The Right to Shop at Renewal: Your Best Negotiating Lever
Mortgage renewal is a pivotal moment in the life of your loan. It is the only opportunity where you can switch lenders, renegotiate your rate, and adjust your mortgage conditions without incurring a prepayment penalty. Yet a surprising number of borrowers sign their current lender's renewal offer without comparing it to the market, potentially leaving thousands of dollars on the table.
What the Law Says
In Canada, the legal framework is clear: at mortgage term maturity, the borrower is not bound to any lender. The Bank Act, for federally regulated institutions, and the Civil Code of Quebec (CCQ) for contractual matters, guarantee this freedom. The renewal notice you receive from your current lender is an offer, not an obligation. You have the right to decline it and seek better conditions elsewhere, whether from another bank, a caisse populaire, or a monoline lender.
How to Shop Effectively for Your Renewal
- Mark your term maturity date: Enter this date in your calendar at least 120 days in advance. Most lenders offer rate holds of 90 to 120 days, allowing you to lock in a favorable rate while continuing to shop.
- Contact your mortgage broker: An AMF-certified broker has access to dozens of lenders and can obtain rates not available directly at the counter. They will compare offers considering not only the rate but also prepayment privileges, portability conditions, and charge type (conventional or collateral).
- Obtain competing offers: Ask your broker to present at least three offers from different lenders. Use these offers as leverage to negotiate with your current lender. Studies show that a simple negotiation call can reduce the offered rate by 0.10% to 0.30%.
- Evaluate the total cost of transfer: If your mortgage is conventional, the transfer is typically free. If it is collateral, ask the new lender if they absorb discharge and re-registration fees. Compare transfer costs against interest savings over the new term.
Mortgage Portability
- Mortgage portability