Canadian Mortgage Rate Forecast 2026
Current Rates (Approximate)
| Rate Type | Current Range | Direction |
|---|---|---|
| Variable (5-yr) | 4.50-5.50% | ↓ Declining |
| Fixed (5-yr) | 4.25-5.00% | → Stabilizing |
| Fixed (3-yr) | 4.50-5.25% | → Stabilizing |
| Fixed (2-yr) | 4.50-5.25% | → Stabilizing |
| Fixed (1-yr) | 5.00-5.75% | ↓ Declining |
Rates change frequently. Check current rates with your lender.
Rate History & Context
| Year | BoC Rate (Year-End) | 5-Yr Fixed (Avg) | 5-Yr Variable (Avg) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2019 | 1.75% | 2.9-3.3% | 2.5-3.0% |
| 2020 | 0.25% | 1.9-2.4% | 1.5-2.0% |
| 2021 | 0.25% | 2.0-2.8% | 1.2-1.8% |
| 2022 | 4.25% | 4.5-5.5% | 4.0-5.5% |
| 2023 | 5.00% | 5.0-6.0% | 5.5-6.5% |
| 2024 | 3.25-3.75% | 4.5-5.5% | 5.0-6.0% |
| 2025 | 2.75-3.25% (est) | 4.0-5.0% | 4.0-5.0% |
| 2026 | 2.50-3.00% (est) | 4.0-4.75% | 3.75-4.75% |
Key Factors Affecting 2026 Rates
Bank of Canada Policy Rate
| Factor | Impact on Rates | Current Trend |
|---|---|---|
| Inflation returning to 2% target | ↓ Allows further cuts | ✅ Declining |
| Employment softening | ↓ Supports rate cuts | ⚠️ Mixed |
| GDP growth slowing | ↓ Supports rate cuts | ⚠️ Below trend |
| Housing prices recovering | ↑ Could pause cuts | ⚠️ Market dependent |
| US Federal Reserve policy | Influences Canadian rates | Cutting cycle |
Bond Yields (Affect Fixed Rates)
| Factor | Impact | Status |
|---|---|---|
| Government of Canada 5-yr bond | Directly sets fixed rates | ~3.0-3.5% |
| Global bond market | Influences Canadian bonds | Stabilizing |
| Inflation expectations | Higher = higher yields | Moderating |
Fixed vs Variable in 2026
| Factor | Fixed | Variable |
|---|---|---|
| Current rate | 4.25-5.00% | 4.50-5.50% |
| Rate direction | Stable | Likely declining |
| Payment certainty | ✅ Locked in | ❌ Fluctuates |
| Penalty to break | ~$10K-25K (IRD) | ~$2K-5K (3 months interest) |
| Best if rates rise | ✅ Protected | ❌ Payments increase |
| Best if rates fall | ❌ Locked higher | ✅ Payments decrease |
Historical Winner: Variable
Over the past 30 years, variable rates have saved borrowers money about 80% of the time compared to fixed rates. However, past performance doesn’t guarantee future results.
Rate Forecast Scenarios
Scenario 1: Soft Landing (Most Likely)
| Period | BoC Rate | 5-Yr Fixed | 5-Yr Variable |
|---|---|---|---|
| Early 2026 | 2.75-3.00% | 4.25-4.75% | 4.25-4.75% |
| Mid 2026 | 2.50-2.75% | 4.00-4.50% | 3.75-4.50% |
| Late 2026 | 2.50-2.75% | 4.00-4.50% | 3.75-4.50% |
Scenario 2: Recession
| Period | BoC Rate | 5-Yr Fixed | 5-Yr Variable |
|---|---|---|---|
| Early 2026 | 2.50% | 3.75-4.25% | 3.75-4.25% |
| Mid 2026 | 2.00% | 3.50-4.00% | 3.25-3.75% |
| Late 2026 | 1.75-2.00% | 3.25-3.75% | 3.00-3.50% |
Scenario 3: Inflation Returns
| Period | BoC Rate | 5-Yr Fixed | 5-Yr Variable |
|---|---|---|---|
| Early 2026 | 3.25% | 4.75-5.25% | 5.00-5.50% |
| Mid 2026 | 3.50% | 5.00-5.50% | 5.25-5.75% |
| Late 2026 | 3.75%+ | 5.25-5.75% | 5.50-6.00% |
What Renewers Should Do
If your mortgage is renewing in 2026:
| Situation | Strategy |
|---|---|
| Renewing from 2021 rates (1.5-2.5%) | Prepare for higher payments; budget for 4-5% |
| Renewing from 2023 rates (5-6%) | You’ll likely get a lower rate — shop around |
| Variable rate holder | Could benefit from continued BoC cuts |
| Considering switching lenders | Shop 3-5 lenders; brokers can help |
Payment Impact (on $500,000 Mortgage, 25-Year Amortization)
| Rate | Monthly Payment | vs 2% Rate |
|---|---|---|
| 2.00% | $2,117 | — |
| 3.00% | $2,366 | +$249/mo |
| 4.00% | $2,630 | +$513/mo |
| 4.50% | $2,767 | +$650/mo |
| 5.00% | $2,908 | +$791/mo |
| 5.50% | $3,053 | +$936/mo |
| 6.00% | $3,200 | +$1,083/mo |
Tips for 2026
| Tip | Details |
|---|---|
| Shop around | Rates vary 0.25-0.75% between lenders |
| Use a mortgage broker | Access to 30+ lenders |
| Consider shorter terms | 2-3 year fixed if you expect further cuts |
| Don’t over-stress on rate | Focus on amortization and payment strategy |
| Pre-appoval before shopping | Lock a rate for 90-120 days |
| Read the fine print | Prepayment privileges, portability, penalties |
What drives Canadian mortgage rates?
Bank of Canada policy rate: The BoC overnight rate is the primary driver of variable-rate mortgages. When the BoC raises rates, variable mortgage rates rise almost immediately. Fixed rates are less directly tied to BoC decisions.
Government of Canada bond yields: 5-year fixed mortgage rates are closely tied to 5-year GoC bond yields. When bond markets expect future rate cuts, yields fall and fixed rates tend to follow (often with a lag of weeks).
Lender spreads: Lenders add a spread above their funding cost (bonds or BoC rate). Competition between lenders (banks, credit unions, online lenders, brokers) compresses spreads. Mortgage brokers often access rates 0.1–0.4% below what banks offer directly.
Inflation: The BoC’’s primary mandate is maintaining 2% inflation. Persistent inflation above 2% keeps rates higher longer; inflation falling below target gives the BoC room to cut.
Fixed vs variable in a falling rate environment
When rates are expected to decline:
- Variable rate benefits as the rate falls automatically with each BoC cut
- Fixed rate locks in current rates — potentially advantageous if rates reverse
The historical Canadian data (1975–2024) shows variable rate holders have generally paid less interest over time than fixed rate holders, but with more payment volatility. In 2022–2023, fixed-rate holders who locked in before the hike cycle benefited significantly.
Frequently asked questions
Will Canadian mortgage rates drop in 2026? Most major bank forecasts (RBC, TD, BMO Economics) expect the Bank of Canada overnight rate to continue modest easing through 2026, barring an inflationary shock. Fixed mortgage rates may stabilize or edge lower as bond yields respond to slower growth. Rate forecasts are unreliable beyond 6 months — always stress-test your mortgage at higher rates.
Should I lock in a fixed rate or go variable in 2026? In a declining rate environment, variable rates may outperform over a 5-year term. However, if payment stability is more important than total interest paid (e.g., tight household budget), a 3-year fixed rate may offer a reasonable balance of certainty and flexibility to renew at potentially lower rates sooner.