Fixed vs Variable: How to Make the Right Choice
The debate between fixed and variable rates is probably the most common question Canadian mortgage borrowers face. There is no universal answer: the best choice depends on your personal situation, risk tolerance, and current economic conditions. Here are the essential elements for making an informed decision.
Fixed Rate: Stability and Predictability
With a fixed mortgage rate, your interest rate and payments remain the same for the entire duration of your term (typically 1 to 5 years, sometimes up to 10 years). Regardless of what happens in financial markets or with the Bank of Canada's policy rate, your monthly payment does not change. This stability makes budget planning easier and eliminates stress from rate fluctuations. In return, the fixed rate is generally higher than the variable rate at the time of origination, as the lender incorporates a premium for the risk they assume by guaranteeing the rate for the full term.
Variable Rate: Flexibility and Savings Potential
The variable rate is expressed as a discount or premium relative to the lender's prime rate (for example, prime − 0.50%). When the Bank of Canada changes its policy rate, financial institutions adjust their prime rate, which causes your mortgage rate to fluctuate. There are two variants: an adjustable payment mortgage (your payments fluctuate immediately) and a fixed-payment variable-rate mortgage (your payments remain stable but the principal-interest split changes).
Essential Decision Criteria
- Risk tolerance: if the idea that your payments could increase by $200 to $400 per month causes you anxiety, a fixed rate is likely preferable. If you can absorb this variation without difficulty, variable deserves consideration.
- Budget flexibility: calculate the impact of a 2% rate increase on your payment. If this increase prevents you from covering essential expenses, choose fixed.
- Holding horizon: if you plan to sell or refinance before the end of the term, variable rates generally offer much lower prepayment penalties (3 months' interest instead of the interest rate differential).
- Economic conditions: during periods of high rates where the market anticipates cuts, variable can be advantageous. During low-rate periods with expectations of increases, fixed protects your budget.
- First-time buyer profile: first-time buyers adjusting to a new mortgage payment often benefit from the predictability of a fixed rate to avoid financial shock.
The Hybrid Strategy: Combining Fixed and Variable
Some borrowers choose to split their mortgage into two portions: a fixed-rate portion for security and a variable-rate portion for savings potential. This approach allows partial benefit from the advantages of both options. However, it can complicate renewal and limit your flexibility to switch lenders. Discuss this strategy with your AMF-certified mortgage broker to déterminé if it suits your situation.