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Adjustable-Rate Mortgage (ARM) vs Variable-Rate Mortgage in Canada (2026)

Updated

In Canada, the terms “adjustable-rate mortgage” and “variable-rate mortgage” are often used interchangeably, but they describe two different products. The distinction matters — especially when interest rates are volatile.

ARM vs VRM: the key difference

Both adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs) and variable-rate mortgages (VRMs) have rates that float with the lender’s prime rate. The difference is what happens to your payment when rates change.

FeatureAdjustable-Rate Mortgage (ARM)Variable-Rate Mortgage (VRM)
RateMoves with primeMoves with prime
Payment amountChanges when prime changesStays the same
Principal vs interest splitAlways paying down principalSplit shifts — less principal when rates rise
Trigger rate riskNone — payment always adjustsYes — if rates rise enough, payment may not cover interest
Negative amortization riskNoneYes — can occur if trigger rate is hit
Payment predictabilityLower — amount changesHigher — amount stays constant
Cash flow planningHarder to budgetEasier to budget

How an ARM works

With an adjustable-rate mortgage, every time the Bank of Canada changes the overnight rate and your lender adjusts their prime rate, your mortgage payment changes proportionally.

Example: $500,000 ARM at prime − 0.50%, 25-year amortization

Bank of Canada MovePrime RateYour RateMonthly PaymentChange
Starting point4.50%4.00%$2,622
+0.25% rate hike4.75%4.25%$2,696+$74
+0.25% rate hike5.00%4.50%$2,771+$75
−0.25% rate cut4.75%4.25%$2,696−$75
−0.50% rate cut4.25%3.75%$2,548−$148

Each payment is recalculated to ensure you pay off the full mortgage within the original amortization period. You never fall behind on principal.

How a VRM works (and the trigger rate problem)

With a variable-rate mortgage, your payment stays the same but the allocation between principal and interest shifts.

Example: $500,000 VRM at prime − 0.50%, fixed payment of $2,622

Prime RateYour RateInterest PortionPrincipal PortionStatus
4.50%4.00%$1,653$969Normal — paying down principal
5.00%4.50%$1,860$762Less principal each payment
5.50%5.00%$2,068$554Much less principal
6.20%5.70%$2,622$0Trigger rate — payment covers only interest
6.50%6.00%$2,746−$124Negative amortization — balance grows

The trigger rate is the point where your fixed payment no longer covers the interest. Beyond that point, unpaid interest is added to your principal.

Who should choose an ARM

An adjustable-rate mortgage is better if you:

  • Want transparency — You always know your payment covers principal and interest
  • Can handle payment variability — Your budget has room for payments to increase
  • Want to avoid trigger rate risk — ARMs cannot hit a trigger rate because the payment always adjusts
  • Are in a declining rate environment — Your payments decrease automatically as rates drop
  • Have a high risk tolerance — You are comfortable with rate uncertainty

Who should choose a VRM

A variable-rate mortgage with fixed payments is better if you:

  • Need payment stability — You want to know exactly what your payment is each month for budgeting
  • Are close to the edge of affordability — A payment increase could strain your finances
  • Expect a short rate-increase cycle — If rates rise temporarily and then drop, the VRM smooths out the short-term impact
  • Are disciplined about prepayments — If rates are low and less of your payment goes to interest, you can make lump-sum prepayments to compensate

Canadian ARMs vs American ARMs

The products are quite different:

FeatureCanadian ARMAmerican ARM
Rate adjustmentMoves with prime, changes can happen any time the BoC movesAdjusts at set intervals (e.g., annually after an initial fixed period)
Initial fixed periodNone — rate is variable from day oneCommon — “5/1 ARM” means 5 years fixed, then annual adjustments
Rate capsNo formal caps — moves with primePeriodic caps (e.g., 2% per adjustment) and lifetime caps (e.g., 5% total)
Negative amortizationNot possible (payment adjusts)Possible with some ARM structures
Term lengthTypically 5 years (then renewal)Up to 30 years
PrepaymentPenalty is usually 3 months interestMay have prepayment penalties depending on product

Canadian ARMs are simpler: the rate moves with prime, and the payment adjusts immediately. There is no teaser rate period or complex adjustment schedules.

Rate discount: ARM vs fixed

Variable/adjustable rates have historically been lower than fixed rates in Canada because the borrower assumes rate risk. The typical discount varies by market conditions:

Market ConditionVariable/ARM Rate vs 5-Year Fixed
Normal yield curve0.50% to 1.50% below fixed
Flat/inverted yield curveSimilar to fixed or even higher
BoC cutting cycleWidens — variable becomes much cheaper
BoC hiking cycleNarrows or inverts — variable may exceed fixed

In April 2026, with the Bank of Canada having cut rates from the 2023 peak, variable and adjustable rates are generally competitive with or slightly below 5-year fixed rates.

What to ask your lender

Before choosing a variable-rate product, ask these specific questions:

  1. Is this an adjustable-rate (payment changes) or variable-rate (payment stays the same)? — The terminology is not standardized. Confirm which type you are getting
  2. What is the prime rate discount or premium? — Know whether you are getting prime minus 0.50%, prime minus 1.00%, etc.
  3. Is the discount guaranteed for the full term? — Some lenders can change the spread in certain conditions
  4. What happens if I hit the trigger rate (VRM only)? — Will they increase your payment automatically, or will you go into negative amortization?
  5. What is the prepayment penalty? — Variable/adjustable rate penalties are typically 3 months interest, but confirm
  6. Can I convert to fixed mid-term? — Most variable products allow conversion to a fixed rate, but the rate offered may not be the lender’s best rate

The bottom line

In Canada, the choice between an ARM and a VRM comes down to payment predictability vs transparency. ARMs protect you from trigger-rate surprises by adjusting your payment immediately. VRMs give you payment stability at the risk of falling behind on principal. If you choose variable, make sure you know exactly which product your lender is offering — and plan for the possibility that rates move against you.

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