Short Answer
Breaking a mortgage in Canada can cost anywhere from a few thousand dollars to over $30,000 depending on your lender, your rate, and how much time remains. Understanding the penalty calculation before you break is essential — and so is exploring alternatives first.
How Mortgage Break Penalties Work
When you break a fixed mortgage before maturity, your lender collects one of two penalties:
| Penalty type | How it’s calculated | When it applies |
|---|---|---|
| 3 months interest | Current rate × balance ÷ 12 × 3 | Usually on variable rate mortgages, some fixed |
| Interest Rate Differential (IRD) | (Your rate − comparator rate) × balance × remaining months/12 | Fixed rate mortgages when rates have dropped |
Lenders apply whichever is greater. When interest rates have fallen since you signed, the IRD is almost always larger.
Why Big Bank IRD Penalties Are Higher
The IRD comparator rate matters enormously. Big banks typically compare your contract rate to the current discounted rate for the nearest closed term, while monoline lenders typically compare to the posted rate. Discounted rates are lower than posted rates, so the differential widens at big banks.
| Lender type | IRD comparator | Effect on penalty |
|---|---|---|
| Big Six bank | Current discounted rate | Higher differential → higher penalty |
| Monoline lender | Current posted rate | Smaller differential → lower penalty |
| Credit union | Varies (often better) | Generally more borrower-friendly |
Penalty Calculation Example
Scenario: $450,000 remaining balance, 3 years left in a 5-year term, original rate 5.25%
| Step | Calculation |
|---|---|
| 3-month interest | $450,000 × 5.25% ÷ 12 × 3 = $5,906 |
| IRD comparator rate (big bank using current 2-year discounted rate at 4.10%) | 5.25% − 4.10% = 1.15% differential |
| IRD penalty | $450,000 × 1.15% × (36 months ÷ 12) = $15,525 |
| Penalty charged | $15,525 (IRD is greater) |
The actual numbers vary by lender and current rates. Always request a formal penalty quote from your lender before making any decisions.
The Break-Even Calculation
Breaking your mortgage only makes financial sense if the total savings exceed the total costs:
| Item | Your numbers |
|---|---|
| Current rate | ___% |
| New rate available | ___% |
| Remaining balance | $______ |
| Remaining months | ____ |
| Monthly interest savings at new rate | $______ |
| Break penalty | $______ |
| Legal/discharge fees | $500–$1,500 |
| New mortgage setup fees | $0–$1,000 |
| Total break cost | $______ |
| Months to break even | Total cost ÷ Monthly savings = ____ months |
If you plan to stay in the home longer than the break-even period, breaking may be worthwhile.
Alternatives to Breaking Your Mortgage
Before paying a penalty, consider these options:
| Alternative | Works when | Tradeoff |
|---|---|---|
| Blend and extend | Rates dropped modestly, high penalty | Get partial benefit, no penalty, new term starts |
| Port the mortgage | You are buying a new home | Transfer terms, avoid penalty, subject to approval |
| Prepayment privilege | Want to reduce balance | Use annual lump sum limit (typically 10–25%) penalty-free |
| Wait for renewal | Penalty declines as maturity nears | Delay savings, but penalty math improves each month |
When Breaking Usually Makes Sense
- Interest rates have dropped 1.5%+ and you have 2+ years remaining
- You are selling the home and cannot port to the next property
- You need to access equity for an urgent need and HELOC is not available
- You are separating from a spouse and the property is being sold or refinanced
When Breaking Usually Doesn’t Make Sense
- Rates have only dropped modestly (less than 0.75%) — penalty may eat years of savings
- You are less than 12 months from renewal — wait and renew at market rates
- Blend-and-extend gets you 70–80% of the rate benefit penalty-free
- You are planning to sell within the break-even period
Before You Break Your Mortgage: Checklist
- Obtained formal written penalty quote from lender
- Calculated IRD and 3-month interest penalties manually to verify
- Completed break-even calculation (months to recoup total costs)
- Confirmed break-even is before your expected move date
- Evaluated blend-and-extend option and compared savings
- Confirmed portability if purchasing another property
- Exhausted annual prepayment privilege if goal is principal reduction
- Checked if lender offers any penalty discounts or promotional refinance offers
Bottom Line
Mortgage break penalties at Canadian big banks can run into the tens of thousands of dollars. Always get a formal penalty quote, run the break-even numbers, and explore blend-and-extend or portability before committing. For many Canadians, the alternatives are substantially cheaper.