The Split Mortgage: A Hybrid Strategy to Reduce Risk
The debate between fixed and variable rates is one of the most common questions in mortgage financing. The split mortgage offers a third option: dividing your loan into two portions, one at a fixed rate for security and the other at a variable rate for potential savings. This diversification strategy, well established in portfolio management, also applies to the Canadian mortgage world.
How Split Mortgages Work in Canada
In a split mortgage, the total mortgage balance is divided into two distinct components managed under the same mortgage deed. Each component has its own interest rate, its own payment calculation, and potentially its own term. For example, a borrower with a $500,000 loan could place $300,000 at a 5-year fixed rate of 4.99% and $200,000 at a 5-year variable rate of prime minus 0.80%. The two payments combined form the total mortgage payment.
- Split Mortgage (Hybrid Mortgage)
- A mortgage structure in which the loan balance is divided into two or more portions, each with its own rate type (fixed or variable), its own interest rate, and potentially its own term. The objective is to diversify interest rate risk while maintaining a single mortgage deed.
Advantages and Disadvantages of Splitting
- Risk diversification: if rates rise, only the variable portion is affected, while the fixed portion remains stable. Conversely, if rates fall, the variable portion benefits immediately.
- Psychological compromise: borrowers anxious about a fully variable rate gain partial peace of mind without completely giving up potential savings.
- Increased complexity at renewal: if the two portions have different terms, the renewal dates do not coincide, which can limit the flexibility to transfer to another lender.
- Separate penalties: in the event of prepayment, each portion is subject to its own penalty. The fixed portion is subject to the interest rate differential (IRD) calculation, while the variable portion is limited to three months' interest.
- Limited availability: not all lenders offer this option, and conditions vary. A mortgage broker is essential for finding the best split mortgage offers.
Determining the Optimal Allocation
The ideal allocation between fixed and variable depends on your profile. A borrower with a tight budget and low tolerance for payment fluctuations should favour a higher proportion at a fixed rate (70 to 80%). A borrower with a comfortable financial margin and a view that rates will remain stable or decline could consider opting for a larger variable proportion (50 to 60%). The determining factor is your ability to absorb a payment increase on the variable portion without compromising your budget.