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How to Refinance Your Mortgage in Canada: Complete Guide

Updated

Refinancing can be a powerful financial tool — or an expensive mistake. This guide covers when it makes financial sense, what it actually costs, and how the process works so you can make an informed decision.

What refinancing actually means

When you refinance, you break your existing mortgage and replace it with a new one. The new mortgage can be:

  • Larger — you borrow more against your equity (cash-out refinance)
  • At a different rate — you switch to a lower rate to reduce payments
  • On different terms — you change your amortization, payment frequency, or term length
  • With a different lender — you move to a lender offering better terms

The maximum loan-to-value (LTV) for a refinance in Canada is 80%. No CMHC insurance applies to refinances regardless of your down payment amount on the original purchase.

When refinancing makes financial sense

ScenarioWhy It Works
Debt consolidationReplacing $50K in credit card debt (20%+ interest) with mortgage debt (5–6% interest) saves $7,000+ in annual interest
Rates dropped significantlyIf current rates are 1.5%+ below your locked rate, the savings over the remaining amortization can exceed the penalty
Major renovationBorrowing through a refinance at 5–6% is cheaper than a personal loan at 8–12% or a credit line at 7–9%
Shortening your amortizationRefinancing to a shorter amortization at a lower rate accelerates payoff and reduces total interest
Getting out of a bad mortgageEscaping a restrictive or high-rate mortgage (e.g., private lender) into a better product

When refinancing does NOT make sense

ScenarioWhy Not
Penalty exceeds savingsRun the numbers — if the penalty wipes out the rate savings, wait until renewal
You are close to maturity (under 1 year)Wait and switch at renewal for free
Extending amortization for lower payments onlyYou feel relief now but pay significantly more total interest over the life of the loan
Small rate difference (under 0.50%)The penalty and fees typically exceed the savings unless your balance is very large
Using equity for non-essential spendingTurning home equity into cash for vacations or consumer goods erodes your wealth

The math: when does breaking your mortgage pay off?

Fixed-rate mortgage example

DetailAmount
Current balance$400,000
Current rate5.89% (5-year fixed)
Time remaining in term3 years
Interest Rate Differential (IRD) penalty~$12,000
New rate available4.29% (5-year fixed)
Monthly payment savings~$370/month
Savings over new 5-year term~$22,200
Net savings after penalty~$10,200
Break-even point~32 months

Variable-rate mortgage example

DetailAmount
Current balance$400,000
Penalty (3 months interest)~$5,000
Rate drop from variable to fixed0.75%
Monthly payment savings~$185/month
Savings over remaining 3-year term~$6,660
Net savings after penalty~$1,660

Variable-rate penalties are simpler and smaller — just 3 months of interest. This makes mid-term refinancing more viable for variable-rate holders.

Full cost breakdown

CostTypical RangeNotes
Prepayment penalty (fixed)$5,000–$25,000+IRD calculation — can be very large at Big 5 banks
Prepayment penalty (variable)$2,000–$6,0003 months interest — predictable
Appraisal fee$300–$500Required for most refinances
Legal fees$800–$1,500Lawyer handles discharge and re-registration
Discharge fee$200–$350Paid to current lender to remove their charge
Title insurance$200–$400Usually required by new lender
Total (excluding penalty)$1,500–$2,750

Tip: Some lenders offer to absorb legal and appraisal fees on refinances over a certain threshold ($200K+). Always ask.

How to qualify for a refinance

Your new lender will underwrite the refinance as if it were a new mortgage:

RequirementMinimum
Credit score680+ for best rates (600+ for A-lender approval)
Gross Debt Service (GDS) ratioUnder 39%
Total Debt Service (TDS) ratioUnder 44%
Loan-to-value (LTV)Maximum 80%
Income verificationFull documentation (T4, pay stubs, NOA, or T1 General for self-employed)
Property appraisalMarket value must support the new loan amount

Self-employed borrowers: You will need 2 years of T1 Generals and Notices of Assessment. Some lenders offer stated income programs at slightly higher rates.

Step-by-step refinance process

Step 1: Calculate the penalty (before anything else)

Call your current lender and ask: “What is my prepayment penalty as of today?” Get the number in writing. This is the baseline cost that any refinance savings must exceed.

Step 2: Determine your home’s current value

Get a rough estimate from local comparable sales or an online calculator. The formal appraisal comes later, but you need to know whether 80% of your home’s value exceeds your desired new mortgage amount.

Step 3: Shop rates and get pre-approved

Contact a mortgage broker and at least one bank. Provide all income documentation and get a written rate commitment. The broker can access monoline lenders that may offer better refinance rates.

Step 4: Run the break-even analysis

Calculate
Total penalty + feesA
Monthly savings with new rateB
Break-even point (months)A ÷ B
Remaining time in new term (months)C
Net savings over new term(B × C) – A

If the break-even point is under 24 months and you plan to keep the property through the new term, refinancing is likely worthwhile.

Step 5: Apply and provide documentation

Submit your full application. The lender will order an appraisal and verify all income and employment details. Expect 2–4 weeks for approval.

Step 6: Lawyer handles closing

Your lawyer will:

  • Receive instructions from the new lender
  • Arrange discharge of the old mortgage
  • Register the new mortgage on title
  • Distribute funds (penalty paid to old lender, any cash-out to you)

Step 7: Closing and first payment

The refinance closes, the old mortgage is paid off plus penalty, and your new payment schedule begins. Any cash-out amount is deposited to your account within a few business days.

Refinance alternatives to consider

AlternativeBest ForHow It Works
HELOCOngoing access to equityRevolving credit secured by home, no need to break mortgage
Blend-and-extendGetting a lower rate without penaltyCurrent lender blends your existing rate with today’s rate for a new term
Second mortgageOne-time cash need, don’t want to break first mortgageHigher rate but no penalty on first mortgage
Personal line of creditSmaller amounts ($25K or less)Unsecured, no impact on mortgage
Wait until renewalRate savings are marginalSwitch lenders at maturity with zero penalty
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