The Two Penalty Calculation Methods in Canada
When a borrower wants to break a fixed-rate mortgage before the end of the term, the lender calculates the penalty using two methods and applies whichever is higher. This rule is standard for Canadian financial institutions, whether fédéral (under OSFI supervision) or provincial.
Method 1: Three Months' Interest
The three months' interest method is the simplest. The formula is: Remaining mortgage balance x Annual contractual rate / 4. For example, on a $350,000 balance at a contractual rate of 4.50%, the penalty would be $350,000 x 0.045 / 4 = $3,937.50. This method does not account for the remaining term or rate changes.
Method 2: Interest Rate Differential (IRD)
The IRD measures the cost to the lender of reinvesting the funds at a lower rate for the remaining term. The general formula is: (Contractual rate - Comparison rate) x Remaining balance x Months remaining / 12. The comparison rate is the lender's current rate for a new term equal to your mortgage's remaining duration.
Concrete Comparison With an Example
- Starting data: $300,000 balance, 5.00% contractual rate, 36 months remaining. The current 3-year posted rate is 4.50%, the current 3-year discounted rate is 3.50%.
- Three months' interest: $300,000 x 5.00% / 4 = $3,750.
- IRD with posted rate (big banks): (5.00% - 4.50%) x $300,000 x 36/12 = $4,500. The lender applies $4,500.
- IRD with discounted rate (monolines): (5.00% - 3.50%) x $300,000 x 36/12 = $13,500. NOTE: if the lender uses the lower discounted rate, the IRD is paradoxically higher because the gap is larger. In this case, monoline lenders often cap the IRD at the actual loss amount.
This example illustrates why it is essential to understand which method your lender uses and what comparison rate they apply. An AMF-certified mortgage broker can help you decode your contract clauses and estimate your actual penalty before any refinancing decision.