurontario Street, the same busy court that serves Mississauga and Caledon.
If your loan is bigger than $50,000 — and in a market where down-payment help runs into six figures, plenty are — the claim belongs in the Superior Court of Justice instead, which means more cost and more process, and an even stronger reason to have a clean agreement from day one. Our guide to suing for an unpaid loan in Ontario Small Claims Court walks through the steps.
A short conversation now beats a long argument later
Writing it down isn't a sign you distrust your family — in a multigenerational home, it's the opposite. It means nobody has to carry a private, unspoken version of events that surfaces only when things go wrong. The agreement holds the memory so the relationships don't have to. And for the giver who genuinely means a gift, putting that in writing is a gift in itself: it spares the recipient from ever having to prove it.
Our guide to writing a family loan agreement covers each piece in plain language.
Settle "gift or loan?" in writing — in minutes
Answer a few plain questions and we build a clear, Ontario-appropriate agreement you both e-sign from your phones. Free to draft.
Create my loan agreement →This piece is general information about lending in Ontario — not legal advice — and Lend Right is not a law firm. Klemensiewicz v. Klemens, 2025 ONSC 4603 is described for general illustration only; every case turns on its own facts. Census figures shift over time, and court limits, fees, forms, and courthouse locations change too — check the current details with the Ontario Ministry of the Attorney General, or a licensed paralegal or lawyer, before you act.