Variable Rate Mortgage Risks in Canada 2025

Variable mortgages can save money — but the risks are real and need to be understood.

Variable rate mortgages (VRMs) have been popular in Canada for decades, and for good reason: historically, they've been cheaper than fixed rates over the long run. But the 2022–2023 Bank of Canada rate cycle exposed serious risks that many Canadians hadn't considered. Here's a clear-eyed look at the risks in 2025.

How Variable Rate Mortgages Work

A variable rate mortgage has an interest rate that fluctuates with the lender's prime rate, which in turn follows the Bank of Canada's overnight rate. Variable rates are typically expressed as prime minus (or plus) a spread: e.g., Prime – 0.70%.

There are two main types in Canada:

Key Risks of Variable Rate Mortgages

1. Interest Rate Risk

If the Bank of Canada raises rates, your effective rate rises immediately. The 2022–2023 rate hike cycle saw prime rate jump from 2.70% to 7.20% in 18 months — an increase of 4.5 percentage points. Borrowers who took variable rates at the lows saw their costs more than double.

2. Trigger Rate Risk (VRMs)

With a standard VRM (fixed payment, variable rate), a trigger rate exists. When rates rise so much that your fixed payment no longer covers even the interest owing, you hit the trigger rate. At that point:

2022–2023 lesson: Hundreds of thousands of Canadians with variable rate mortgages hit their trigger rates when the Bank of Canada raised rates 10 consecutive times. Many saw their mortgage balance grow despite making regular payments.

3. Payment Uncertainty

With ARMs (adjustable rate mortgages), your payment amount can change each month. Budget planning becomes more difficult, and sharp rate increases can create genuine financial hardship for households with tight cash flow.

4. Psychological Stress

Rate cycles are unpredictable. Even financially sophisticated borrowers can find the uncertainty of variable rates mentally taxing — particularly during periods of rapid rate increases. If financial stress affects your quality of life significantly, a fixed rate may be better regardless of economics.

Comparing Variable and Fixed: Historical Context

PeriodVariable Rate OutcomeBetter Choice
2000–2010Variable generally lowerVariable
2011–2021Variable consistently cheaperVariable
2022–2023Fixed saved significant moneyFixed
2024–2025Rate cuts helping variableDepends on spread

When Variable Rate Makes Sense in 2025

When Fixed Rate Makes Sense in 2025

Middle Ground: Some lenders offer a "fixed payment, variable rate" product where you can lock in to fixed mid-term if rates spike. Ask about conversion rights and lock-in features before choosing variable.

The Cost of Breaking a Variable vs. Fixed Mortgage

One major advantage of variable rate mortgages: the prepayment penalty for breaking a variable is typically only 3 months' interest. Breaking a fixed-rate mortgage mid-term can trigger an Interest Rate Differential (IRD) penalty worth thousands or tens of thousands of dollars.

If there's any chance you'll sell or refinance before your term ends, the variable rate's lower breakage penalty is a significant advantage.

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