Every year, hundreds of thousands of Ontario homeowners receive a mortgage renewal letter from their bank. It arrives in a plain envelope, includes a proposed interest rate and term, and asks for a signature. Most people sign it and send it back within a week, often without reading beyond the rate. It feels routine, like renewing a library card.

It is not routine. Your mortgage renewal is the single biggest financial decision you will make that year, and possibly for the next five years. In 2026, with the rate environment shifting and over $300 billion in Canadian mortgages renewing (according to CMHC projections), the stakes are higher than they have been in a decade.

This is your guide to handling a 2026 mortgage renewal in Ontario the right way.

The Renewal Trap: How Banks Keep You Paying More

Here is how the renewal process works at most big banks:

  1. 120 days before your maturity date, the bank sends you a renewal offer.
  2. The offer includes a rate that is almost always higher than what you could get by shopping the market.
  3. The letter makes it easy to accept: sign here, mail it back, done.
  4. Most people do exactly that.

Why the offered rate is rarely the best rate:

Banks know that switching lenders at renewal requires effort: a new application, an appraisal (sometimes), and legal fees to discharge and register a new mortgage. They are betting that the hassle factor keeps you in place. And they are usually right. According to industry data, approximately 60% to 70% of Canadian mortgage holders renew with their existing lender without negotiating or shopping.

That convenience comes at a cost. The gap between a bank's initial renewal offer and the rate you could negotiate or obtain elsewhere is typically 0.15% to 0.50%. On a $400,000 mortgage over a 5-year term, a 0.30% rate difference is approximately $6,000 in additional interest. For doing nothing more than making a phone call or sending an email to a broker.

What Has Changed in the 2026 Rate Environment

The Bank of Canada has been adjusting its policy rate throughout 2025 and into early 2026, and fixed mortgage rates have responded. If you locked in a 5-year fixed rate in 2021, you likely secured something between 1.69% and 2.49%. If you locked in during the peak in late 2023 or early 2024, you may be at 5.50% to 6.49%.

Here is the key context for 2026 renewals:

ProductRate Range (Early 2026)Notes
5-year fixed (A lender)4.09% to 4.89%Depends on insured vs. uninsured and the lender
Variable rate4.20% to 4.95%Bank of Canada may continue to adjust through 2026
3-year fixed4.19% to 4.69%Worth considering if you believe rates will continue to decline

If you are renewing from a pandemic-era rate (1.69% to 2.49%), your payment is going up regardless. The question is how much, and whether you are getting the best available rate or simply accepting whatever your bank offers.

If you are renewing from a 2023/2024 rate of 5.50%+, you may actually see a lower rate at renewal. But "lower than what you had" does not mean "the best available." Your bank knows you will feel relieved seeing a lower number and may not push further.

The Renewal Timeline: What to Do and When

120 Days Before Maturity (4 Months Out)

This is when your lender sends the renewal offer. Do not sign it. Instead:

90 Days Before Maturity (3 Months Out)

60 Days Before Maturity (2 Months Out)

30 Days Before Maturity (1 Month Out)

How a Broker Helps at Renewal (and What It Costs)

A common misconception: "I only need a broker if I am buying a home." In reality, renewal is one of the most valuable times to use a broker.

What a broker does at renewal:

What it costs you:

For conventional (A lender) renewals and switches, the broker is paid by the lender. There is zero cost to you. The lender pays the broker a finder's fee (typically 0.50% to 1.10% of the mortgage amount). This fee is built into the lender's pricing and does not affect your rate.

In other words: working with a broker is free, and it gives you access to better information and more options. There is no rational reason not to do it.

Special Situation: Switching from Private to Conventional at Renewal

If you currently hold a private mortgage and your term is coming up for renewal in 2026, this is the most important renewal you will face. The goal from day one of a private mortgage should be to exit into a B lender or A lender as soon as possible.

What You Need to Qualify for a B Lender

What You Need to Qualify for an A Lender

The Savings Are Substantial

TransitionExample Rate ChangeAnnual Savings ($300K Mortgage)
Private to B lender10.99% to 6.49%Approximately $13,500 + avoided renewal fees
B lender to A lender6.49% to 4.49%Approximately $6,000

Moving from a private mortgage at 10.99% with annual fees to a B lender at 6.49% on a $300,000 mortgage saves you approximately $13,500 in interest per year, plus you avoid the 1% to 3% renewal fees that private lenders typically charge. Over two years, that is $30,000+ in savings.

If you are approaching private mortgage renewal: Contact a broker at least 90 days before your maturity date. We can assess your credit, identify any gaps, and determine whether you qualify for a conventional lender today. If you are close but not quite there, a 6-month or 1-year private renewal with a targeted credit rebuilding plan may be the right move.

What If You Are Underwater or Behind on Payments?

If your property value has declined and you owe more than it is worth (negative equity), or if you have missed mortgage payments, renewal becomes more complicated but not impossible.

If you have missed payments: Your current lender may still renew you (they often prefer this to the cost and hassle of enforcement), but they may increase your rate or impose conditions. A broker can help you understand your options, including refinancing with a different lender to get current.

If your property value has dropped: This primarily affects your ability to switch lenders, since the new lender will require an appraisal and may not lend at the same LTV as your current mortgage. Staying with your current lender may be the pragmatic choice, but negotiate hard on rate.

Common Mistakes at Renewal

Mistake 1: Signing the First Offer

As discussed above. Never sign without shopping. It takes one phone call.

Mistake 2: Focusing Only on Rate

Rate matters, but so do prepayment privileges (can you make lump sum payments? increase your monthly payment?), portability (can you transfer the mortgage to a new property?), and penalties (what does it cost to break the mortgage early?). A mortgage at 4.19% with a restrictive penalty clause may cost you more than a mortgage at 4.39% with a 3-month interest penalty.

Mistake 3: Ignoring the Amortization Reset Opportunity

Renewal is an opportunity to adjust your amortization. If your finances have improved, shortening your amortization from 22 years remaining to 20 (or even 15) saves tens of thousands in total interest. If your finances are tight, extending the amortization reduces your payment.

Mistake 4: Not Considering a Switch Because "It Seems Like Too Much Hassle"

Switching lenders at renewal typically costs $800 to $1,500 in legal fees. Some lenders offer cash-back incentives or cover your switching costs. If the rate savings exceed the switching cost within the first year, the math favours switching.

Mistake 5: Waiting Until the Last Minute

If you call a broker two weeks before your maturity date, your options are limited. Four months out is ideal. Three months is fine. One month is tight but possible. Two weeks is emergency territory.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I have to renew with my current lender?
No. At renewal, you are free to switch to any lender that will approve you. There is no obligation to stay, and your current lender cannot charge a penalty at renewal (only during the term if you break early).
Is there a penalty for switching lenders at renewal?
No penalty from your current lender if you switch at the renewal date (maturity). The only costs are the legal fees to discharge the old mortgage and register the new one, typically $800 to $1,500.
How far in advance should I start the renewal process?
Four months (120 days) before your maturity date. This gives you time to shop rates, lock in a rate hold, and complete any application process if switching.
Can I change my mortgage term length at renewal?
Yes. Renewal is the natural point to change from a 5-year fixed to a 3-year fixed, or to switch to a variable rate, or any other term your new lender offers. You are not locked into the same term structure.
What if my financial situation has changed since I first got my mortgage?
If your income has increased, your credit has improved, or your debts have decreased, you may qualify for a better rate than your current lender is offering. Conversely, if your situation has deteriorated (job loss, new debts, credit issues), you may have fewer options. Either way, knowing where you stand early gives you time to act.
Should I choose fixed or variable in 2026?
This depends on your risk tolerance and view of rate direction. As of early 2026, fixed and variable rates are relatively close together. Fixed offers certainty. Variable offers the potential for savings if the Bank of Canada continues easing. A broker can model both scenarios for your specific mortgage amount and show you the dollar difference.

Renewal Coming Up? Let Us Check Your Rate.

A free, no-obligation rate comparison takes 24 to 48 hours and could save you thousands over your next term. No cost, no commitment.

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Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or mortgage advice. Individual circumstances vary, and all mortgage products are subject to lender approval (OAC). Rate ranges are illustrative based on current market conditions as of March 2026 and may change without notice. Good Home Capital Inc. (FSRA Mortgage Brokerage Licence #12596) is independently licensed and regulated by the Financial Services Regulatory Authority of Ontario. Consult a licensed mortgage professional before making financial decisions.