Roughly 70% of Canadian mortgages still come from the Big Five banks (RBC, TD, BMO, Scotia, CIBC), even though monoline lenders consistently offer better rates and terms. The reason is familiarity and convenience — not value. Here is a feature-by-feature comparison so you can make an informed choice.
The fundamental difference
| Big Five Banks | Monoline Lenders | |
|---|---|---|
| Business model | Full-service banking (mortgages, deposits, credit cards, investments, insurance) | Mortgages only |
| Revenue strategy | Cross-sell you multiple products; mortgage is an entry point | Compete on mortgage rate and service to win your business |
| Overhead | Branch networks, thousands of employees, marketing | Lean operations, no branches |
| How you access them | Walk into a branch, call a mortgage specialist, or use their website | Through a mortgage broker (most) or online (Nesto) |
| Pricing result | Higher rates because overhead is higher and cross-selling subsidizes discounts | Lower rates because overhead is lower and rate IS the product |
Rate comparison
This is the most obvious and measurable difference:
| Rate Type | Big Five Banks (typical) | Monoline Lenders (typical) | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5-year fixed (insured) | 4.79–5.09% | 4.44–4.64% | 0.20–0.50% lower |
| 5-year fixed (uninsured) | 4.99–5.24% | 4.59–4.79% | 0.25–0.50% lower |
| 5-year variable | Prime – 0.40% to – 0.70% | Prime – 0.70% to – 1.00% | 0.20–0.40% better discount |
| 3-year fixed | 5.09–5.44% | 4.69–4.99% | 0.30–0.50% lower |
What the rate difference costs on a $400,000 mortgage
| Metric | Bank at 4.99% | Monoline at 4.59% | 5-Year Savings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Monthly payment (25-year am) | $2,314 | $2,237 | $77/month |
| Total interest (5-year term) | $90,500 | $85,600 | $4,900 |
| Principal paid | $47,300 | $48,600 | $1,300 more equity |
| Total 5-year advantage | $6,200 |
Over a 25-year amortization with consistent rate differences at each renewal, the total savings from a monoline lender can exceed $20,000.
Penalty comparison (the hidden cost)
This is where the biggest financial difference lives — and where most borrowers get surprised.
How penalties are calculated
Both banks and monolines use the same two penalty formulas, but the inputs differ dramatically:
3-month interest penalty (same everywhere):
- Balance × rate ÷ 12 × 3
- On a $350,000 balance at 5%: $350,000 × 0.05 ÷ 12 × 3 = $4,375
Interest Rate Differential (IRD) — this is where the gap appears:
| Factor | Monoline (Fair IRD) | Big Five Bank (Posted-Rate IRD) |
|---|---|---|
| Your contract rate | 4.59% | 4.99% |
| Comparison rate | Lender’s current rate for the remaining term (e.g., 2-year rate of 4.39%) | Bank’s POSTED rate for the remaining term (e.g., 2-year posted rate of 3.44%) |
| Rate differential | 4.59% – 4.39% = 0.20% | 4.99% – 3.44% = 1.55% |
| Penalty calculation | 0.20% × $350,000 × 2 years = $1,400 | 1.55% × $350,000 × 2 years = $10,850 |
The bank penalty is nearly 8× higher because banks use their artificially inflated posted rate (which nobody actually pays) as the comparison — while monolines use the rate they are actually offering to new customers.
Real penalty comparison: breaking your mortgage in year 3
| Scenario | 3-Month Interest | IRD | Penalty You Pay |
|---|---|---|---|
| Monoline (fair IRD) | $4,375 | $1,400 | $4,375 (higher of the two) |
| Big Five bank (posted IRD) | $4,375 | $10,850 | $10,850 (higher of the two) |
You pay $6,475 more at the bank. This one difference can completely wipe out any perceived benefits of banking with a Big Five institution.
Who breaks their mortgage early?
More people than you think. Studies show approximately 60% of Canadian borrowers break their 5-year fixed mortgage before the term ends due to:
- Selling and buying a new home
- Refinancing to access equity
- Refinancing to get a better rate
- Relationship changes (separation, divorce)
- Job relocation
If there is any chance you will break your mortgage, penalty structure is more important than a 0.10% rate difference.
Prepayment privilege comparison
Prepayment privileges let you pay down your mortgage faster without penalty.
| Feature | Big Five Banks (typical) | Monoline Lenders (typical) |
|---|---|---|
| Annual lump-sum payment | 10–15% of original balance | 15–20% of original balance |
| Payment increase | 10–15% (some allow double-up payments) | 15–20% per year |
| Frequency | Varies — some restrict to once annually | Most allow monthly or at any time |
What better prepayment privileges mean
On a $400,000 mortgage:
| Privilege | Bank (10%) | Monoline (20%) | Extra Room |
|---|---|---|---|
| Maximum annual lump sum | $40,000 | $80,000 | $40,000 more |
| Maximum payment increase on $2,300/mo | $230/month additional | $460/month additional | $230/month more |
If you receive a bonus, inheritance, or simply want to be aggressive with payments, monoline privileges give you significantly more room to pay down your mortgage faster.
Feature-by-feature comparison
| Feature | Big Five Banks | Monoline Lenders | Winner |
|---|---|---|---|
| Interest rates | Higher (0.20–0.50% more) | Lower | Monoline |
| Penalty calculation | Posted-rate IRD (expensive) | Fair IRD or 3-month interest | Monoline |
| Prepayment privileges | 10–15% lump sum, 10–15% increase | 15–20% lump sum, 15–20% increase | Monoline |
| Portability | Yes (most) | Yes (most) | Tie |
| Blend and extend | Yes (flexible) | Yes (some limitations) | Slight bank edge |
| In-person service | Branch access, mortgage specialists | No branches — broker or phone | Bank |
| Bundled products | Mortgage + chequing + card + investments | Mortgage only | Bank (if you value this) |
| Rate holds | 120 days | 120 days | Tie |
| Approval speed | 1–3 business days | 1–3 business days | Tie |
| HELOC integration | Easy to add HELOC alongside mortgage | Separate HELOC process if available | Bank |
| Relationship pricing | Discounts for total banking relationship | No relationship discounts (rate is the rate) | Depends |
| Renewal process | Automatic renewal letter, easy to stay | Renewal letter — equally easy | Tie |
| Regulation | OSFI regulated | OSFI regulated | Tie |
When the bank is actually the better choice
Banks are not always worse. Here are legitimate reasons to choose a Big Five bank:
1. You want cashback on closing
Banks offer cashback mortgages (2–5% of the mortgage amount) that monolines do not. If you need cash for closing costs and the math works in your favour, this is a bank-only option.
2. You need a HELOC alongside your mortgage
Big Five banks make it easy to pair a mortgage with a Home Equity Line of Credit (HELOC) in a readvanceable structure. Some monolines offer HELOCs, but the integration is less seamless.
3. You have a deep banking relationship
If you have significant assets with a bank (investments, business banking, insurance), they may offer relationship pricing that matches or beats monoline rates — while keeping your banking consolidated.
4. You are a newcomer to Canada
Big Five banks have dedicated newcomer mortgage programs with flexible credit and documentation requirements. Monoline lenders typically do not offer newcomer programs.
5. You need in-person service
If you strongly prefer sitting in a branch, talking face-to-face with a mortgage specialist, and having a local contact, banks provide that. Monoline mortgages are managed through your broker and the lender’s phone/email service centre.
When the monoline is the clear winner
1. Lowest rate is your priority
Monoline wins on rate almost every time. Even when a bank “matches” the rate, read the fine print — the penalty structure is still worse.
2. You might move or refinance within 5 years
The penalty savings alone can be $5,000–$20,000. If there is any chance you break early, monoline is the financially superior choice.
3. You want maximum prepayment flexibility
Monoline prepayment privileges are consistently better — 20/20 vs the typical bank 10/10 or 15/15.
4. You want fair treatment at renewal
Both types mail you a renewal letter. The difference is that monolines do not rely on inertia to keep you at an inflated posted rate. Their renewal offer is typically competitive because they know you are likely working with a broker who will shop the market.
5. You do not need branch access
If you are comfortable managing your mortgage via phone, email, or your broker, you are paying for branch overhead you do not use by choosing a bank.
Common myths about monoline lenders
| Myth | Reality |
|---|---|
| “They are not safe” | Regulated by OSFI, same as banks. Your mortgage contract is legally identical. |
| “What if they go bankrupt?” | Your mortgage contract transfers to the new owner with all original terms. This has happened with monolines and service continued seamlessly. |
| “I cannot get service” | Service is through your broker (who you already know) and the lender’s dedicated service team. Most issues (payment changes, prepayments) can be handled online. |
| “My mortgage will be sold” | Banks also sell mortgages (loan securitization is standard). Your terms never change regardless of who holds the loan. |
| “Nobody uses them” | Monoline lenders fund approximately 30% of all Canadian mortgages, amounting to hundreds of billions of dollars. |
| “Banks will match the rate” | Banks sometimes match the rate but never match the penalty structure, which is where the real money is. |
The decision framework
Choose a monoline if any of these are true:
- You want the lowest rate ✅
- You might break your mortgage before 5 years ✅
- You want the best prepayment privileges ✅
- You are comfortable working with a mortgage broker ✅
- You do not need cashback or a bundled HELOC ✅
Choose a bank if all of these are true:
- You need cashback or a readvanceable HELOC ✅
- You are a newcomer who needs a dedicated program ✅
- You have a deep banking relationship with meaningful rate discounts ✅
- You strongly prefer in-person branch service ✅
- You are certain you will not break your mortgage early ✅
For most borrowers — especially first-time buyers, people who may move, or anyone who prioritizes saving money — the monoline lender is the better choice.