Mortgage Rate Lock Explained: How Rate Holds Work in Canada
Updated
A mortgage rate lock is one of the most valuable — and least understood — tools available to Canadian homebuyers. It costs nothing, protects you from rising rates, and at most lenders, lets you benefit if rates drop. Here’s how to use it strategically.
What is a mortgage rate lock?
A rate lock (also called a rate hold or rate guarantee) is a written commitment from a lender to hold a specific mortgage rate for a set period. If you close your mortgage within that period, you get the locked-in rate — regardless of what happens to rates in the meantime.
Feature
Typical Terms
Cost
Free
Duration
90–120 days
Commitment required
None — you can walk away with no penalty
Rate direction protection
Locked if rates rise
Float-down
Most lenders give you the lower rate if rates drop
How rate locks work in practice
Step-by-step timeline
Step
What Happens
Timing
1. Get pre-approved
Lender offers a specific rate and locks it in
Day 0
2. Rate hold period begins
Rate guaranteed for 90–120 days
Day 0 → Day 120
3. You find a home & make an offer
Rate remains locked
Within hold period
4. Mortgage finalizes
You close at the locked rate (or lower if rates dropped)
Within hold period
What happens in different rate scenarios
During Your Hold Period
What You Pay
Rates rise by 0.50%
Your locked rate (you’re protected)
Rates stay the same
Your locked rate
Rates drop by 0.25%
The lower rate (float-down protection)
Rates drop by 0.75%
The lower rate (float-down protection)
Your hold expires and you haven’t closed
You need a new rate lock at current rates
Rate lock policies by lender type
Big 5 banks (RBC, TD, BMO, Scotiabank, CIBC)
Feature
Typical Policy
Hold period
120 days
Float-down
Yes — automatic
Applies to
Pre-approval and purchase
Renewal hold
60–120 days before maturity
Cost
Free
Mortgage brokers (multiple lenders)
Feature
Typical Policy
Hold period
90–130 days (varies by lender)
Float-down
Most lenders offer it — confirm with broker
Advantage
Can lock rates from multiple lenders simultaneously
Best strategy
Lock the best available rate, let broker monitor for lower options
Monoline lenders
Feature
Typical Policy
Hold period
90–120 days
Float-down
Usually available
Rates
Often lower than big banks (tighter spreads)
Access
Through mortgage brokers only
Credit unions
Feature
Typical Policy
Hold period
60–90 days (often shorter)
Float-down
Varies — not always available
Rates
Competitive, sometimes below banks
Note
Policies vary significantly between credit unions
When to lock in a mortgage rate
Best times to lock in
Scenario
Why Lock In Now
Bond yields are trending up
Fixed rates will follow — lock before they rise further
BoC is expected to hold or hike
Variable rates unlikely to improve — lock your fixed-rate option
You have a firm offer on a home
Eliminate rate risk during the closing period
You’re 90–120 days from renewal
Start early to protect against rate increases
Rate environment is uncertain
Lock in as insurance — it’s free and risk-free with float-down
When to wait
Scenario
Why You Might Wait
BoC rate cuts are expected and not priced in
Variable rates may drop; fixed rates may follow if bond yields decline
You’re more than 120 days from buying
Your hold will expire before you need it
You’re targeting variable rate
Rate locks typically apply to fixed rates
Rate locks for renewals
If your mortgage is renewing within the next 120 days, you can proactively lock in a rate:
Strategy
How It Works
Current lender
Most banks offer a renewal rate 60–120 days before maturity. Accept it to lock in, then negotiate for lower.
New lender
Get pre-approved with a new lender 90–120 days before renewal. Lock the rate. If your current lender beats it, stay.
Broker approach
A broker can lock rates with multiple lenders simultaneously and match the best available rate at closing.
Renewal rate lock strategy
120 days out: Get a rate lock from a competing lender (through a broker)
90 days out: Receive your renewal offer from your current lender
60 days out: Use the competing rate lock to negotiate with your current lender
30 days out: Finalize your choice with the best available rate
Rate locks for variable-rate mortgages
Rate locks work differently for variable mortgages:
Feature
Fixed Rate Lock
Variable Rate Lock
What’s locked
The actual interest rate
The discount off prime (e.g., prime − 0.80%)
Duration
90–120 days
Often shorter (60–90 days)
Float-down
Yes (rate)
Your discount is fixed, but prime may change
Rate protection
Full protection against rising fixed rates
Protected against worsening discounts, not against BoC hikes
Common questions about rate locks
Can I lock rates with multiple lenders?
Yes. Through a mortgage broker, you can have rate holds with multiple lenders simultaneously. There’s no exclusivity requirement and no cost. This gives you the flexibility to choose the best option at closing.
What if my rate hold expires?
You’ll need to request a new rate hold at the current market rate. If rates have risen, you’ll get the higher rate. There’s no penalty for letting a hold expire.
Is a rate hold the same as a pre-approval?
Not exactly. A pre-approval includes both a rate hold AND a preliminary credit/income assessment. A rate hold alone only guarantees the rate — the lender still needs to verify your application at closing. Most rate holds come as part of a full pre-approval.
Can I extend a rate hold?
Some lenders allow extensions, but it’s not guaranteed. If your hold is about to expire and you need more time, ask your lender or broker about extension options. In some cases, the lender may reissue a new hold at the current rate.