Renewal

Mortgage Renewal Toronto 2026: How to Get the Best Deal at Renewal Time

Jenny Tate By Jenny Tate
· 7 min read · Last updated: April 2026

Mortgage renewal in Toronto is one of the most financially significant events a homeowner will face — and most people handle it wrong. They receive a renewal letter from their lender, accept whatever rate is offered, and sign. This costs the average Toronto homeowner thousands of dollars over a five-year term. This guide will change how you approach mortgage renewal in Toronto, so you walk away with the best possible terms.

What Happens When Your Mortgage Comes Up for Renewal?

In Canada, mortgages are typically renewed every 1 to 5 years, even if the amortization period is 25 years. When your current term ends, you have three options: renew with your existing lender, switch to a new lender, or refinance your mortgage to access equity or change your structure.

Your lender is required to send you a renewal offer 21 days before your term expires. Most lenders actually send it 120 to 150 days in advance — and that early offer almost always includes a rate that is higher than what you could negotiate or find elsewhere. This is not an accident. Lenders count on the fact that most borrowers will not shop around.

Toronto renewal reality check: In 2026, a significant wave of Canadian mortgages are coming up for renewal after being locked in at historically low rates from 2020 to 2021. If your renewal is coming up, your payment is almost certainly going up — but by how much depends entirely on what rate you secure.

How Much Can You Negotiate on a Mortgage Renewal in Toronto?

The answer is: more than you think. Lenders build a spread into their posted renewal rates specifically because they expect a portion of customers to negotiate. The discount you can achieve varies by lender, your credit profile, the loan-to-value ratio, and how competitive the current lending environment is.

In our experience working with Toronto homeowners at jenny.mortgage, a borrower who shops their renewal actively — whether through a mortgage agent or by calling competing banks directly — typically achieves a rate 0.20% to 0.60% lower than the initial offer. On a $700,000 mortgage, that's $1,400 to $4,200 in savings over five years on interest alone.

When Should You Start Comparing Renewal Options?

Start 120 days before your renewal date. This gives you time to explore options without any pressure. Many lenders allow you to lock in a rate up to 120 days in advance, which is valuable in a volatile rate environment.

Do not wait until 30 days before renewal. At that point, you lose the ability to switch lenders without penalty — and you lose all negotiating leverage.

Should You Switch Lenders at Renewal?

Switching lenders at renewal in Ontario is more straightforward than most people realize. When your mortgage term ends, there is no prepayment penalty to switch. You will typically need to go through a new application process (the lender will want to verify income, credit, and the property value), but there are no exit fees if you time it at renewal.

The key question is whether the savings justify the administrative time. Here's when switching makes the most sense:

  • Your current lender's best offer is higher than what competing lenders are offering by 0.30% or more
  • You want to change your mortgage structure (e.g., move from variable to fixed, or change your amortization)
  • You want to add a HELOC (Home Equity Line of Credit) component
  • Your financial situation has changed significantly (income increase, new business, etc.)

Fixed vs Variable at Renewal in 2026

The fixed vs variable debate at renewal depends on your personal risk tolerance, income stability, and economic outlook. In 2026, fixed rates have come down from their 2023 peaks, and variable rates have tracked the Bank of Canada's rate cuts. The spread between 5-year fixed and variable has narrowed.

For most Toronto homeowners renewing in 2026, a 3-year or 5-year fixed term provides predictability that makes budgeting easier. Variable rates still make sense for those with strong cash reserves who can absorb potential rate increases, or those planning to sell in the next 2 to 3 years (since breaking a variable mortgage typically incurs a smaller penalty than breaking a fixed).

What is a Collateral Charge Mortgage and Why It Matters at Renewal

This is where many Toronto homeowners get trapped. Some lenders register your mortgage as a collateral charge rather than a standard charge. With a collateral charge mortgage, switching lenders at renewal requires full legal discharge and re-registration — which costs $1,000 to $2,500 in legal fees. This is one of the ways lenders reduce competition for your renewal.

If you are unsure how your mortgage is registered, check your original mortgage documents or call your lender. If it is a collateral charge, factor the switching cost into your comparison — a 0.15% rate difference on a $700,000 mortgage saves about $1,050/year, which may still justify the switch.

The Renewal Checklist: What to Do Before Signing Anything

  1. Get your renewal offer in writing — don't negotiate verbally
  2. Contact a mortgage agent at least 90 days before renewal to see what the market has available
  3. Know your mortgage balance and remaining amortization — this affects your options
  4. Check your credit score — a strong score gives you more leverage
  5. Decide if you need to restructure — renewal is the lowest-cost time to change your mortgage
  6. Get competing offers in writing before going back to your current lender
  7. Negotiate the rate AND the terms — prepayment privileges, portability, and penalty calculation methods all matter

Why Work with a Mortgage Agent for Your Toronto Renewal?

A licensed mortgage agent in Toronto has access to rates from 50+ lenders simultaneously — major banks, credit unions, monoline lenders, and alternative lenders. This means they can present your renewal situation to multiple lenders at once and bring you competing offers, often within 24 to 48 hours.

Importantly, the mortgage agent's fee is paid by the lender in most renewal scenarios. You pay nothing out of pocket for expert advice and market-wide rate shopping.

"Most clients who work with us for renewal are surprised by how much better the rates are versus their bank's first offer. The bank is counting on loyalty — we use competition." — Jenny Tate, Mortgage Agent Level 2, FSRA #M22002086

Common Mistakes to Avoid at Mortgage Renewal in Toronto

  • Signing the first offer without negotiating. Always counter, even if you plan to stay with your lender.
  • Renewing too early by accepting a rate lock before shopping. Early rate locks with your current lender often come with conditions that limit your ability to switch.
  • Focusing only on rate and ignoring terms. A 0.05% lower rate is irrelevant if the penalty for breaking early is $15,000.
  • Not considering your future plans. If you plan to sell or renovate in the next 3 years, a shorter term or variable rate may be better even if the rate is slightly higher.
  • Waiting until the last minute. Rushed renewals remove all your options.

Mortgage renewal in Toronto in 2026 is a genuine opportunity to save thousands — or to set up your mortgage in a smarter structure for the years ahead. Take the time to get it right. If you'd like a second opinion on your renewal offer, reach out at jenny.mortgage for a free, no-obligation review.

Renewal coming up? Get a free second opinion.

Book a free 20-minute discovery call. Jenny will review your renewal offer and tell you if you can do better.

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Jenny Tate — Mortgage Agent Toronto

Jenny Tate

Mortgage Agent Level 2 · FSRA #M22002086 · MBA in Finance · Lean Six Sigma Black Belt

Jenny Tate is a licensed mortgage agent serving Toronto, Burlington, and the Greater Toronto Area. With an MBA in Finance and 10+ years of experience, she has helped over 200 Ontario families secure better mortgage structures. Licensed with Tango Financial Inc. (FSRA #13691).

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