If you have ever wondered why Canadian mortgage math seems slightly different from US mortgage calculators, the answer is semi-annual compounding. It is a uniquely Canadian feature required by law — and it actually saves you money compared to the monthly compounding used in most other countries. Here is exactly how it works.
What is semi-annual compounding?
Compounding determines how often interest is calculated on accumulated interest. With semi-annual compounding, this happens twice per year.
How often each system compounds
| System | Compounding Periods Per Year | Used By |
|---|---|---|
| Semi-annual | 2 | Canadian fixed-rate mortgages |
| Monthly | 12 | US mortgages, Canadian variable-rate mortgages, most loans |
| Daily | 365 | Some savings accounts, credit cards |
| Continuous | Infinite | Theoretical/academic only |
More frequent compounding means you pay interest on interest sooner — which costs more. Semi-annual compounding is better for borrowers because it compounds less frequently.
Why Canada uses semi-annual compounding
The legal requirement
The Bank Act of Canada (Section 418) requires that:
Interest on a mortgage loan shall be calculated not in advance and shall be compounded not more frequently than semi-annually.
This applies to all federally regulated lenders (Big 5 banks, other Schedule I and II banks) for fixed-rate mortgages. Provincial credit unions are governed by provincial legislation but generally follow the same convention.
Historical context
This regulation was enacted as a consumer protection measure. By limiting compounding to semi-annual, Parliament ensured that Canadian mortgage borrowers pay less interest than they would under more frequent compounding systems. It has been in place for decades and is one of the key differences between the Canadian and American mortgage markets.
Semi-annual vs monthly compounding: the math
The core difference
When a lender quotes you a 5.00% mortgage rate in Canada, they mean 5.00% compounded semi-annually. Here is what that means in practice:
Semi-annual compounding (Canada):
- Nominal rate: 5.00%
- Compounded 2 times per year
- Each semi-annual period: 5.00% ÷ 2 = 2.50%
- Effective annual rate: $(1.025)^2 - 1 = 5.0625%$
Monthly compounding (US):
- Nominal rate: 5.00%
- Compounded 12 times per year
- Each monthly period: 5.00% ÷ 12 = 0.4167%
- Effective annual rate: $(1.004167)^{12} - 1 = 5.1162%$
Difference in effective rate: 5.1162% − 5.0625% = 0.0537%
This means a 5.00% Canadian mortgage costs less than a 5.00% US mortgage, even if the quoted nominal rate is identical.
Effective annual rate comparison
| Nominal Rate | Semi-Annual (Canada) | Monthly (US) | Canadian Advantage |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3.00% | 3.0225% | 3.0416% | 0.0191% |
| 4.00% | 4.0400% | 4.0742% | 0.0342% |
| 5.00% | 5.0625% | 5.1162% | 0.0537% |
| 6.00% | 6.0900% | 6.1678% | 0.0778% |
| 7.00% | 7.1225% | 7.2290% | 0.1065% |
| 8.00% | 8.1600% | 8.3000% | 0.1400% |
The higher the rate, the larger the Canadian advantage.
How semi-annual compounding affects your payments
Converting to a monthly payment rate
Even though interest compounds semi-annually, you still make monthly payments. Canadian lenders must convert the semi-annual rate to an equivalent monthly rate for payment calculations.
Step 1: Calculate the semi-annual factor
$$\text{Semi-annual factor} = 1 + \frac{\text{nominal rate}}{2}$$
For 5.00%: $1 + 0.025 = 1.025$
Step 2: Convert to equivalent monthly rate
$$\text{Monthly rate} = (1 + \frac{\text{nominal rate}}{2})^{1/6} - 1$$
For 5.00%: $(1.025)^{1/6} - 1 = 0.41239%$ per month
Compare to US monthly compounding: US monthly rate at 5.00% = $\frac{5.00%}{12} = 0.41667%$ per month
The Canadian monthly rate (0.41239%) is lower than the US monthly rate (0.41667%).
Payment comparison: $500,000 mortgage, 25-year amortization
| System | Monthly Rate | Monthly Payment | Total Interest (25 Years) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Canadian (semi-annual) | 0.41239% | $2,908 | $372,335 |
| US (monthly) | 0.41667% | $2,922 | $376,970 |
| Difference | 0.00428% | $14/month | $4,635 over 25 years |
Canadian semi-annual compounding saves approximately $4,600 on a $500,000 mortgage at 5% over 25 years.
Savings at different mortgage amounts (5.00%, 25-year amortization)
| Mortgage Amount | Canadian Monthly Payment | US Monthly Payment | Monthly Savings | 25-Year Savings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $300,000 | $1,745 | $1,753 | $8 | $2,780 |
| $400,000 | $2,326 | $2,338 | $12 | $3,710 |
| $500,000 | $2,908 | $2,922 | $14 | $4,635 |
| $600,000 | $3,490 | $3,507 | $17 | $5,560 |
| $750,000 | $4,362 | $4,383 | $21 | $6,950 |
| $1,000,000 | $5,816 | $5,844 | $28 | $9,270 |
Variable-rate mortgages: a different rule
Variable-rate mortgages in Canada compound monthly, not semi-annually.
This is an important distinction when comparing fixed vs variable rates:
| Feature | Fixed Rate | Variable Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Compounding | Semi-annual | Monthly |
| Rate quote | Compounded semi-annually | Compounded monthly |
| Effective rate at 5.00% | 5.0625% | 5.1162% |
What this means for rate comparison
A fixed rate of 5.00% and a variable rate of 5.00% are not the same cost. The fixed rate costs slightly less because semi-annual compounding is more favourable to borrowers.
To make a true apples-to-apples comparison:
To find the fixed rate equivalent of a 5.00% variable rate:
$$\text{Equivalent fixed rate} = 2 \times [(1 + \frac{0.05}{12})^6 - 1] = 5.0521%$$
A 5.00% variable rate (compounded monthly) is equivalent to approximately a 5.05% fixed rate (compounded semi-annually). The difference is small but worth understanding when rates are close.
How lenders calculate your payment
Here is the complete step-by-step calculation lenders use for a fixed-rate Canadian mortgage:
Example: $500,000 at 5.00%, 25-year amortization, monthly payments
Step 1: Calculate the effective monthly rate
$$r = (1 + \frac{0.05}{2})^{1/6} - 1 = (1.025)^{0.16667} - 1 = 0.0041239$$
Step 2: Calculate the number of payments
$$n = 25 \times 12 = 300$$
Step 3: Apply the mortgage payment formula
$$\text{Payment} = P \times \frac{r(1+r)^n}{(1+r)^n - 1}$$
$$\text{Payment} = 500{,}000 \times \frac{0.0041239 \times (1.0041239)^{300}}{(1.0041239)^{300} - 1}$$
$$\text{Payment} = 500{,}000 \times \frac{0.0041239 \times 3.4371}{3.4371 - 1}$$
$$\text{Payment} = 500{,}000 \times \frac{0.014178}{2.4371} = 500{,}000 \times 0.005817$$
$$\text{Payment} = $2{,}908$$
Why mortgage calculators may give different answers
If you use an American mortgage calculator (which assumes monthly compounding), you will get a slightly higher payment. Always use a Canadian mortgage calculator or ensure the tool accounts for semi-annual compounding.
| Calculator Type | Compounding Assumed | Payment Result ($500K, 5%, 25yr) |
|---|---|---|
| Canadian mortgage calculator | Semi-annual | $2,908 |
| US mortgage calculator | Monthly | $2,922 |
| Difference | — | $14/month |
Compounding frequency comparison table
$500,000 mortgage at 5.00%, 25-year amortization
| Compounding | Effective Annual Rate | Monthly Payment | Total Interest |
|---|---|---|---|
| Annual | 5.0000% | $2,894 | $368,020 |
| Semi-annual (Canada) | 5.0625% | $2,908 | $372,335 |
| Quarterly | 5.0945% | $2,915 | $374,650 |
| Monthly (US) | 5.1162% | $2,922 | $376,970 |
| Daily | 5.1267% | $2,924 | $377,405 |
The less frequent the compounding, the less you pay. Canada’s semi-annual system sits near the most favourable end.
How semi-annual compounding affects your amortization schedule
First 12 months: $500,000 at 5.00%, monthly payments
| Month | Payment | Interest | Principal | Remaining Balance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | $2,908 | $2,062 | $846 | $499,154 |
| 2 | $2,908 | $2,059 | $849 | $498,305 |
| 3 | $2,908 | $2,055 | $853 | $497,452 |
| 6 | $2,908 | $2,044 | $864 | $494,867 |
| 12 | $2,908 | $2,016 | $892 | $489,582 |
Notice the monthly interest of $2,062 in month 1. With monthly compounding (US), it would be $2,083 ($500,000 × 0.05 ÷ 12). The $21 difference is the semi-annual compounding benefit — and it compounds over 300 payments.
International comparison
How different countries handle mortgage compounding
| Country | Compounding | Rate Type | Typical Term |
|---|---|---|---|
| Canada | Semi-annual (fixed), monthly (variable) | Nominal | 1–10 years |
| United States | Monthly | Nominal | 15 or 30 years (fixed) |
| United Kingdom | Monthly or annual | Nominal or APR | 2–5 years (fixed), tracker |
| Australia | Monthly | Nominal | Variable (dominant) |
| European Union | Annual (APR required) | APR | Varies by country |
Canada’s system is the most borrower-friendly among major mortgage markets because semi-annual compounding produces the lowest effective rate for any given nominal rate (excluding annual compounding, which no major mortgage market uses).
Practical implications
For borrowers
| Implication | What It Means |
|---|---|
| Your effective rate is slightly lower than the quoted rate | A 5.00% mortgage really costs 5.0625% annually |
| US mortgage calculators will overestimate your payment | Always use Canadian calculators |
| Fixed and variable rates are not directly comparable | Fixed (semi-annual) is slightly cheaper than variable (monthly) at the same nominal rate |
| Prepayments are slightly more effective | Lower interest accumulation means more of each payment goes to principal |
For rate shopping
When comparing mortgage offers:
- Fixed-to-fixed comparisons are apples-to-apples (both semi-annual)
- Variable-to-variable comparisons are apples-to-apples (both monthly)
- Fixed-to-variable comparisons need adjustment (different compounding)
Quick conversion
To compare a variable rate to its fixed-rate equivalent:
$$\text{Fixed equivalent} = 2 \times [(1 + \frac{\text{variable rate}}{12})^6 - 1]$$
To compare a fixed rate to its variable-rate equivalent:
$$\text{Variable equivalent} = 12 \times [(1 + \frac{\text{fixed rate}}{2})^{1/6} - 1]$$
| Variable Rate | Fixed-Rate Equivalent | Fixed Rate | Variable-Rate Equivalent |
|---|---|---|---|
| 4.00% | 4.034% | 4.00% | 3.967% |
| 4.50% | 4.542% | 4.50% | 4.459% |
| 5.00% | 5.052% | 5.00% | 4.949% |
| 5.50% | 5.564% | 5.50% | 5.438% |
| 6.00% | 6.078% | 6.00% | 5.926% |
Summary
| Feature | Detail |
|---|---|
| What | Canadian fixed-rate mortgages compound interest semi-annually (twice per year) |
| Why | Bank Act (Section 418) consumer protection regulation |
| Benefit | Lower effective rate than monthly compounding — saves ~$4,600 on a $500K mortgage at 5% over 25 years |
| Variable rates | Compound monthly (different rule) |
| Practical impact | Always use Canadian mortgage calculators; fixed and variable nominal rates are not directly comparable |
Semi-annual compounding is one of the small but meaningful ways the Canadian mortgage system is designed in favour of borrowers. Understanding how it works helps you calculate your true costs and make accurate comparisons between fixed and variable rate options.