Calculate whether converting to fixed actually saves money — including the penalty cost
The decision to lock a variable rate into a fixed rate is one of the most common mortgage questions in Canada, especially during periods of rate volatility. The math is not as simple as comparing the two rates — you must factor in the penalty, the rate differential, and your timeline.
If you have a variable-rate mortgage and want to convert to fixed, most lenders allow this — but at a cost. Typically, the penalty is 3 months' interest on your current variable rate. On a $450,000 balance at 4.20%, that's approximately $4,725. This is money you pay today in exchange for rate certainty going forward. You need to recoup this penalty through savings on the fixed rate before the lock-in makes financial sense.
If your variable rate is 4.20% and the fixed rate you can lock into is 4.44%, you're paying 0.24% more per year to lock in. On $450,000, that's about $1,080 per year in extra interest. Your $4,725 penalty takes approximately 4.4 years to recoup — but if you only have 3 years left in your term, locking in makes you worse off (mathematically) compared to staying variable at the same rate. The break-even analysis changes dramatically if rates rise after you lock in.
The Bank of Canada reduced its policy rate multiple times through late 2024 and into 2025, responding to slowing inflation and economic growth concerns. As of early 2026, the overnight rate sits around 3.0%–3.25%, translating to a prime rate of approximately 4.95%–5.25%. Variable-rate holders who signed mortgages at prime minus significant discounts in 2023–2024 are now seeing attractive effective rates. Whether further cuts materialize depends on inflation, the global economy, and trade conditions — all uncertain.
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Get KOHO Free — Code 45ET55JSYALast updated: March 2026. Calculations use Canadian semi-annual compounding. Not financial advice.