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Early Mortgage Renewal in Canada: When It Makes Sense and What It Costs

Updated

Your mortgage renewal doesn’t have to wait until the last minute. Many Canadians benefit from locking in a rate months before their term ends — and in some cases, breaking the mortgage early saves real money. But early renewal is not always the right move. Here is how to evaluate it.

How early mortgage renewal works in Canada

There are two distinct paths to early renewal, and they have very different cost implications.

PathHow It WorksPenalty?Best When
Blend-and-extendYour current lender combines your old rate with a new rate for a new termNo explicit penalty — but blended rate may not be the lowest availableRates have dropped moderately and you want simplicity
Break and renewYou pay the prepayment penalty, end your current mortgage, and start a new one (same or different lender)Yes — IRD or 3 months’ interestRates have dropped significantly and the savings exceed the penalty

The blend-and-extend window

Most lenders allow blend-and-extend starting 120–180 days (4–6 months) before your maturity date. Some are more generous:

Lender TypeTypical Early Renewal Window
Big 5 banks120–150 days before maturity
Monoline lenders90–180 days, varies by lender
Credit unions90–120 days typically

When early renewal makes sense

Early renewal is worth considering when rates have moved significantly in your favour or when you need to restructure your mortgage for other reasons.

Scenario 1: Rates have dropped

If current rates are meaningfully below your existing rate, breaking early and paying the penalty can save thousands over the new term.

Example: You have 18 months left on a 5-year fixed at 5.79% with a $400,000 balance. Current 5-year fixed rates are 4.29%.

FactorAmount
Prepayment penalty (IRD estimate)~$6,000–$9,000
Monthly payment savings at new rate~$320/month
Savings over new 5-year term~$19,200
Net savings after penalty~$10,000–$13,000

In this case, breaking early is clearly worthwhile.

Scenario 2: You need to refinance

If you need to access equity (for renovations, debt consolidation, or investment), early renewal combined with a refinance accomplishes both in a single transaction.

Scenario 3: You’re switching from variable to fixed (or vice versa)

If you currently have a variable-rate mortgage and rates are rising, locking into a fixed rate early can protect you from further increases. The penalty on a variable-rate mortgage is only three months’ interest — typically $3,000–$6,000 on a mid-sized mortgage — making this an affordable move.

Scenario 4: Your lender’s blend-and-extend offer is competitive

If your lender offers a blend-and-extend at a rate close to market, and you value the simplicity of not switching lenders, this can be a good deal — especially if you are within the penalty-free window.

When early renewal does NOT make sense

SituationWhy Not
Your term ends in less than 4 monthsJust wait — the penalty is not worth it for marginal savings
Rate difference is less than 0.50%The penalty likely exceeds the savings
You have a fixed-rate mortgage with a large IRD penaltyBig 5 bank IRD penalties can be $10,000–$25,000; run the numbers carefully
Your lender’s blend-and-extend rate is higher than market ratesYou’re better off waiting and switching at maturity
You plan to sell the home within 2 yearsEarly renewal locks you into a new term with a new penalty period

How to calculate whether breaking early is worth it

Use this simple framework:

StepCalculation
1. Get your penalty quoteCall your lender and ask for the exact prepayment penalty amount
2. Calculate monthly savings(Current monthly payment) minus (new monthly payment at available rate)
3. Calculate total savings over new termMonthly savings × number of months in new term
4. Subtract the penaltyTotal savings minus penalty = net benefit
5. Compare to waitingWould the savings from just waiting 6–12 months and renewing penalty-free be similar?

Rule of thumb: If the net savings after penalty are more than $3,000–$5,000, early renewal is likely worth the hassle. If the savings are marginal, wait for your penalty-free renewal window.

The renewal timeline: what to do and when

TimeframeAction
6 months before maturityStart checking current rates. Contact a mortgage broker for a rate quote.
5 months beforeIf rates are favourable, lock in a rate hold (90–150 days depending on lender).
4 months beforeEvaluate your current lender’s blend-and-extend offer against the market rate you’ve locked.
3 months beforeDecide: stay and blend, switch lenders, or wait for a better offer.
21+ days before maturityYour lender sends their renewal offer. This is almost never their best rate — always negotiate or use a competing quote.
Maturity dateIf you haven’t renewed, most lenders automatically roll you into a month-to-month open mortgage at a higher rate. Don’t let this happen.

Negotiating your renewal rate

Your current lender’s first renewal offer is a starting point, not a final price. Here is how to negotiate:

  1. Get an outside quote first. A broker quote or a rate from nesto gives you a concrete number to present.
  2. Call your lender’s retention department — not the general service line. Ask to speak with a “mortgage retention specialist.”
  3. Present the competing rate and ask if they can match or beat it.
  4. If they can’t match it, ask about other incentives — some lenders offer cash bonuses ($500–$2,000) or reduced fees to retain your mortgage.
  5. Be prepared to switch. If your lender won’t offer a competitive rate, a no-cost switch at maturity is straightforward through a broker.

Penalty-free ways to improve your rate before renewal

StrategyHow It Works
Increase payment frequencySwitch to accelerated bi-weekly to pay down principal faster before renewal
Make lump-sum paymentsUse prepayment privileges to reduce your balance (and therefore your penalty, if you break early)
Set up automatic increasesSome lenders let you increase payments by 10–20% annually — extra goes to principal
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