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How to Pay Off Your Mortgage Early in Canada (2026 Guide)

Updated

Paying off your mortgage early can save tens of thousands of dollars in interest and give you financial freedom years ahead of schedule. But it is not always the right move. This guide covers every strategy Canadian homeowners can use to pay down their mortgage faster, along with the math on when it makes sense — and when your money is better deployed elsewhere.

Prepayment privileges by lender

Before making extra payments, check your prepayment privileges. Going above these limits triggers penalties.

LenderAnnual Lump Sum (% of original balance)Payment Increase (per year)Minimum Lump Sum
RBC10%10%$100
TD15%Up to double$100
BMO20%20%$100
Scotiabank15%15%None specified
CIBC10%10%$100
National Bank10%10%None specified
Tangerine25%25%$25
MCAP20%20%$100
First National15%15%$100

Note: Privileges reset annually on your mortgage anniversary date. Unused amounts do not carry over. If your privilege resets in September and you have a tax refund in March, make the lump sum before the anniversary to use this year’s room, then use next year’s room after the anniversary.

Strategy 1: Accelerated bi-weekly payments

This is the simplest and most popular strategy. Instead of making 12 monthly payments per year, you make 26 bi-weekly payments — the equivalent of 13 monthly payments.

How it works

Payment FrequencyHow It WorksPayments Per YearEquivalent Monthly Payments
Monthly1 payment per month1212
Bi-weeklyMonthly payment ÷ 2, every 2 weeks2612
Accelerated bi-weeklyMonthly payment ÷ 2, every 2 weeks2613

The key difference: regular bi-weekly simply splits your monthly payment in half, so you pay the same annual amount. Accelerated bi-weekly takes your monthly payment, divides by 2, and pays that every 2 weeks — which adds up to one extra monthly payment per year.

Savings on a $500,000 mortgage at 4.50%, 25 years

MetricMonthly PaymentsAccelerated Bi-Weekly
Payment amount$2,756/month$1,378 every 2 weeks
Total paid over life of mortgage$826,800$775,600
Interest saved$51,200
Mortgage paid off25 years~21.5 years
Time saved~3.5 years

Strategy 2: Annual lump sum payments

Making a lump sum payment once a year — from a tax refund, bonus, or savings — goes directly to principal and reduces your amortization.

Impact of annual lump sum on a $500,000 mortgage at 4.50%, 25 years

Annual Lump SumTotal Interest SavedYears Saved
$5,000$48,0004.0 years
$10,000$80,0006.5 years
$15,000$101,0008.5 years
$20,000$115,0009.5 years

Even a modest $5,000 annual lump sum saves nearly $50,000 in interest and pays off your mortgage 4 years early.

Strategy 3: Increasing your regular payments

Most lenders let you increase your payment by 10%–25% per year. Even small increases compound over time.

Example: On a $500,000 mortgage at 4.50% with a $2,756 monthly payment, increasing your payment by 10% ($276 more per month) in year 1 saves approximately $55,000 in interest and pays the mortgage off 4 years earlier.

Strategy 4: Choosing a shorter amortization

If you can afford it, choosing 20 years instead of 25 at the outset saves significantly.

AmortizationMonthly PaymentTotal Interest PaidInterest Savings vs 25 Years
15 years$3,825$188,500$138,300
20 years$3,154$257,000$69,800
25 years$2,756$326,800
30 years$2,533$411,900−$85,100 (costs more)

Comparison: How each strategy saves on a $500,000 mortgage at 4.50%

StrategyExtra Monthly CostInterest SavedYears SavedDifficulty
Accelerated bi-weekly~$230/month$51,2003.5 yearsEasy
$10,000 annual lump sum~$833/month (averaged)$80,0006.5 yearsModerate
10% payment increase$276/month$55,0004.0 yearsEasy
20-year amortization$398/month$69,8005.0 yearsEasy (if you qualify)
All combinedVaries$150,000+10+ yearsAggressive

When NOT to pay off your mortgage early

Paying down your mortgage is not always the smartest use of extra cash. Consider these scenarios:

1. Prepayment penalties exceed the benefit

If you are on a fixed-rate mortgage and want to make a lump sum beyond your privileges, the penalty can wipe out the interest savings. Stay within your prepayment limits or wait until renewal to make a large paydown.

2. You have unused TFSA or RRSP room

Contributions to a TFSA grow tax-free, and RRSP contributions generate a tax refund. If your mortgage rate is 4.5% but your investments earn 6%–8% long-term, you are better off financially by investing first and making minimum mortgage payments.

3. You carry higher-interest debt

If you have credit card debt at 20%, a car loan at 7%, or a line of credit at 8%, pay those off before accelerating your mortgage at 4.5%.

The math: Paying off your mortgage vs investing

FactorMortgage PrepaymentInvesting (TFSA)
Return4.50% (guaranteed, tax-free on principal residence)6%–8% (expected, not guaranteed, tax-free in TFSA)
RiskZeroMarket risk
LiquidityLocked in home equityAccessible (TFSA withdrawals)
Emotional valueDebt-free peace of mindWealth building
Tax benefitNone (already tax-free on principal residence)Tax-free growth

The verdict: If you have TFSA and RRSP room, investing likely wins on paper. But there is meaningful value in being mortgage-free, especially heading into retirement. A balanced approach — invest in your TFSA/RRSP and make modest extra mortgage payments — often serves Canadians best.

Prepayment penalties: fixed vs variable

If you go beyond your prepayment privileges or break your mortgage early, penalties differ significantly:

Mortgage TypePenaltyTypical Cost on $400K Balance
Variable rate3 months interest$4,000–$6,000
Fixed rateGreater of 3 months interest or IRD$8,000–$25,000+

Variable mortgages are far cheaper to break or prepay beyond limits. If you plan to make aggressive prepayments, a variable mortgage gives you more flexibility. Use our mortgage penalty calculator to estimate your specific cost.

The Bottom Line

The most effective way to pay off your mortgage early is to combine accelerated bi-weekly payments with annual lump sums within your prepayment privileges. On a $500,000 mortgage, this combination can save over $100,000 in interest and cut 7–10 years off your amortization. Before making extra payments, ensure you have no higher-interest debt, have maximized your TFSA and RRSP contributions, and are staying within your prepayment limits to avoid penalties.