Mortgage Penalty Estimator
How Mortgage Penalties Work in Canada
3 Months Interest (Variable Rate)
Variable rate mortgages always use the simpler 3-month interest penalty. On a $480,000 balance at 4.50% variable, that's $480,000 × 4.50% / 12 × 3 = $5,400. Painful but predictable.
Interest Rate Differential — IRD (Fixed Rate)
Fixed rate mortgages at big banks use IRD, calculated as: (Your Rate - Comparison Rate) × Balance × Remaining Term in Years.
The problem: big banks use their posted rates (not the discounted rate you actually got) as the comparison rate. If you got a 0.80% discount off posted, that discount is stripped out of the comparison, inflating your penalty dramatically.
Example: You have a $480K mortgage at 4.24% (big bank posted was 5.04%, you got a 0.80% discount). 3 years remaining. Current 3-year posted rate is 4.59%, less your 0.80% discount = 3.79% comparison rate. IRD = (4.24% - 3.79%) × $480,000 × 3 = $6,480. But banks calculate this differently in practice, often yielding $15,000-$30,000.
How to Minimize Penalties
- Choose a variable rate if you think you might need flexibility
- Use monoline lenders — their IRD calculations are more borrower-friendly
- Port your mortgage — if buying a new home, porting keeps your rate and avoids penalty
- Use prepayment privileges before breaking — reducing balance reduces penalty
- Ask for a blend-and-extend — blending current and new rate vs. paying full penalty
Real Examples: What Penalties Look Like in Practice
Variable Rate Example
Borrower has $420,000 remaining at 5.45% variable. They want to break with 28 months left. Penalty = $420,000 × 5.45% / 12 × 3 = $5,723. This is the same regardless of what market rates are doing — always 3 months' interest.
Fixed Rate — Monoline Lender Example
Borrower has $500,000 at 4.89% fixed, 30 months remaining. Current 30-month rate at that lender: 4.10%. IRD = (4.89% − 4.10%) × $500,000 × 2.5 years = $9,875. 3-month interest = $500,000 × 4.89% / 4 = $6,113. Monoline uses higher of two = $9,875 penalty.
Fixed Rate — Big Bank Example (Same Numbers)
Same borrower at a big bank. Posted rate when locked in: 6.39%. Current 30-month posted rate: 5.40%. The bank strips your 1.50% discount from the comparison, so comparison rate = 5.40% − 1.50% = 3.90%. IRD = (4.89% − 3.90%) × $500,000 × 2.5 = $12,375 — over $2,500 more than the monoline for identical circumstances.
Can You Negotiate a Penalty?
In some cases, yes. If you're renewing early (before maturity), some lenders offer a blend-and-extend option — blending your existing rate with the current market rate into a new term without charging the full IRD. This is particularly attractive when the rate gap is large. Ask your lender specifically: "What are my blend-and-extend options, and what rate would I get?" Compare the blended rate to what you'd get by paying the penalty and refinancing fresh.
Penalty vs. Savings: How to Do the Math
The break-even calculation: divide your total penalty cost by the monthly savings from the new lower rate. If you'd save $400/month and the penalty is $12,000, your break-even is 30 months. If you're staying in the home for 36+ months and the new rate is meaningful lower, breaking makes financial sense. Use our refinance break-even calculator for a full analysis.
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