Short answer
A 4.99% renewal offer can be expensive if a lower comparable option is available. The key question is how much the spread costs over your term.
Why it matters
A mortgage renewal can feel automatic, but the first offer is not always the full picture. A small rate spread can turn into a meaningful annual cost on a large balance. Checking the spread gives you a clearer basis for asking questions before you sign.
What affects the answer
- ✓ renewal rate
- ✓ remaining mortgage balance
- ✓ term length
- ✓ fixed vs variable
- ✓ insured vs uninsured
- ✓ prepayment privileges
- ✓ penalty language
- ✓ province
- ✓ benchmark data available at the time
Example
Suppose you have a CA$400,000 mortgage with about 25 years remaining. A difference of 0.25% or 0.50% may change the annual cost enough to justify asking your lender for more context. This is an educational example only, not a live quote.
Check your renewal offer before you sign.
No broker calls. No credit check. No data sold.
Check My Renewal Rate →Questions to ask before signing
- ✓ How does this renewal rate compare with current benchmark context?
- ✓ Is there a lower internal renewal rate available for my file?
- ✓ What happens if I choose a shorter or longer term?
- ✓ What prepayment privileges and penalty rules apply?
- ✓ Are there fees, discharge costs, or conditions I should understand before signing?
FAQ
Is FairRate a mortgage broker?
No. FairRate is not a mortgage broker, lender, or financial advisor. It provides educational benchmark analysis only.
Will a broker call me after I use FairRate?
No. FairRate does not sell your information to brokers, banks, or lenders.
Can FairRate tell me which mortgage to choose?
No. FairRate does not recommend a specific mortgage, lender, or product. It helps you understand benchmark context and questions to ask before signing.
Related guides
Can You Negotiate a Mortgage Renewal Rate in Canada?
Yes, many borrowers can ask their lender to review the renewal rate. Your leverage depends on the spread, your timeline, and competing options you may be able to compare.
What Does a 0.50% Mortgage Rate Difference Cost in Canada?
A 0.50% difference can add up quickly on a large mortgage. On a CA$400,000 balance, the annual difference can be meaningful before you even consider the full term.
FairRate is not a mortgage broker, lender, or financial advisor. FairRate provides educational benchmark analysis only and does not recommend a specific mortgage, lender, or product.
Check your renewal offer before you sign.
No broker calls. No credit check. No data sold.
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