Your Right to Demand Mortgage Penalty Calculation Détails
When a Quebec borrower considers prepaying their mortgage, whether to refinance at a better rate, sell their property, or consolidate debts, the first crucial step is obtaining an official penalty statement from their lender. This fundamental right is protected by the Canadian regulatory framework and allows borrowers to make informed decisions based on exact figures rather than rough estimates.
The Regulatory Framework Protecting Your Right
At the fédéral level, OSFI imposes disclosure obligations on chartered banks regarding prepayment penalties. Lenders must clearly explain how the penalty is calculated, which rates are used for comparison, and which balance serves as the calculation basis. In Quebec, the AMF regulates provincial financial institutions with similar transparency requirements. The Consumer Protection Act (CPA) also provides additional protections regarding credit charge disclosure.
How to Draft Your Written Request
- Identify your lender and loan number: Gather your mortgage loan number, property address, and complete contact information. This information appears on your monthly or annual mortgage statement.
- Draft a formal written request: Send an email or registered letter to your lender specifying the desired prepayment date. Explicitly request a detailed statement including the calculation method (three months' interest or IRD), the comparison rate used, the balance serving as the calculation basis, and the number of days remaining on the term.
- Keep proof of your request: Retain a copy of your email or the acknowledgment of receipt for your registered letter. In case of a dispute, this proof will document that you exercised your right in the required manner.
- Have the statement reviewed by your broker: Once you receive the statement, forward it to your AMF-certified mortgage broker. They can compare the calculation against your contract terms and identify any anomalies in the method used by the lender.
What the Penalty Statement Must Contain
- The calculation method used: three months' interest or interest rate differential (IRD), whichever is greater for a fixed-rate mortgage.
- The comparison rate used for the IRD calculation, including whether the posted rate or the discounted rate was applied.
- The mortgage balance used as the calculation basis, as of the stated reference date.
- The number of months or days remaining on the mortgage term.
- The statement's validity date, after which a new calculation will be required.
- Penalty Statement
- An official document issued by the mortgage lender detailing the exact prepayment penalty amount, the calculation method used, and the parameters applied. This statement has a limited validity period (generally ten to thirty days) and is the only reliable reference for evaluating the true cost of breaking a mortgage.