Mortgage Trigger Rate Explained: What It Means for Your Variable Mortgage (2026)
Updated
The trigger rate became the most Googled mortgage term in Canada during 2022 when the Bank of Canada launched its aggressive rate hiking cycle. Hundreds of thousands of variable-rate mortgage holders discovered that there was a hidden threshold in their mortgage — a rate at which their payment would stop reducing their balance entirely. Understanding your trigger rate, how to calculate it, and what to do when you hit it is essential for any Canadian with a fixed-payment variable-rate mortgage.
What Is the Trigger Rate?
The Definition
Your trigger rate is the interest rate at which 100% of your mortgage payment goes to interest and 0% goes to principal.
Payment Allocation
Below Trigger Rate
At Trigger Rate
Above Trigger Rate
Interest portion
Partial
100%
100% + shortfall
Principal portion
Some
0%
Negative (balance grows)
Balance direction
Decreasing
Flat
Increasing
Visual Example
On a $450,000 mortgage with a $2,100 fixed monthly payment:
Key insight: Larger mortgages relative to payments have lower trigger rates — meaning they hit the threshold sooner when rates rise. Borrowers who stretched to the maximum they could afford at rock-bottom rates in 2020–2021 had the lowest trigger rates and were hit first.
The formula above gives an approximation. Canadian mortgages compound semi-annually (not monthly), so the exact trigger rate may be slightly different. For most borrowers, the approximation is within 0.05–0.10% of the actual number.
Trigger Rate vs Trigger Point
These terms are related but distinct. Both became relevant during the 2022–2023 rate cycle.
Concept
Trigger Rate
Trigger Point
What it is
The rate where payment = interest only
The point where balance exceeds a % of original property value
What it means
No principal is being paid down
Lender’s risk threshold has been breached
Who defines it
Mathematical — based on your payment and balance
Contractual — defined in your mortgage agreement
What happens
Negative amortization begins
Lender requires action (payment increase or lump sum)
Typical threshold
Varies by borrower
65%–80% LTV or balance exceeding original balance
Lender notification
Not always guaranteed
Usually required by contract
Action required
Optional (but recommended)
Mandatory (lender enforces)
Example: Hitting Trigger Rate BEFORE Trigger Point
Metric
Value
Original balance
$450,000
Current balance
$455,000 (after 6 months of negative amortization)
Home value at purchase
$562,500
LTV at purchase
80%
Current LTV
80.9% ($455,000 ÷ $562,500)
Trigger point (lender-defined)
105% of original balance = $472,500
Status
Past trigger rate but NOT at trigger point yet
In this case, you are in negative amortization but the lender has not taken action because the balance has not yet exceeded the trigger point threshold. You should act on your own before it gets there.
What Happens When You Hit the Trigger Rate
Immediate Effects
Effect
Details
Principal repayment stops
100% of payment goes to interest
Amortization becomes infinite
You will never pay off the mortgage at this payment level
Balance may begin growing
If rates go even slightly higher
Lender may notify you
Some do, some don’t (it’s not always consistent)
If Rates Continue Rising Past the Trigger Rate
Additional Rate Above Trigger
Monthly Balance Increase
Annual Balance Increase
+0.25%
$94
$1,125
+0.50%
$188
$2,250
+1.00%
$375
$4,500
+1.50%
$563
$6,750
+2.00%
$750
$9,000
Based on $450,000 balance.
Lender Policies When You Hit the Trigger Rate
Big 5 Bank Approaches
Lender
Payment Type
At Trigger Rate
At Trigger Point
TD
Fixed payment
Sends notification; offers increase
May force payment adjustment
CIBC
Fixed payment
Notifies borrower; suggests options
Requires borrower action
BMO
Adjustable
Payment auto-adjusts (no trigger rate issue)
N/A
RBC
Adjustable
Payment auto-adjusts (no trigger rate issue)
N/A
Scotiabank
Adjustable
Payment auto-adjusts (no trigger rate issue)
N/A
National Bank
Fixed payment
Notifies borrower
May require action
If your mortgage is with BMO, RBC, or Scotiabank, your payment adjusts automatically when rates change, so you never hit a trigger rate. The trigger rate issue is specific to fixed-payment variable mortgages (TD, CIBC, National Bank, and some credit unions).
What to Do If You Have Hit Your Trigger Rate
Option 1: Increase Your Payment (Best Option for Most)
Action
Details
Use prepayment privilege
Increase payment by 10–25%
Target payment
At least enough to cover interest + some principal
Cost
None — no fees or penalties
Timeline
Immediate effect
Option 2: Make a Lump Sum Payment
Action
Details
Use annual lump sum privilege
10–20% of original principal
Effect
Reduces balance, which reduces monthly interest, which may bring payment back above interest level
Cost
Uses your savings/investments
Timeline
Immediate effect
Option 3: Convert to Fixed Rate
Action
Details
Request conversion
Call lender and ask for variable-to-fixed switch
New rate
Lender’s current fixed rate (may not be the best available)
Penalty
Some lenders charge; others convert at no cost
Risk
If rates are about to fall, you lock in a high fixed rate
Option 4: Refinance
Action
Details
Break the variable mortgage
Penalty = 3 months’ interest
Get new mortgage
At a new rate (fixed or variable) with a new lender
Benefit
Fresh start; competitive rate shopping
Cost
3 months’ interest + legal fees ($1,500–3,000)
Option 5: Do Nothing and Wait for Rate Cuts
Action
Details
Keep making the same payment
Balance grows slowly
Wait for Bank of Canada rate cuts
Variable rate drops, trigger rate issue resolves
Risk
Balance grows until rates fall; if rates stay high, the damage compounds
When appropriate
Only if rate cuts are imminent and the negative amortization amount is small
Prevention: Avoiding Trigger Rate Issues in the Future
Strategy
How It Helps
Choose adjustable-payment variable
Payment moves with rate — no trigger rate
Set payment higher than minimum
Build a buffer so trigger rate is far away
Use accelerated bi-weekly
Higher effective annual payment
Monitor Bank of Canada announcements
Stay aware of rate direction
Know your trigger rate
Calculate it the day you sign the mortgage
How the Bank of Canada Rate Cycle Affected Trigger Rates