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Bank of Canada Rate Decision: How It Affects Your Mortgage (2026)

Updated

The Bank of Canada rate decision is the single most-watched economic event for Canadian mortgage holders. But how the rate decision actually affects your mortgage depends on what type of mortgage you have, and the answer is more nuanced than “rates went up” or “rates went down.”

How the Bank of Canada rate affects different mortgage types

Mortgage TypeAffected by BoC Rate?How?
Adjustable-rate variableYes — immediatelyPayment changes with prime rate
Static-payment variableYes — immediatelyPayment stays the same, but interest/principal split changes
Fixed-rate (in term)NoRate is locked until renewal
Fixed-rate (at renewal)IndirectlyFixed rates follow bond yields, which are influenced by BoC policy
HELOCYes — immediatelyHELOC rates are prime + a spread

What happens after a rate cut

Your variable-rate mortgage

FactorAdjustable PaymentStatic Payment
Interest rateDecreases by the same amount as the BoC cutDecreases by the same amount as the BoC cut
Monthly paymentDecreasesStays the same
Principal repaymentSameIncreases (more of each payment goes to principal)
When it takes effectWithin 1–2 business daysWithin 1–2 business days

Example: 0.25% BoC cut on a $400,000 mortgage

ImpactAdjustable PaymentStatic Payment
Rate change5.20% → 4.95%5.20% → 4.95%
Monthly payment change$2,392 → $2,338 (−$54/month)No change
Annual interest savings~$1,000~$1,000 (applied to principal)

Your fixed-rate mortgage

A BoC rate cut does not change your current fixed rate. Your rate is contractually set until renewal.

However, a BoC cut may influence fixed rates at renewal because:

  1. Lower BoC rates signal a weaker economy or lower inflation
  2. Bond yields may decline (pushing down fixed rates)
  3. Your renewal rate may be lower

Important: Bond markets often anticipate BoC cuts before they happen. By announcement day, fixed rates may have already adjusted.

Your HELOC

HELOCs are priced at prime + a spread. A BoC cut reduces the prime rate, which reduces your HELOC interest rate immediately.

Example: 0.25% BoC cut, HELOC at prime + 0.50%

BeforeAfter
4.95% + 0.50% = 5.45%4.70% + 0.50% = 5.20%

What happens after a rate hike

Your variable-rate mortgage

FactorAdjustable PaymentStatic Payment
Interest rateIncreasesIncreases
Monthly paymentIncreasesStays the same
Principal repaymentSameDecreases (more goes to interest)
Trigger rate riskN/AIf rate rises enough, payment may not cover interest

Trigger rate (static-payment variable mortgages)

ConceptDetails
What it isThe rate at which your static payment no longer covers the interest portion
What happensNegative amortization — your balance grows instead of shrinking
Lender responseMay require increased payment or lump-sum payment
How to avoidChoose adjustable-payment variable or make voluntary extra payments

→ See: Is a Variable Rate Mortgage Worth the Risk?

The Bank of Canada rate decision schedule

The Bank of Canada announces rate decisions on 8 fixed dates per year. Dates for 2026:

DateRate DecisionMonetary Policy Report
January 29Held at 3.00%Yes
March 12Cut to 2.75%No
April 16TBDYes
June 4TBDNo
July 30TBDYes
September 17TBDNo
October 29TBDYes
December 10TBDNo

Monetary Policy Report dates include the BoC’s detailed economic outlook and are typically more significant for market movements.

How to respond to a BoC rate decision

If rates are cut and you have a variable mortgage

ActionWhen
Do nothingIf your payment adjusts automatically (adjustable-rate)
Enjoy faster principal paydownIf you have a static payment — your effective repayment rate increases
Consider locking in to fixedOnly if you believe rates will rise soon and want certainty
Increase payments voluntarilyUse the savings to pay down principal faster

If rates are cut and you have a fixed mortgage

ActionWhen
Do nothingIf your rate is already competitive and renewal is far away
Start planning for renewalIf renewal is within 6–12 months — monitor rates
Evaluate breaking your mortgageOnly if the rate drop is significant and break-even math works

→ See: Should I Break My Mortgage for a Lower Rate?

If rates are hiked and you have a variable mortgage

ActionWhen
Check your trigger rateIf you have a static payment — know your threshold
Budget for higher paymentsIf adjustable-rate — your payment is going up
Don’t panic-lock into fixedFixed rates are probably already higher; switching may cost more
Use prepayment privilegesMake lump-sum payments to offset the higher interest cost

Current rate environment (April 2026)

MetricValue
Bank of Canada overnight rate2.75%
Prime rate4.95%
Best 5-year variable rate~3.90%–4.20%
Best 5-year fixed rate~4.10%–4.40%
5-year GoC bond yield~2.80%
Market expectations1–2 more cuts priced in for 2026

→ See: Mortgage Rate Forecast 2026