Yes. Canadian residential mortgage treatment is the default across the site. Brief Canada-vs.-U.S. notes may appear only when they materially help explain the Canadian term.
The core audience is Canadian home buyers, homeowners, students, and readers who need clear mortgage explanations without lender jargon, generic filler, or cross-border confusion.
Terms belong here when they directly support Canadian residential mortgage learning: qualification, stress test, down payment, mortgage default insurance, closing costs, title, appraisal, renewal, refinance, HELOC, servicing, arrears, and enforcement.
Broad real-estate lifestyle content, landlord content, broad investing material, and U.S.-default mortgage-program pages do not belong here. Product pricing, account access, and support flows also belong elsewhere in the ecosystem.
No. The site is educational only. For high-stakes decisions, use current lender documents and qualified professional advice that fits your province, lender, insurer, and specific facts.
AI may assist with drafting, outlining, cleanup, formatting, and internal-link work. Human editorial review is still needed to remove drift, tighten language, and keep the treatment consistent with Canadian mortgage reality.
No. Knowledge checks appear only when a page has enough substance to support them honestly. If a page is better served by a clean explanation and related-term trail, the site should prefer that.
Those intents belong on MasteryExamPrep.com. MortgageTermsLexicon.ca is the editorial and learning layer, not the product or support hub.
Yes. Send the page URL, the term, and the issue to [email protected]. Missing Canadian mortgage terms, broken links, and wording that still sounds too U.S.-first are especially useful reports.
MortgageTermsLexicon.ca is published by Tokenizer Inc. as a personal editorial project led by Fuad Efendi. More context is available on the About and Author pages.