If your mortgage feels painfully expensive, there are two separate questions to answer. First, is your interest rate too high compared with todayβs market? Second, is your payment too high relative to your income and broader budget? Both matter, and the answer is not always the same.
Quick mortgage self-check
| Question | Usually Fine | Possible Problem |
|---|---|---|
| Housing costs as % of gross income | Under 32% to 39% | Over 40% |
| Rate vs current market | Close to available offers | Much higher than new offers |
| Cash flow after mortgage | Healthy monthly surplus | Constantly tight |
| Renewal review | Compared options | Auto-renewed without shopping |
Are you paying too much in monthly housing costs?
Lenders usually focus on the Gross Debt Service ratio.
| Cost Included | Counts Toward Housing Ratio |
|---|---|
| Mortgage principal and interest | Yes |
| Property taxes | Yes |
| Heating | Yes |
| Condo fees (partial) | Often yes |
If these costs consume too much of your income, even a fair interest rate can still leave you overextended.
A simple affordability benchmark
| Gross Household Income | 32% Housing Cost | 39% Housing Cost |
|---|---|---|
| $100,000 | $2,667/mo | $3,250/mo |
| $120,000 | $3,200/mo | $3,900/mo |
| $150,000 | $4,000/mo | $4,875/mo |
If your total housing costs are materially above these levels, your mortgage may be too expensive for your income, even if the lender approved it.
Are you paying too high a rate?
You may be overpaying on rate if:
- you renewed without comparing banks, brokers, and monoline lenders
- your current rate is much higher than available offers for your term type
- you have strong credit and equity but never negotiated
- you stayed with your lender for convenience only
See best mortgage rate Canada and how to negotiate mortgage rate.
When a high payment is normal
Not every painful mortgage is a bad mortgage.
| Situation | Why It May Still Be Reasonable |
|---|---|
| You chose accelerated payments | You are paying it off faster |
| You bought in Toronto or Vancouver | Local housing costs are structurally high |
| You renewed in a higher-rate cycle | Market-wide issue, not just your lender |
| You recently refinanced to consolidate debt | Payment includes prior debt burden |
Signs your mortgage may truly be too much
You may be paying too much if:
- you rely on credit cards or lines of credit to get through the month
- you cannot save for emergencies or retirement
- you dread any rate increase or renewal
- your payment has crowded out taxes, repairs, or insurance
- you only qualified by stretching ratios to the limit
Rate vs payment: know which problem you have
| Problem | Best Response |
|---|---|
| Rate too high | Shop renewal, switch lenders, negotiate |
| Payment too high | Rework budget, extend amortization, prepay other debt, consider downsizing |
| Both | Full mortgage strategy review needed |
Should you refinance or break the mortgage?
Potentially, but run the numbers.
| Factor | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| Prepayment penalty | Can be very large on fixed-rate mortgages |
| Remaining term | Shorter remaining term reduces savings window |
| New rate | Must be meaningfully better |
| Legal / appraisal fees | Reduce benefit |
Sometimes the better move is to prepare for renewal rather than breaking today.
Ways to improve the situation
- Shop multiple renewal quotes well before maturity.
- Negotiate with your current lender using competing offers.
- Increase lump-sum prepayments if cash flow allows.
- Refinance other high-interest debt carefully if it improves overall finances.
- Consider extending amortization only if you need short-term cash-flow relief.
Bottom line
You may be paying too much for your mortgage if your rate is clearly above market and your total housing costs are straining your income. But sometimes the issue is not the lender. It is that the home itself is too expensive for your current cash flow. Knowing the difference matters before you refinance, switch, or downsize.