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7 Mortgage Renewal Tips for the Best Rate in Canada (2026)

Updated

Your mortgage renewal is your best opportunity to improve your rate, terms, and overall mortgage strategy — but only if you prepare. Most Canadians simply sign the renewal letter their bank sends, which almost always offers a rate above what you could get by shopping around.

These seven tips will help you get the best deal at renewal.

Tip 1: Start 120 Days Early

ActionWhy It Matters
Mark your calendar 4 months before maturityMost lenders let you lock in a rate 120 days in advance
Lock a rate with your current lender or another lenderThis is your “floor” — you can only improve from here
If rates drop between lock-in and closing, many lenders will give you the lower rateYou are protected in both directions

The 120-Day Timeline

Days Before RenewalAction
120 daysStart shopping; request rate quotes from 2–3 lenders and a broker
90 daysLock in the best available rate as your fallback
60 daysReceive renewal letter from current lender; compare to your locked rate
30 daysNegotiate with current lender using competing quotes; decide stay or switch
0 daysSign renewal (current lender) or complete switch (new lender)

Starting early gives you leverage and options. Starting late leaves you signing whatever your bank offers.

Tip 2: Never Sign the First Renewal Letter

The renewal letter your bank sends is effectively their opening offer — it is not their best rate.

What the letter offersWhat you can usually get
Posted or near-posted rate0.25%–0.75% lower by negotiating
Standard term (usually 5-year fixed)Choice of term optimized to your situation
No discussion of prepayment optionsOpportunity to improve privileges

What the Rate Difference Costs You

Mortgage BalanceRate on Renewal LetterNegotiated RateMonthly Savings5-Year Savings
$300,0005.24%4.74%$83$4,980
$400,0005.24%4.74%$110$6,600
$500,0005.24%4.74%$138$8,280
$600,0005.24%4.74%$166$9,960

A 15-minute phone call to negotiate can save you thousands over the term.

Tip 3: Get Competing Quotes

The most effective negotiation tool is a real competing offer.

SourceWhat to Request
Mortgage brokerQuotes from multiple lenders (brokers access 30+ lenders)
Online-only lenderDirect rate quote (Tangerine, EQ Bank, nesto, Pine)
Another Big Five bankRate quote (useful if you are at a Big Five currently)
Credit unionRate quote (sometimes offer flexible terms)

How to Use Competing Quotes

StepAction
1Collect 2–3 written rate quotes from other lenders or a broker
2Call your current lender’s mortgage retention team (not just the branch)
3Tell them you have a rate of X% from another lender and ask them to match or beat it
4If they can’t match it, ask them what their absolute best rate is
5Compare the best offer from your current lender against the competing offer, factoring in any switching hassle

Pro tip: Mortgage brokers do the comparison shopping for you and have access to monoline lender rates that are not available directly. A good broker can present you with 5–10 options in a single conversation. See our mortgage broker guide for more.

Tip 4: Choose the Right Term

Renewal is the time to reassess your term length — don’t just default to a 5-year fixed.

TermBest WhenRisk
1-year fixedRates are expected to drop; you want flexibilityMust renew again soon; rate could rise
2-year fixedModerate uncertainty; want to reassess soonerShorter rate lock
3-year fixedBalanced approach; aligns with common life changesLess savings than variable if rates drop
5-year fixedRate certainty matters most; planning to stayHighest break penalties if you need to exit early
Variable rateHistorically saves money over fixed; comfortable with rate fluctuationsPayments change (or trigger rate hit) if rates rise

The Historical Case for Shorter Terms

Studies of Canadian mortgage data consistently show that shorter terms and variable rates have saved borrowers money the majority of the time compared to 5-year fixed. However, the 5-year fixed provides the most predictable payments.

StrategyHistorically cheaper?Payment certainty
Variable rateYes (~75% of the time over 5-year periods)Low — payments fluctuate
1–3 year fixed (serial renewals)Yes (most periods)Medium — rate resets more often
5-year fixedNo — typically the most expensive optionHigh — locked in for 5 years

Your risk tolerance, income stability, and life plans should guide the decision. See fixed vs variable mortgage for a deeper analysis.

Tip 5: Review Your Total Mortgage Strategy

Renewal is not just about rate — it’s a chance to revisit your entire mortgage structure.

Question to AskWhy It Matters
Should I increase my payment amount?Accelerates payoff; builds equity faster
Should I switch to accelerated biweekly payments?Equivalent to one extra monthly payment per year
Should I extend my amortization to lower payments?Useful if facing payment shock
Should I make a lump-sum prepayment?Reduces principal before the new rate applies
Do I need to refinance for cash?Renewal is penalty-free; refinancing adds costs
Should I consolidate high-interest debt into my mortgage?Lower rate, but extends repayment — calculate carefully

Payment Frequency Impact

FrequencyPayments/YearAnnual Amount (on $400K at 4.74%)Amortization Saved
Monthly12$25,128Baseline (25 years)
Biweekly26$25,116~6 months
Accelerated biweekly26$27,222~3 years
Weekly52$25,116~6 months
Accelerated weekly52$27,222~3 years

Switching from monthly to accelerated biweekly at renewal is one of the easiest ways to save tens of thousands in interest over the life of your mortgage.

Tip 6: Stress-Test Your Budget Before Renewing

If you originally locked in at a low rate (2020–2022 era), your renewal rate will likely be significantly higher. Prepare your budget before the payment changes.

Original RateRenewal RatePayment Increase per $100KOn $400K Mortgage
1.89%4.49%+$124/month+$496/month
2.49%4.49%+$93/month+$372/month
3.29%4.49%+$55/month+$220/month
3.99%4.49%+$23/month+$92/month

Pre-Renewal Budget Checklist

ActionWhen
Calculate your new estimated payment at current rates4 months before renewal
Start living on the higher payment amount now (put the difference into savings)3 months before renewal
Identify expenses to cut if needed2 months before renewal
Build a 1–2 month mortgage payment bufferBefore renewal date

If the payment increase is severe, see our payment shock at mortgage renewal guide for detailed strategies.

Tip 7: Know When to Switch Lenders

Switching lenders at renewal is free (no prepayment penalty) for a standard transfer. A switch makes sense when:

ScenarioStay or Switch?
Current lender matches the best available rateStay — no reason to switch
Current lender is 0.10–0.15% higher but offers good service and featuresStay — convenience has value
Current lender is 0.20%+ higher than competing offersSwitch — savings are significant
You want features your current lender doesn’t offer (e.g., better prepayment privileges)Switch
You have a HELOC/mortgage combo (collateral charge)May need to stay — collateral charges are harder to transfer

What Switching Involves

ComponentWho Handles ItCost to You
New lender applicationYou (online or with broker)Free
Credit check and qualificationNew lenderFree
Appraisal (if required)New lender orders itUsually lender-paid
Legal transferNew lender’s lawyerUsually lender-paid
Discharge of old mortgageOld lender$200–$400 (your cost)
Total cost to switch$0–$400

Collateral charge warning: If your current mortgage is registered as a collateral charge (common with TD, Scotiabank STEP, and some credit unions), switching requires a full discharge and re-registration, which costs $500–$1,000+ and may not be covered by the new lender. Check your mortgage registration type before assuming a free switch.

Renewal Quick-Reference Checklist

  • Started shopping 120 days before renewal
  • Got 2–3 competing rate quotes (broker + direct lenders)
  • Did NOT sign the first renewal letter
  • Called current lender’s retention team with competing quotes
  • Evaluated the right term length for current situation
  • Considered switching to accelerated biweekly payments
  • Stress-tested budget at the new rate
  • Checked whether mortgage is standard or collateral charge
  • Reviewed prepayment privilege options
  • Made lump-sum prepayment if beneficial before new rate takes effect
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