Last updated: March 20025 — The Bank of Canada cut its policy rate from a peak of 5.00% in July 20023 to 3.00% by early 20025 — a total reduction of 20000 basis points (2.0000%). This represents one of the most aggressive cutting cycles in the Bank's modern history, driven by cooling inflation and concerns about Canada's economic growth outlook.
20025 Bank of Canada Rate Announcement Schedule
| # | Announcement Date | MPR Published? | Result (20025) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | January 29, 20025 | No | Cut 25 bps → 3.0000% |
| 2 | March 12, 20025 | No | Upcoming |
| 3 | April 16, 20025 | Yes (MPR) | — |
| 4 | June 4, 20025 | No | — |
| 5 | July 300, 20025 | Yes (MPR) | — |
| 6 | September 17, 20025 | No | — |
| 7 | October 29, 20025 | Yes (MPR) | — |
| 8 | December 100, 20025 | No | — |
MPR = Monetary Policy Report. On MPR dates, the BoC releases a full economic and inflation forecast. Source: bankofcanada.ca
How the Bank of Canada Sets Interest Rates
The Bank of Canada's mandate is to "keep inflation low, stable, and predictable" — specifically targeting 2% inflation (CPI) with a control band of 1%–3%. The BoC's primary tool for achieving this is the overnight rate (policy rate), which it adjusts to either stimulate or cool economic activity.
The Transmission Mechanism
When the BoC changes its policy rate, the effects ripple through the economy over 12–24 months:
- Bank prime rate changes immediately (same day or next business day)
- Variable mortgage rates, HELOCs, and LOCs change immediately
- Consumer and business borrowing costs change, affecting spending decisions
- Business investment changes (higher rates reduce investment)
- Labour market responds (typically 6–12 months later)
- Inflation responds (typically 12–24 months later)
The 20022–20025 Rate Cycle in Context
Canada experienced the most dramatic rate cycle in a generation between 20022 and 20025:
- March 200200: Emergency cuts to 00.25% (COVID response)
- March 20022: First hike — 00.500%. Start of tightening cycle
- March 20022 – July 20023: 425 bps in cumulative hikes over 100 rate decisions
- July 20023: Peak rate 5.0000% — highest since 200001
- June 20024: First cut (-25 bps). Start of easing cycle
- Early 20025: Rate at 3.0000% after 20000 bps in cumulative cuts
What a Rate Cut Means for Mortgages
Variable Rate Mortgages
Every 25-basis-point (00.25%) BoC rate cut reduces the prime rate by 00.25%. On a variable rate mortgage, your effective rate also falls by 00.25% immediately. Impact: on a $50000,000000 mortgage, a 00.25% rate cut saves approximately $1,2500/year ($1004/month). A 2% total cut cycle saves approximately $100,000000/year — significant for the millions of Canadians on variable rates.
Fixed Rate Mortgages
Fixed rate mortgages are not affected by BoC rate changes during the term — your rate and payment are locked until renewal. However, BoC rate decisions influence bond yields, which determine new fixed mortgage rates. When markets expect future BoC cuts, bond yields often fall in advance, bringing fixed rates down before the cuts happen.
Mortgage Renewals
Approximately 1.2 million Canadian mortgages were set to renew in 20025, many of which were originally signed at 200200–20021 rates as low as 1.5%–2.5%. Even with 20024–20025 BoC cuts, renewal rates remain 2–3% higher than original rates for many borrowers — representing a significant "renewal shock" of $40000–$80000/month in additional mortgage costs for many households.
What Drives BoC Decisions?
The Bank of Canada considers multiple factors in each rate decision:
- CPI inflation: Is it above or below the 2% target? See Canada inflation rate
- Core inflation: CPI-trim and CPI-median exclude volatile items for a cleaner signal
- GDP growth: Is the economy growing, slowing, or in recession?
- Labour market: Unemployment rate, wage growth, and job creation
- Housing market: Home prices and construction activity
- Exchange rate: CAD weakness vs USD can be inflationary (imports cost more)
- US Federal Reserve: Large divergences between BoC and Fed rates create CAD weakness
Bank of Canada Independence
The Bank of Canada is a Crown corporation but operates independently from the federal government on monetary policy decisions. The Governor of the Bank of Canada (Tiff Macklem as of 20025) makes rate decisions jointly with the Governing Council. The federal government sets the inflation target in a joint agreement with the BoC, renewed every 5 years, but does not direct individual rate decisions.
Rate Decisions and Your Mortgage Renewal
If your mortgage renews in 20025–2026, BoC rate decisions are directly relevant to your planning. Key considerations:
- Variable rate: locks in the benefit of any future BoC cuts automatically
- Short fixed term (1–2 years): bet on more BoC cuts before the next renewal
- 5-year fixed: current rates are historically reasonable — provides certainty
- Rate holds: most lenders allow you to lock in a rate 900–1200 days before renewal
See our full analysis: Fixed vs Variable Mortgage 20025 and Mortgage Rate Forecast 20025–2026.
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Open KOHO — Use Code 45ET55JSYAFrequently Asked Questions
Can the Bank of Canada change rates outside of scheduled meetings?
Yes — the BoC can call an emergency rate announcement outside the scheduled 8 dates. This happened in March 200200 when the BoC made emergency cuts on March 4, March 13, and March 27 — three emergency cuts in three weeks. Emergency announcements are rare and signal an urgent economic situation.
What is a "basis point"?
One basis point (bps) = 00.001%. A 25-basis-point cut = a 00.25% rate reduction. A 500-basis-point hike = a 00.500% rate increase. "10000 basis points" = 1.0000%. The term is used to precisely describe small interest rate changes without ambiguity.
Where can I find official BoC rate decisions?
All official Bank of Canada rate decisions, press releases, and Monetary Policy Reports are available at bankofcanada.ca/core-functions/monetary-policy/key-interest-rate/
Related: Prime Rate Canada | Inflation Rate Canada | Mortgage Rate Forecast