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APR vs Interest Rate on a Mortgage: What Canadian Borrowers Need to Know

Updated

When comparing mortgages in Canada, you’ll see two numbers: the interest rate and the APR. They’re related but different — and understanding the distinction can save you from choosing the wrong mortgage.

Interest rate vs APR: the basics

FeatureInterest RateAPR (Annual Percentage Rate)
What it measuresCost of borrowing the principalTotal cost of borrowing including fees
Includes fees?NoSome fees (insurance premiums, compounding)
Which is higher?Lower or equalAlways equal to or higher
What you see advertisedUsually the interest rateRequired to be disclosed in mortgage documents
Best used forUnderstanding your monthly paymentComparing total cost across lenders

How Canadian mortgage APR is calculated

The APR in Canada accounts for:

1. Semi-annual compounding effect

Canadian fixed-rate mortgages are required by law to compound semi-annually, not monthly. This is unusual — most countries use monthly compounding. The result is that the effective rate you pay is slightly higher than the stated rate.

Stated RateMonthly Payment RateEffective Annual RateDifference
4.00%3.93% (monthly equivalent)4.04%+0.04%
5.00%4.89% (monthly equivalent)5.06%+0.06%
6.00%5.84% (monthly equivalent)6.09%+0.09%
7.00%6.78% (monthly equivalent)7.12%+0.12%

How this works: A 5.00% rate compounded semi-annually means you pay 2.50% every six months. Over a year: (1.025)² = 1.050625, or an effective 5.0625% annual rate.

For your monthly payment, the lender converts the semi-annual rate to a monthly equivalent: (1.025)^(1/6) − 1 = 0.4124% per month, or about 4.949% annual.

Note: Variable-rate mortgages in Canada typically compound monthly, so their stated rate and effective rate are closer together.

2. Mortgage default insurance premiums

If you put less than 20% down, you must pay CMHC, Sagen, or Canada Guaranty mortgage default insurance. This premium is usually added to your mortgage balance.

Down PaymentInsurance PremiumOn $400K MortgageImpact on APR
5%4.00%+$16,000APR increases ~0.25%–0.35%
10%3.10%+$12,400APR increases ~0.20%–0.28%
15%2.80%+$11,200APR increases ~0.17%–0.25%
20%+0%$0No impact

When the insurance premium is added to your mortgage balance, you’re paying interest on a larger amount. The APR reflects this higher effective cost.

3. Certain lender fees

Some lender fees — such as application fees, discharge fees, or commitment fees — may be factored into the APR calculation. In practice, most Canadian lenders don’t charge upfront application fees, so this factor is minimal for standard mortgages.

What APR does NOT include in Canada

CostIncluded in APR?
Interest rate (with compounding)✅ Yes
Mortgage insurance premium✅ Yes (if added to balance)
Lender application fees✅ Yes (if charged)
Legal fees ($1,000–$2,500)❌ No
Appraisal fee ($300–$500)❌ No
Title insurance ($250–$500)❌ No
Home inspection ($400–$700)❌ No
Land transfer tax❌ No
Property taxes❌ No
Home insurance❌ No
Prepayment penalties❌ No

Because the APR excludes many real costs, it under-represents the true cost of homeownership. Use it for comparing lenders, but calculate your full carrying costs separately.

APR comparison example

Two lenders, same interest rate:

FeatureLender ALender B
Interest rate4.50%4.50%
Mortgage amount$400,000$400,000
Down payment10%10%
Insurance premium added$12,400$12,400
Lender fee$0$500
APR4.73%4.78%

Lender A has a lower APR because it has no application fee. The interest rate is identical, but Lender B costs more in total.

Different rates, different charges:

FeatureLender CLender D
Interest rate4.40%4.55%
Mortgage amount$400,000$400,000
Down payment20% (no insurance)20% (no insurance)
Cash-back bonus$0$3,000
APR4.44%4.47%

Despite a higher stated rate, Lender D’s cash-back offer narrows the effective cost gap. The APR helps you see the true comparison — but in this case, Lender C is still cheaper over the full term.

Canadian APR vs American APR

If you’ve compared APR figures across the border, note that the Canadian and American APR calculations are different:

FeatureCanadian APRAmerican APR
Compounding conventionSemi-annual (fixed), monthly (variable)Monthly
Includes mortgage insuranceYes (if premium added to balance)Yes
Includes discount pointsNot applicable (Canada doesn’t use points)Yes
Includes broker feesNot typicallyYes
Includes origination feesOnly if chargedYes
Regulatory frameworkBank Act (federal)Truth in Lending Act (TILA)

American APR calculations tend to include more fees, making the gap between stated rate and APR larger in the US than in Canada.

When APR matters most

ScenarioDoes APR Help?
Comparing two fixed-rate mortgages from different lenders✅ Yes — shows total cost difference
Deciding between insured and uninsured✅ Yes — reveals cost of insurance on total borrowing
Comparing fixed vs variable⚠️ Limited — variable APR is based on current rate, which will change
Comparing mortgage vs HELOC❌ Not useful — different products, different APR calculations
Understanding your monthly payment❌ No — use the interest rate for payment calculations

How to use APR when shopping for a mortgage

  1. Always ask for the APR — it’s required by law for lenders to provide it, but it may not be prominently displayed
  2. Compare APR to APR — use it as an apples-to-apples comparison between lenders offering similar products
  3. Don’t rely on APR alone — it excludes legal fees, appraisal costs, and prepayment penalty terms, which vary significantly
  4. Watch for cash-back offers masking higher rates — a lender offering cash-back with a higher APR may still cost more in the long run
  5. Use the interest rate for budgeting — your monthly payment is based on the interest rate, not the APR

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