Choosing between a bank mortgage specialist and an independent mortgage broker is one of the first decisions in the home buying process. Here is how they compare — and when each option makes more sense.
How each role works
Bank mortgage specialist
A mortgage specialist is a bank employee assigned to help you get a mortgage — at their bank only.
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Employer | A specific bank (RBC, TD, BMO, etc.) |
| Products available | Only that bank’s mortgage products |
| Number of lenders | 1 |
| Compensation | Salary + bonus based on volume and product targets |
| Loyalty | To the bank — their job depends on selling bank products |
| Licensing | Some provinces require licensing; some rely on bank supervision |
Independent mortgage broker
A mortgage broker is a licensed professional who shops your mortgage across many lenders.
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Employer | Independent brokerage (may be franchised or independent) |
| Products available | Dozens of lenders: banks, monolines, credit unions, trust companies, B-lenders, private |
| Number of lenders | Typically 30–50+ lenders |
| Compensation | Commission from the lender (0.50%–1.10% of mortgage). Free to borrower for most mortgages |
| Loyalty | To the borrower — regulated duty to act in your interest |
| Licensing | Provincially licensed and regulated (FSRA in Ontario, BCFSA in BC, RECA in Alberta) |
Head-to-head comparison
| Factor | Bank Specialist | Mortgage Broker |
|---|---|---|
| Rate | Bank’s offer (negotiable) | Access to wholesale and monoline rates |
| Typical rate difference | — | 0.10%–0.40% lower |
| Lender choice | 1 bank | 30–50+ lenders |
| HELOC / readvanceable | Available | Not available from most monolines |
| Pre-approval speed | Fast (internal system) | Fast (multiple lender systems) |
| Complex situations | Limited flexibility — bank guidelines | More options for self-employed, poor credit, unique properties |
| Cost to you | Free | Free (standard mortgages) |
| Renewal shopping | Must shop yourself or accept offer | Broker shops renewal across lenders |
| Relationship pricing | May offer discounts for multi-product clients | No relationship bundling |
| Advice scope | Mortgage + bank products | Mortgage only (no investment or banking advice) |
Rate comparison scenario
$500,000 mortgage, 5-year fixed
| Source | Rate Offered | Monthly Payment | 5-Year Interest | Savings vs First Bank Offer |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bank first offer | 5.14% | $2,943 | $119,524 | — |
| Bank (negotiated) | 4.39% | $2,737 | $100,016 | $19,508 |
| Broker (monoline) | 4.09% | $2,651 | $93,543 | $25,981 |
| Broker (bank rate match) | 4.19% | $2,680 | $95,959 | $23,565 |
The bank’s first offer is rarely their best. Negotiating or using a broker quote as leverage can save thousands. The broker’s monoline option may save an additional $2,000–$6,000 over the bank’s best negotiated rate.
When to choose a mortgage broker
| Situation | Why a Broker Is Better |
|---|---|
| Rate shopping | Broker does the shopping across 30+ lenders — saves you time and usually gets a lower rate |
| Self-employed | Brokers know which lenders have the best stated-income and business-for-self programs |
| New to Canada | Brokers know newcomer programs across multiple lenders |
| Credit challenges | Brokers have access to B-lenders and private lenders that banks cannot match |
| First-time buyer | Broker navigates the full landscape of first-time buyer incentives and lender programs |
| Renewal | Broker shops your renewal across all lenders, not just your current one |
| Want monoline rates | The only way to access monoline lenders is through a broker |
| Complex property | Brokers know which lenders handle rural, multi-unit, mixed-use, or unconventional properties |
When to go directly to a bank
| Situation | Why a Bank May Be Better |
|---|---|
| Need a HELOC | Most monoline lenders do not offer HELOCs — banks are the primary option |
| Readvanceable / all-in-one | Products like Manulife One, Scotia STEP, TD FlexLine require a bank relationship |
| Strong multi-product relationship | If you have investments, business accounts, and personal banking, the bank may offer relationship pricing |
| Rate match willingness | Some banks will match a broker quote to retain you as a client |
| Want one institution for everything | Simplicity of managing mortgage, chequing, savings, and credit cards in one place |
| Private banking client | High-net-worth clients may get exception pricing unavailable through brokers |
The hybrid approach: best of both worlds
Many savvy borrowers use both channels:
- Get a broker quote first — Have a broker provide their best rate from their top lender
- Take it to your bank — Show the bank the broker’s offer and ask them to match or beat it
- Compare the full package — Rate is not everything. Compare penalties, prepayment privileges, portability, and HELOC availability
- Choose the best overall deal — Sometimes the bank matches the rate and offers a HELOC; sometimes the broker’s deal is simply better
Choosing a good mortgage broker
Not all brokers are equal. Here is what to look for:
| Quality | How to Assess |
|---|---|
| Licensed and active | Verify their license with the provincial regulator (FSRA, BCFSA, RECA) |
| Experience | Ask how many years they have been brokering and their approximate annual volume |
| Lender access | Ask how many lenders they work with — a good broker has 30+ |
| Transparency | They should disclose their commission and explain why they recommend a specific lender |
| Communication | Responsive, clear, and proactive about the process and timelines |
| Reviews | Check Google reviews and ask for references |
| Specialization | If you have a unique situation (self-employed, investment property, poor credit), find a broker who specializes in that area |
| No pressure | A good broker educates you on options — they do not pressure you into a decision |
How broker commissions work
| Commission Type | Who Pays | Amount | When Paid |
|---|---|---|---|
| Upfront finder’s fee | Lender pays broker | 0.50%–1.10% of mortgage amount | At mortgage funding |
| Trailer / renewal fee | Lender pays broker | 0.10%–0.20% of balance annually | Ongoing during the term |
| Volume bonus | Lender pays broker | Additional if broker meets volume targets | Quarterly or annually |
| Borrower-paid fee (private) | Borrower pays broker | 1%–2% of mortgage | At funding (deducted from advance) |
On a $500,000 mortgage, the broker typically earns $2,500–$5,500 from the lender. This is built into the lender’s cost structure — the same rate would not be lower if you went to the lender directly, because monoline lenders only operate through brokers.
The bottom line
For most borrowers, a mortgage broker provides better rates, more options, and expert guidance at no cost. The bank advantage lies in specific products (HELOCs, readvanceable mortgages) and relationship pricing for multi-product clients. The smartest approach is to use both: get a broker quote to establish the best available rate, then decide whether your bank can match it with products the broker cannot access.