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Trigger Point Options: What to Do When Your Mortgage Hits the Trigger Point (2026)

Updated

The trigger point is the moment your lender steps in and tells you: your mortgage balance has grown too much, and you need to do something about it. Unlike the trigger rate — which is a mathematical threshold you may not even notice — the trigger point is a contractual provision that forces action. If you have a fixed-payment variable-rate mortgage and rates have risen significantly, you may be approaching or have already hit your trigger point. Here are your options and how to evaluate each one.

What Triggers the Trigger Point

How Lenders Define It

LenderTrigger Point Definition
TDBalance exceeds the original principal amount (i.e., you owe more than you started with)
CIBCBalance exceeds the original principal amount
National BankBalance exceeds a percentage of property value (varies by contract)
Credit unionsVaries widely — check your specific agreement

Example: Hitting the Trigger Point

MetricValue
Original mortgage amount$450,000
Home purchase price$562,500
Original LTV80%
Current variable rate6.20%
Fixed monthly payment (set at 2.50%)$2,010
Monthly interest at 6.20%$2,325
Monthly shortfall (negative amortization)$315
Time to hit trigger point (balance > $450,000)Already hit — balance grows $315/month

After approximately 10 months of negative amortization at this shortfall, the balance would have grown to $453,150 — exceeding the original $450,000 and triggering the trigger point at lenders using the “balance exceeds original” definition.

Your Options at the Trigger Point

Option 1: Increase Your Payment

The most common and usually best option.

Your lender will calculate a new payment that covers the current interest charge plus enough principal to properly amortize the mortgage within the remaining term.

Before Trigger PointAfter Payment Increase
Payment: $2,010Payment: $2,750–$3,100
Interest covered: $2,010 of $2,325Interest covered: $2,325 of $2,325
Principal: −$315 (growing)Principal: +$425–$775 (shrinking)

The increase can be significant. In the example above, the payment increase of $740–$1,090/month is a 37–54% jump. This is the “payment shock” that made headlines during 2022–2023.

Affordability Check

Current Monthly PaymentRequired New PaymentIncreaseAnnual Cost Increase
$1,800$2,500$700 (+39%)$8,400
$2,100$2,900$800 (+38%)$9,600
$2,500$3,400$900 (+36%)$10,800
$3,000$4,100$1,100 (+37%)$13,200

If the new payment is unaffordable, you need to explore other options.

Option 2: Make a Lump Sum Payment

A lump sum reduces your principal balance, which:

  1. Brings the balance back below the trigger point threshold
  2. Reduces the monthly interest charge
  3. May make your existing payment sufficient again
Lump SumNew BalanceNew Monthly InterestExisting Payment Covers?
$5,000$448,150$2,316No (still $306 short)
$15,000$438,150$2,264No (still $254 short)
$30,000$423,150$2,186No (still $176 short)
$50,000$403,150$2,083Close (only $73 short)
$60,000$393,150$2,031Yes ($2,010 is close)

In this example, you would need approximately $55,000–$60,000 as a lump sum to make the existing payment viable again at the current rate. This is a large amount of capital, and most borrowers in this situation do not have it readily available.

If you have a lump sum available, combine it with a modest payment increase for the best result.

Option 3: Convert to Fixed Rate

Converting from variable to fixed eliminates the trigger rate/point issue entirely because your rate is locked.

FactorDetails
New rateYour lender’s current 3 or 5-year fixed rate
PenaltyVaries — some lenders convert at no cost; others charge
New paymentCalculated at the fixed rate on the current (higher) balance
AmortizationRecalculated based on remaining term and new balance
Lock-in riskIf rates are falling, you lock in at a peak

Conversion Example

FactorVariable (Current)Convert to 5-Year Fixed
Rate6.20% (variable)5.09% (fixed)
Balance$453,150$453,150
Monthly payment$2,010 (fixed, not covering interest)$2,680 (fully amortizing at 20 years)
Interest covered?NoYes — 100%
Principal being paid?No (negative)Yes — building equity

The conversion increases your payment but ensures you are properly amortizing. The fixed rate is likely lower than the current variable rate (because fixed rates track bond yields, which may be lower than the Bank of Canada overnight rate).

Option 4: Refinance the Mortgage

Break the mortgage entirely and get a new one — potentially with a different lender.

FactorDetails
Penalty3 months’ interest on a variable-rate mortgage
Legal fees$500–1,500
New mortgageAt competitive market rates from any lender
BenefitClean start; can extend amortization; shop for best rate
Potential issueIf your home has lost value, you may not qualify for the same amount

Penalty Calculation

BalanceVariable Rate3 Months’ Interest Penalty
$453,1506.20%$453,150 × 6.20% ÷ 4 = $7,024

Total cost to refinance:

  • Penalty: $7,024
  • Legal fees: ~$1,200
  • Total: ~$8,224

This is much cheaper than a fixed-rate IRD penalty (which can be $15,000–$40,000+). It may be worthwhile if you can get a significantly better rate from another lender.

Option 5: Extend the Amortization

Some lenders will re-amortize the mortgage over a longer period, keeping your payment manageable.

AmortizationPayment ($453,150 at 6.20%)
20 years (remaining)$3,305
25 years$3,010
30 years$2,790

Important: Extending the amortization means paying significantly more interest over the life of the mortgage. Extending from 20 to 30 years on $453,150 at 6.20% adds approximately $135,000 in total interest.

This option may not be available at all lenders, and it may require a formal refinance (with penalty and fees) rather than a simple modification.

Decision Framework

Which Option Is Best for You?

Your SituationRecommended Option
Can afford higher paymentsIncrease payment — cheapest long-term
Have significant savings/investmentsLump sum + modest payment increase
Rates are high and expected to fallIncrease payment (not convert to fixed) — wait for variable to drop
Rates appear to have peakedConvert to fixed — lock in before potential correction
Want to switch lendersRefinance — penalty is only 3 months’ interest on variable
Cannot afford any increaseExtend amortization — last resort
Cannot afford ANY solutionSeek professional advice — mortgage broker or financial counselor

What Your Lender’s Letter Will Say

When you hit the trigger point, you will receive a letter or notification. It typically includes:

InformationWhat It Means
Your current balanceHow much you owe now
Your original balanceFor comparison
Amount above trigger pointThe excess (e.g., $3,150 above original)
Required actionWhat the lender expects you to do
Options availableUsually 2–3 choices
DeadlineTypically 30–60 days to respond
Consequence of inactionLender may unilaterally increase your payment

Do not ignore this letter. If you do not respond, most lenders will automatically increase your payment to a fully amortizing level — which could be a significant payment shock if you are unprepared.

Timeline: How Long Until the Trigger Point?

If you are in negative amortization but have not yet hit the trigger point, here is how quickly you will get there based on the monthly shortfall:

Monthly ShortfallMonths to Trigger Point ($450K balance)Months to Trigger Point ($600K balance)
$100~0 months (already there)~0 months
$200~0 months~0 months
$300~0 months~0 months
$500~0 months~0 months

At most lenders using the “balance exceeds original” definition, you hit the trigger point the moment your balance exceeds the original amount — which happens after just one month of negative amortization. This means the trigger rate and trigger point are effectively hit at nearly the same time for many borrowers.

At lenders using a higher LTV threshold (e.g., 80% of home value), there may be more room before the trigger point is hit — especially if the home has appreciated.

Preventing Future Trigger Point Issues

StrategyHow It Helps
Choose adjustable-payment variableNo trigger rate or point — payments auto-adjust
Overpay from the startSet initial payment 15–20% above the minimum
Monitor rates monthlyProactively increase payments before hitting the trigger
Maintain emergency fundHave 3–6 months of mortgage payments saved
Consider hybrid mortgagePart fixed, part variable splits the risk
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