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Mortgage Rate History Canada (1975–2026) | Historical Rates & Trends

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Canada mortgage rate history: current rates (April 2026)

The Bank of Canada’s policy rate stands at 2.25% as of April 2026, following a cumulative 275 basis points of cuts from the peak of 5.00% in mid-2024. Based on the latest Bank of Canada weekly posted-rate release (April 15, 2026), chartered bank rates currently stand at:

Rate TypeCurrent Posted RateTypical Discounted Rate
5-year fixed6.09%3.9%–4.3%
3-year fixed6.05%3.6%–4.0%
1-year fixed5.49%4.4%–4.9%
10-year fixed6.79%5.0%–5.5%
Variable (est.)~4.15% (Prime -0.30%)3.3%–3.8%
Prime rate4.45%

Posted rates are set by chartered banks and reported by the Bank of Canada. Discounted rates — what most borrowers actually pay — are typically 1.5–2.5% lower depending on the lender, property type, and borrower qualifications.

Source: Bank of Canada — Posted interest rates offered by chartered banks

Looking for live lender pricing by location? See Canada mortgage rates by province and city and the full mortgage rates guide.

Discounted 1-Year, 3-Year, 5-Year and 10-Year Fixed Mortgage Rates

Discounted rates shown above are estimated typical rates offered by lenders and brokers — approximately 1.5–2.5% below the posted bank rates shown in the tables below. For the full 50-year history starting from 1975, see the posted rate tables below.

Jump to: 5-Year Fixed History · Variable Rate History · Term Comparison (1, 3, 5-Year) · 10-Year Fixed · Key Historical Periods · Bank of Canada Rate

5-year fixed mortgage rate history

The 5-year fixed rate is the most popular mortgage term in Canada, chosen by roughly 50% of borrowers. Here is the complete history of the 5-year fixed posted rate since 1975:

Year5-Year Fixed (Posted)ChangeContext
197511.50%Oil crisis aftermath
197612.00%+0.50%Inflation rising
197710.25%-1.75%Brief easing
197810.25%0.00%Stable
197911.25%+1.00%Second oil shock begins
198014.50%+3.25%BoC tightening aggressively
198118.13%+3.63%All-time peak
198219.25%+1.12%Recession but rates lag
198313.50%-5.75%Recovery begins
198413.50%0.00%Stable
198511.75%-1.75%Gradual decline
198611.25%-0.50%
198711.25%0.00%
198811.75%+0.50%Pre-recession tightening
198912.00%+0.25%
199013.25%+1.25%1990–91 recession
199111.25%-2.00%Recovery
19929.63%-1.62%Rates under 10%
19938.85%-0.78%
19949.90%+1.05%Brief tightening
19958.95%-0.95%
19967.95%-1.00%
19977.00%-0.95%
19986.95%-0.05%Asian financial crisis
19997.50%+0.55%
20008.30%+0.80%Dot-com peak
20017.50%-0.80%Post-9/11 easing
20026.85%-0.65%
20036.45%-0.40%
20046.30%-0.15%
20056.05%-0.25%
20066.60%+0.55%
20077.19%+0.59%Pre-GFC peak
20087.15%-0.04%Global financial crisis
20095.79%-1.36%Emergency easing
20105.42%-0.37%
20115.39%-0.03%
20125.24%-0.15%
20135.24%0.00%
20144.79%-0.45%Oil price collapse
20154.64%-0.15%Historic low
20164.64%0.00%Historic low
20174.64%0.00%Historic low
20185.34%+0.70%BoC tightening cycle
20195.34%0.00%
20204.94%-0.40%COVID pandemic
20214.79%-0.15%Near-record low
20226.04%+1.25%Fastest hikes in 40 years
20236.49%+0.45%Peak tightening
20246.79%+0.30%Rate cuts begin Q3
20256.09%-0.70%Cumulative 200bp of cuts
20266.09%0.00%Holding steady

The 5-year fixed posted rate has ranged from a low of 4.64% (2015–2017) to an all-time high of 19.25% (1982). The long-term average since 1975 is approximately 9.2%.

5-Year Fixed Mortgage Rate History — Posted Rate (1975–2026)

Variable mortgage rate history

Variable (or adjustable) rates are tied to the prime rate, which follows the Bank of Canada’s overnight rate. They tend to be lower than fixed rates in most years, but carry the risk of increasing during tightening cycles.

YearVariable Rate5-Year FixedLower RateSpread
19758.70%11.50%Variable2.80%
19769.95%12.00%Variable2.05%
19777.95%10.25%Variable2.30%
19788.95%10.25%Variable1.30%
197911.70%11.25%Fixed0.45%
198013.45%14.50%Variable1.05%
198119.20%18.13%Fixed1.07%
198216.20%19.25%Variable3.05%
198310.70%13.50%Variable2.80%
198411.70%13.50%Variable1.80%
198510.20%11.75%Variable1.55%
19869.95%11.25%Variable1.30%
19879.20%11.25%Variable2.05%
198810.45%11.75%Variable1.30%
198913.20%12.00%Fixed1.20%
199013.95%13.25%Fixed0.70%
19919.45%11.25%Variable1.80%
19927.20%9.63%Variable2.43%
19935.70%8.85%Variable3.15%
19946.70%9.90%Variable3.20%
19957.95%8.95%Variable1.00%
19966.20%7.95%Variable1.75%
19974.45%7.00%Variable2.55%
19986.20%6.95%Variable0.75%
19995.95%7.50%Variable1.55%
20007.20%8.30%Variable1.10%
20015.95%7.50%Variable1.55%
20023.95%6.85%Variable2.90%
20034.45%6.45%Variable2.00%
20043.70%6.30%Variable2.60%
20053.95%6.05%Variable2.10%
20065.70%6.60%Variable0.90%
20075.70%7.19%Variable1.49%
20084.45%7.15%Variable2.70%
20091.95%5.79%Variable3.84%
20102.20%5.42%Variable3.22%
20112.70%5.39%Variable2.69%
20122.70%5.24%Variable2.54%
20132.70%5.24%Variable2.54%
20142.70%4.79%Variable2.09%
20152.55%4.64%Variable2.09%
20162.40%4.64%Variable2.24%
20172.40%4.64%Variable2.24%
20183.15%5.34%Variable2.19%
20193.65%5.34%Variable1.69%
20202.15%4.94%Variable2.79%
20212.15%4.79%Variable2.64%
20223.40%6.04%Variable2.64%
20236.65%6.49%Fixed0.16%
20246.65%6.79%Variable0.14%
20254.65%6.09%Variable1.44%
20264.15%6.09%Variable1.94%

5-Year Fixed vs. Variable Mortgage Rate (1975–2026)

Fixed vs. variable: which has been lower?

Over the 52-year period from 1975–2026, variable rates have been lower than 5-year fixed rates in 42 of 52 years — roughly 81% of the time. The exceptions were concentrated in two specific periods:

  • 1979, 1981, 1989–1990: During aggressive BoC tightening when short-term rates spiked above long-term rates (inverted yield curve)
  • 2023: The fastest tightening cycle in 40 years briefly pushed variable rates above fixed for the first time since 1990

The average spread between the 5-year fixed and variable rate has been approximately 1.8 percentage points in favour of variable. However, the 2022–2023 tightening cycle demonstrated that during periods of rapid rate hikes, variable borrowers face significant payment shock.

Posted 1-year, 3-year, and 5-year rate history

For detailed comparison across all fixed terms, the following table shows the posted rates for 1-year, 3-year, and 5-year fixed mortgages at chartered banks since 1980:

Year1-Year Fixed3-Year Fixed5-Year FixedLowest Term
198013.75%14.25%14.50%1-Year
198118.00%18.13%18.13%1-Year
198218.13%18.75%19.25%1-Year
198311.00%12.75%13.50%1-Year
198412.25%13.50%13.50%1-Year
198510.00%11.25%11.75%1-Year
19869.75%10.75%11.25%1-Year
19879.75%10.75%11.25%1-Year
198810.75%11.25%11.75%1-Year
198912.75%12.25%12.00%5-Year
199013.25%13.25%13.25%Tie
199110.00%11.00%11.25%1-Year
19928.25%9.00%9.63%1-Year
19936.88%8.25%8.85%1-Year
19948.00%9.50%9.90%1-Year
19958.13%8.63%8.95%1-Year
19966.50%7.44%7.95%1-Year
19975.55%6.50%7.00%1-Year
19986.50%6.80%6.95%1-Year
19996.72%7.30%7.50%1-Year
20007.90%8.13%8.30%1-Year
20016.70%7.13%7.50%1-Year
20025.30%6.15%6.85%1-Year
20034.75%5.90%6.45%1-Year
20044.60%5.80%6.30%1-Year
20054.90%5.60%6.05%1-Year
20066.33%6.45%6.60%1-Year
20077.05%7.30%7.19%5-Year
20086.95%7.00%7.15%1-Year
20093.80%4.45%5.79%1-Year
20103.55%4.15%5.42%1-Year
20113.50%4.35%5.39%1-Year
20123.20%3.95%5.24%1-Year
20133.14%3.73%5.24%1-Year
20143.14%3.75%4.79%1-Year
20152.89%3.39%4.64%1-Year
20163.14%3.39%4.64%1-Year
20173.14%3.39%4.64%1-Year
20183.49%4.29%5.34%1-Year
20193.64%4.29%5.34%1-Year
20203.19%3.89%4.94%1-Year
20212.79%3.49%4.79%1-Year
20224.74%5.39%6.04%1-Year
20237.14%6.54%6.49%5-Year
20247.84%6.97%6.79%5-Year
20256.09%6.05%6.09%3-Year
20265.49%6.05%6.09%1-Year

Posted Mortgage Rates by Term — 1-Year, 3-Year, 5-Year Fixed (1980–2026)

In a normal yield curve environment, shorter terms carry lower rates because lenders face less risk. The 1-year fixed has been the lowest of the three fixed terms in the vast majority of years. The notable exception was 2023–2024, when the inverted yield curve meant the 5-year fixed was actually cheaper than the 1-year — a rare situation caused by the market expecting future rate cuts.

10-year fixed mortgage rate overview

The 10-year fixed mortgage is the longest standard fixed term available from most Canadian lenders. It provides maximum payment stability but typically carries a 0.5–1.5% premium over the 5-year fixed rate. The 10-year term is not as widely tracked historically as the 1-, 3-, and 5-year terms, but it has gained popularity during periods of low rates when borrowers wanted to lock in for longer.

Here are estimated typical discounted 10-year fixed rates compared to 5-year fixed over the past 20 years:

Year10-Year Fixed (Discounted)5-Year Fixed (Discounted)10-Year Premium
20065.55%5.20%+0.35%
20085.95%5.40%+0.55%
20104.05%3.25%+0.80%
20123.65%2.84%+0.81%
20143.45%2.64%+0.81%
20163.25%2.20%+1.05%
20183.75%3.45%+0.30%
20202.75%1.79%+0.96%
20225.35%4.74%+0.61%
20235.85%5.29%+0.56%
20245.45%4.39%+1.06%
20254.85%3.94%+0.91%
20265.09%3.94%+1.15%

The 10-year premium widens during periods of rate uncertainty — when markets expect future volatility, lenders charge more for the extra years of certainty. This premium narrowed to just 0.30% in 2018 (a relatively stable rate environment) and widened to 1.15% in 2026 (reflecting uncertainty around trade tariffs and global inflation).

The 10-year term is most suitable for borrowers who plan to stay in their home for the full term and want to avoid the risk and cost of renewing into a potentially higher rate environment.

Note: 10-year fixed mortgage rates are not officially reported by the Bank of Canada in their posted rate tables. Rates shown are estimates based on market data and typical lender offerings.

Key periods in Canadian mortgage rate history

The 1981 crisis: mortgage rates hit 18%+

The early 1980s saw the most extreme mortgage rates in Canadian history. The Bank of Canada, under Governor Gerald Bouey, raised the bank rate aggressively to combat stagflation — the toxic combination of double-digit inflation (12.5% in 1981) and economic stagnation.

  • 5-year fixed posted rate: 18.13% (September 1981)
  • Variable rate: 19.20% (1981)
  • 1-year fixed: 18.00% (1981)

For context, a $300,000 mortgage at 18% over 25 years would carry a monthly payment of roughly $4,500 — compared to about $1,850 at today’s 6% posted rate. The severe rates triggered a deep recession and a housing downturn, with prices falling 10–15% in many markets.

The long decline: 1982–2017

After peaking in 1981–1982, Canadian mortgage rates entered a 35-year secular decline. The 5-year fixed posted rate fell from 19.25% in 1982 to 4.64% in 2015 — a drop of nearly 15 percentage points across three and a half decades. This decline was driven by:

  • Inflation targeting: The Bank of Canada adopted a 2% inflation target in 1991, anchoring expectations and reducing the need for high rates
  • Globalization: Global capital flows and competition among financial institutions compressed lending spreads
  • Demographics: An aging population and slower growth reduced natural interest rates worldwide
  • Technology: Financial innovation improved efficiency and reduced intermediation costs

This structural decline created an unprecedented tailwind for Canadian real estate, as falling rates steadily increased purchasing power. A borrower in 1982 could afford roughly 40% less home than the same borrower in 2017 at the same income, purely due to the rate differential.

The COVID-19 emergency: 2020–2021

The Bank of Canada slashed its overnight rate to 0.25% in March 2020 — the effective lower bound — in response to the pandemic. This pushed variable mortgage rates to historic lows:

  • Variable rate: 2.15% (posted, 2020–2021)
  • 5-year fixed posted: 4.79% (2021)
  • Actual discounted 5-year fixed rates fell as low as 1.5–2.0% — levels never seen before

Combined with pandemic-era fiscal stimulus and remote work demand, rock-bottom rates fuelled a massive housing boom. Canadian home prices surged approximately 50% between early 2020 and February 2022.

The 2022–2023 tightening: fastest hikes in 40 years

Starting in March 2022, the Bank of Canada raised its overnight rate from 0.25% to 5.00% in just 16 months — the fastest tightening cycle since the Volcker era. The impact on mortgage rates was dramatic:

  • Variable rates surged from 2.15% to 6.65%
  • 5-year fixed posted rate rose from 4.79% to 6.79%
  • For the first time since 1990, variable rates exceeded fixed rates (2023)
  • Monthly payments on a typical $500,000 variable mortgage increased by roughly $1,600/month

The rapid hikes caused significant financial stress for variable-rate borrowers and contributed to a housing market correction, with average prices falling approximately 20% from peak levels before stabilizing.

The 2024–2025 easing cycle

The Bank of Canada began cutting rates in June 2024, reducing the overnight rate from 5.00% to 2.25% by January 2026 through seven consecutive cuts totalling 275 basis points. This was one of the most aggressive easing cycles on record.

  • Variable rates dropped from 6.65% to 4.15%
  • The prime rate fell from 7.20% to 4.45%
  • Fixed rates were slower to follow, as bond yields remained elevated due to global inflation concerns and fiscal uncertainty

As of March 2026, the Bank of Canada paused its cutting cycle at 2.25%, with markets pricing in the possibility of further cuts depending on trade conditions and economic data. The next announcement is scheduled for March 18, 2026.

Bank of Canada overnight rate history

The Bank of Canada’s policy rate is the anchor for all Canadian interest rates. Here is the complete schedule of rate decisions from the 2022–2026 tightening-and-easing cycle:

DatePolicy RateChange
Mar 2, 20220.50%+0.25%
Apr 13, 20221.00%+0.50%
Jun 1, 20221.50%+0.50%
Jul 13, 20222.50%+1.00%
Sep 7, 20223.25%+0.75%
Oct 26, 20223.75%+0.50%
Dec 7, 20224.25%+0.50%
Jan 25, 20234.50%+0.25%
Jun 7, 20234.75%+0.25%
Jul 12, 20235.00%+0.25%
Jun 5, 20244.75%-0.25%
Jul 24, 20244.50%-0.25%
Sep 4, 20244.25%-0.25%
Oct 23, 20243.75%-0.50%
Dec 11, 20243.25%-0.50%
Jan 29, 20253.00%-0.25%
Mar 12, 20252.75%-0.25%
Sep 17, 20252.50%-0.25%
Oct 29, 20252.25%-0.25%
Jan 28, 20262.25%0.00%

Bank of Canada Policy Rate — 2022–2026 Rate Cycle

How mortgage rates are set in Canada

Understanding how mortgage rates are determined helps contextualize the historical data:

Fixed mortgage rates

Fixed mortgage rates are primarily driven by Government of Canada bond yields — specifically, the 5-year government bond yield for 5-year fixed mortgages. When bond yields rise (because investors expect higher inflation or economic growth), fixed mortgage rates follow. The typical markup over the 5-year bond yield is about 1.5–2.0 percentage points.

This is why fixed rates sometimes move independently of the Bank of Canada’s policy rate — they respond to bond market expectations about the future, not just current short-term rates.

Variable mortgage rates

Variable mortgage rates are directly tied to the prime rate, which moves in lockstep with the Bank of Canada’s overnight rate. When the BoC cuts or raises rates, prime adjusts by the same amount, and variable mortgage rates follow. The typical variable mortgage rate is quoted as “prime minus X%” where X is the discount offered by the lender.

Why posted vs. discounted rates matter

The rates in the tables above are posted rates — the standard rates advertised by chartered banks. In practice, almost no borrower pays the posted rate. Discounted rates offered by mortgage brokers and lenders are typically 1.5–2.5% lower. The posted rate is still important because:

  • It’s used to stress test mortgage applicants (the qualifying rate is the higher of the posted 5-year rate or the contract rate + 2%)
  • It’s the only rate with consistent historical data going back to the 1970s
  • Mortgage penalties for breaking a fixed-rate mortgage are often calculated using posted rates

Mortgage rate outlook: 2026 and beyond

As of March 2026, consensus expectations for mortgage rates:

ForecastRange
BoC overnight rate (end of 2026)2.00%–2.50%
5-year fixed discounted (end of 2026)3.5%–4.5%
Variable discounted (end of 2026)3.0%–3.5%

Key factors to watch:

  • Trade tariffs: Ongoing trade tensions with the United States create uncertainty about growth and inflation — potentially delaying further BoC cuts
  • Inflation trajectory: Core inflation has largely returned to the 2% target, supporting the case for lower rates
  • Housing market recovery: A significant rebound in housing demand could push bond yields (and fixed rates) higher
  • US Federal Reserve: The Fed’s rate path influences Canadian bond yields and constrains the BoC’s ability to diverge significantly from US rates
  • Employment data: A weakening labour market would support further cuts; resilient employment could keep rates steady

Glossary

  • Posted rate: The standard mortgage rate published by chartered banks, used for stress test qualification
  • Discounted rate: The actual rate most borrowers pay, typically 1.5–2.5% below posted
  • Prime rate: The rate set by commercial banks, currently 4.45%, typically about 2.2% above the BoC overnight rate
  • Overnight rate: The Bank of Canada’s policy interest rate — the rate banks charge each other for overnight loans
  • Basis point (bp): One hundredth of a percentage point (0.01%). A 25bp cut means a reduction of 0.25%
  • Yield curve: The relationship between short-term and long-term interest rates. A “normal” curve has higher long-term rates; an “inverted” curve (higher short-term) signals expected rate cuts
  • Stress test: The requirement that mortgage borrowers qualify at the higher of the posted 5-year rate or their contract rate plus 2%
  • Variable rate mortgage: Rate fluctuates with prime rate; payments may be fixed (adjustable payment) or change (variable payment)
  • Fixed rate mortgage: Rate locked in for the term; payments remain the same regardless of market rate changes

Data sources

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