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How Do Mortgage Brokers Get Paid in Canada?

Updated

One of the most common questions about mortgage brokers is: “If they’re free, who pays them?” The answer is straightforward — but the details matter, especially when commissions vary between lenders.

The standard payment model

For most residential mortgages in Canada, the lender pays the broker. You pay nothing extra.

ComponentHow It WorksTypical Amount
Finder fee (upfront)One-time commission paid by the lender when the mortgage funds0.50%–1.10% of mortgage amount
Trailer fee (ongoing)Annual payment from lender while you stay with them0.10%–0.15% of outstanding balance
Volume bonusExtra incentive for high-producing brokersVaries
Cost to youNothing (for standard A-lender mortgages)$0

Finder fee example

Mortgage AmountFinder Fee (at 0.80%)Finder Fee (at 1.10%)
$300,000$2,400$3,300
$500,000$4,000$5,500
$700,000$5,600$7,700
$1,000,000$8,000$11,000

The finder fee is paid by the lender to the brokerage as a business-to-business transaction. It does not appear on your mortgage documents and does not affect your rate.

How each payment type works

1. Finder fee (upfront commission)

The finder fee is the primary way brokers earn income. It’s paid once, when your mortgage funds (closes).

FactorDetail
Who pays itThe lender
When it’s paidAt mortgage funding (closing day)
Typical range0.50%–1.10% of mortgage amount
What determines the amountLender, mortgage type (insured vs uninsured), term length
Who receives itThe brokerage — broker gets a split (typically 50%–85%)

Commission by mortgage type:

Mortgage TypeTypical Finder FeeWhy
Insured (high-ratio, <20% down)0.80%–1.10%Higher because CMHC insurance eliminates lender risk
Insurable (qualifies for insurance, 20%+ down)0.65%–0.90%Moderate risk, moderate commission
Uninsured/uninsurable (refinance, 30-yr, $1M+)0.50%–0.70%Higher lender risk = lower commission
B-lender0.50%–1.00%+Varies significantly; may include borrower fee

2. Trailer fee (ongoing commission)

Some lenders pay an ongoing trailer or renewal commission for each year you remain with that lender.

FactorDetail
Who pays itThe lender
When it’s paidAnnually, on the mortgage anniversary
Typical range0.10%–0.15% of outstanding balance per year
DurationFor the life of the mortgage with that lender
PurposeIncentivizes brokers to place mortgages with quality lenders and support client retention

Trailer fee example ($500,000 mortgage):

YearOutstanding BalanceTrailer Fee (at 0.12%)
1~$490,000~$588
3~$465,000~$558
5~$435,000~$522

Not all lenders pay trailers. Some pay a higher upfront finder fee with no trailer; others pay a lower finder fee with a trailer attached.

3. Volume bonuses and status programs

High-producing brokers and brokerages may receive additional compensation:

Bonus TypeHow It Works
Volume bonusExtra 0.05%–0.15% for exceeding annual funding targets
Status tierPreferred access, faster approvals, and better pricing for top-tier brokers
Efficiency bonusIncentive for submitting clean, complete files (faster to underwrite)
Lender events/tripsSome lenders offer conferences or trips for top producers

These bonuses are paid by lenders to brokerages, not charged to borrowers. They are a legitimate part of the broker business model but represent a potential area of conflict.

When brokers charge borrower fees

In certain situations, the broker may charge you a fee directly. This is standard practice for non-standard mortgages where lender commissions are low or nonexistent.

SituationTypical Borrower FeeWhy
B-lender mortgage0.50%–1.50% of mortgage amountB-lenders pay lower commissions; broker fee supplements income
Private mortgage1.00%–3.00% of mortgage amountPrivate lenders often pay no commission; broker fee is the only compensation
Complex or high-effort fileNegotiableFile required extensive work (multiple lender submissions, difficult documentation)
Very small mortgageFlat fee ($500–$1,500)Commission on a small mortgage may not cover the broker’s time

Borrower fee rules

RuleDetail
Must be disclosed in writingBefore you sign anything or commit
Must be in the broker agreementPart of the formal engagement
Cannot be hiddenRegulators require full transparency
You can negotiateFees are not fixed — discuss before agreeing
Deducted from proceeds or paid separatelyDepends on lender and situation

The conflict of interest question

Since different lenders pay different commissions, there’s a legitimate question: does your broker recommend the best mortgage for you, or the one that pays them the most?

The concern

Lender ALender B
4.30% rate4.25% rate
1.00% finder fee ($5,000)0.65% finder fee ($3,250)
Better for brokerBetter for borrower

A broker recommending Lender A earns $1,750 more but costs you an extra $1,400+ over a 5-year term on a $500,000 mortgage.

Why this risk is manageable

SafeguardHow It Helps
Regulatory dutyBrokers must act in your best interest (fiduciary-like duty in most provinces)
Disclosure requirementsMany provinces require commission disclosure upon request
Market competitionBrokers who don’t provide best rates lose clients to those who do
Referral-driven businessMost broker income comes from repeat clients and referrals — one bad deal destroys that
Online rate transparencyYou can check rate comparison sites to verify the offer

How to protect yourself

  1. Ask: “Is this the lowest rate available?” — and if not, ask why the recommended lender is better despite the higher rate
  2. Ask about the penalty structure — a lower rate with a punitive penalty (fixed-rate IRD) may cost more long-term
  3. Ask if the broker receives the same commission from all recommended lenders — if not, understand the spread
  4. Compare with at least one other source — a second broker, an online lender, or your bank
  5. In Ontario: request a Broker Disclosure to Borrower form, which outlines compensation

How broker compensation compares to bank advisors

FeatureMortgage BrokerBank Mortgage Specialist
Paid byLender commissionBank salary + variable compensation
Incentive structureCommission per deal; trailer per yearSales targets, bonuses, product cross-selling
Potential conflictMay favour higher-commission lendersAlways recommends own bank’s products
Number of options30–50+ lenders1 lender (their bank)
TransparencyCompensation disclosable by lawInternal compensation structure not disclosed

Both models have conflicts of interest. The broker conflict is between lenders offering different commissions. The bank advisor conflict is between the bank’s interests and yours — they can only recommend their employer’s products regardless of whether a competitor offers something better.

The bottom line on broker compensation

FactDetail
For standard mortgagesBrokers are free — the lender pays
The typical commission0.50%–1.10% of mortgage amount (one-time) + possible trailer
Your rate is not affectedBroker commission doesn’t increase your rate
For non-standard mortgagesYou may pay a borrower fee — always disclosed upfront
Conflicts exist but are manageableRegulation, competition, and transparency mitigate risks

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