Renewal: A Golden Opportunity to Restructure Your Finances
Too many borrowers view mortgage renewal as a simple administrative formality consisting of signing a new rate and term agreement. In reality, renewal is one of the rare moments when you can substantially modify the structure of your mortgage without paying a penalty, and sometimes without additional fees. It is the ideal opportunity to reassess your overall financial strategy and adapt your mortgage to your current situation.
Modifying the Amortization Period
Adjusting the amortization period is one of the most powerful levers at your disposal at renewal. If your income has increased since the last term, shortening the amortization accelerates your mortgage repayment and significantly reduces the total interest paid. Conversely, if you are going through a more challenging financial period or want to free up cash for other goals, extending the amortization reduces the monthly payment.
Consolidating High-Interest Debt
Renewal is also the time when many homeowners consider consolidating their consumer debts into their mortgage. Credit card debt (often at 19% to 22%), auto loans (5% to 8%), and personal lines of credit (7% to 10%) cost far more in interest than a mortgage (4% to 5%). By consolidating, you reduce the weighted average interest rate across all your debts.
Important Rules for Consolidation
- Debt consolidation into the mortgage constitutes a refinance in OSFI's eyes. The loan-to-value ratio must not exceed 80%, meaning you need at least 20% equity in your property.
- Notary fees ($1,000 to $2,000 in Quebec), appraisal fees ($300 to $500), and possibly discharge fees will apply since the mortgage amount changes.
- Financial discipline after consolidation is crucial. The most common mistake is resuming credit card use after rolling them into the mortgage, creating a cycle of increasing debt.
- While the interest rate is lower, the debt is spread over a much longer period (the mortgage amortization). It may be advisable to increase monthly payments to compensate for this effect and avoid paying more total interest.
Other Possible Restructuring at Renewal
- Switch from a fixed rate to a variable rate (or vice versa) to adapt to new market conditions or a change in your risk tolerance.
- Split the mortgage into multiple tranches with different terms to diversify rate risk (staggering strategy).
- Add or modify prepayment privileges to accelerate repayment.
- Change payment frequency (monthly, bi-weekly, accelerated weekly) to save on interest and pay down the mortgage faster.
The Support of a Mortgage Broker
Mortgage restructuring at renewal involves complex calculations and financial trade-offs that deserve professional analysis. An AMF-certified mortgage broker will examine your entire financial situation, including your income, debts, risk tolerance, and medium- to long-term goals. They can model different restructuring scenarios and present a quantified comparison of each option. This service is free for the borrower since the lender pays the broker's commission. Take advantage of this expertise to transform your renewal into a genuine financial optimization strategy.