Mortgage Renewal Checklist Ontario: The 120-Day Timeline (2026)
By Jenny TatePart of: Mortgage Renewal Ontario — the full hub
★ Start here: Mortgage Renewal Ontario — the complete 2026 hub — the big-picture guide that ties all nine renewal articles together.
Short answer
Start your renewal process 120 days before your maturity date. In that window: request your renewal letter, gather documents, compare at least three competing offers, run stress-test numbers if you'll switch lenders, and sign at least 15 days before closing. Doing this cleanly typically saves Ontario homeowners 0.25%–0.75% versus the first offer the bank sends.
Key takeaways
- 120 days out is the standard rate-hold window — don't wait longer.
- The bank's first offer is almost never their best rate.
- Switching lenders triggers the stress test; staying does not.
- Get 2–3 competing written quotes before signing anything.
- Never let your mortgage auto-renew at posted rate — always respond.
Quick example
A homeowner with a $600,000 balance receives an auto-renewal at 5.14%. They start shopping at Day 120 and secure a competing offer at 4.54% — a 0.60% improvement. That's about $3,600/year in interest savings, or roughly $18,000 over a 5-year term. The only work required: two hours of paperwork spread across four months.
What most people get wrong
- "I'll deal with it the week before." At 2 weeks out you've lost your leverage — there's no time to switch lenders or appraise. You're stuck with whatever your bank sends.
- "I only need one competing quote." One competing quote is a negotiation — three quotes is a market read. The third usually beats the first by 0.10%–0.25%.
- "Documents are the same as five years ago." Lender requirements have tightened. Self-employed borrowers especially need fresher NOAs and business statements than they did on the original application.
Most Ontario homeowners leave money on the table at renewal not because they don't want to shop — but because they don't have a timeline. This checklist is the exact sequence I run with clients, starting 120 days before maturity.
Day 120: Request Your Renewal Letter & Gather Documents
Call your current lender and request your renewal offer in writing, plus your current balance and penalty-to-break quote (you want this on file even if you plan to stay). Start collecting:
- Last two paystubs or current T4 (employed borrowers).
- Most recent Notice of Assessment from CRA.
- Current mortgage statement showing balance, rate, maturity date.
- Property tax bill (most recent).
- Home insurance policy (declaration page).
- Government-issued photo ID.
- Self-employed: two years of NOAs, business financials or T2125s.
Day 110: Get Competing Quotes
Contact at least two other lenders or engage a mortgage agent who can pull from 40+ lenders at once. You want written rate holds, not verbal quotes. A written 120-day hold from a competing lender is your leverage with your existing bank.
If you're considering switching, read our Toronto renewal guide for the switch-vs-stay decision framework and the negotiation scripts that actually work.
Related reads — Mortgage Renewal Series
Day 90: Decide Stay vs Switch & Lock a Rate
With your bank's best offer and 1–2 competing quotes in hand, run the numbers. If the competing rate is 0.20% better or more, switching usually pays — even factoring in a collateral-charge discharge. If you're switching, submit the full application at Day 90 and lock the rate.
Switching lenders means you must re-qualify at the federal mortgage stress test — the higher of 5.25% or your contract rate + 2%. Staying with your current federally regulated lender waives this.
Day 60: Appraisal & Lawyer (Switchers Only)
If you're switching, the new lender orders an appraisal around Day 60. Most switch programs cover the appraisal cost. Your lawyer (or the lender's in-house title-insurance partner) begins the discharge paperwork with your old lender.
If you're staying, there's nothing to do here — the renewal simply rolls over on maturity date.
Day 30: Final Signatures
Switchers: sign final mortgage documents with the new lender's lawyer or notary. Confirm payment date, payment amount, and prepayment privileges match what you were offered.
Stayers: sign the renewal agreement and return it by the deadline on the letter. If you haven't negotiated yet, this is your last real window — the bank's retention team has authority to sharpen the rate once they see a signed competing offer.
Day 0: Closing & Beyond
On maturity date, your new term begins. Set a calendar reminder for 4 years and 8 months from now — that's when your next 120-day window opens. Reviewing your mortgage annually (not just at renewal) is what separates homeowners who pay down principal fast from those who stay on autopilot.
Frequently asked questions
When should I start preparing for my mortgage renewal in Ontario?expand_more
Start 120 days before your renewal date. That is the standard rate-hold window offered by most Canadian lenders and gives you enough time to shop, re-qualify, and close without pressure.
What documents do I need for an Ontario mortgage renewal?expand_more
Recent paystubs or T4s, latest Notice of Assessment, current mortgage statement, property tax bill, home insurance policy, and government-issued photo ID. Self-employed applicants should also have two years of NOAs and business financials.
Do I have to re-qualify for a mortgage at renewal in Ontario?expand_more
Only if you switch lenders. If you stay with your current federally regulated lender and sign the renewal offer, no re-qualification is required. Switching to a new federally regulated lender triggers the stress test at the higher of 5.25% or your contract rate + 2%.
Can I negotiate my renewal offer with the bank?expand_more
Yes. The first offer in a renewal letter is rarely the bank's best rate. A written competing quote from another lender is the fastest way to get the bank to sharpen its number.
What happens if I do nothing and my mortgage auto-renews?expand_more
Most lenders will auto-renew you into a posted-rate term — often 0.50% to 1.00% above the market. On a $500,000 balance, that is roughly $2,500 to $5,000 per year in extra interest. Always respond before the deadline.
Renewal coming up?
Book a free 15-minute discovery call. Jenny will map the 120-day checklist against your actual maturity date and pull live competing quotes.
⏱ Borrowers who start at 120 days typically save 0.20–0.50% vs those who start inside 30.
★ 200+ Ontario families served · Mortgage Agent Level 2 · FSRA #M22002086 · MBA in Finance
No obligation, no sales pitch — just a second opinion on your numbers.
Jenny Tate
Mortgage Agent Level 2 · FSRA #M22002086 · MBA in Finance
Jenny Tate is a licensed mortgage agent serving Toronto and the GTA. She specializes in renewal planning and mortgage restructuring through Tango Financial Inc. (FSRA #13691).