Lump-Sum Payments: Using Your Privileges to Reduce Your Mortgage
Every closed mortgage contract in Canada contains prepayment clauses that define what the borrower can pay beyond regular payments without incurring a penalty. The lump-sum payment is one of these privileges: it allows the borrower to make an additional payment directly against the loan principal. This amount immediately reduces the mortgage balance and, consequently, the interest calculated in each subsequent period. It is one of the most effective ways to shorten your amortization and decrease the total cost of your mortgage.
How the Lump-Sum Prepayment Privilege Works
- Lump-sum prepayment privilege
The privilege amount is expressed as a percentage of the original loan amount. For example, a lender offering a 15% privilege on a $400,000 mortgage allows up to $60,000 per year in additional principal. This amount is generally paid in one or more payments, depending on the lender's conditions. Some lenders require a minimum payment (for example, $100), while others accept payments of any amount.
Concrete Financial Impact
The impact of a lump-sum payment is all the more significant when made early in the life of the loan. On a $400,000 mortgage at 5% amortized over 25 years, a single $20,000 lump-sum payment made in the first year immediately reduces the balance to $380,000. Interest is now calculated on this new reduced balance. In total, this single payment can save over $35,000 in interest and shorten amortization by approximately one and a half years. If the borrower contributes $20,000 each year for five years, the cumulative effect is even more dramatic.
Conditions and Limits to Know
- The privilege is annual: it does not carry over from one year to the next. If you do not use it, it is lost for that year.
- The calculation basis varies: most lenders calculate the percentage on the original loan amount, which is more generous. Some calculate it on the current balance.
- Excess is penalized: any amount paid beyond the privilege is subject to the prepayment penalty (three months' interest or interest rate differential).
- Payment methods vary: some lenders accept online payments, others require a phone call or branch visit. Verify the process with your institution.
- The regular payment does not change: after a lump-sum payment, your regular payment stays the same. It is the amortization period that decreases. However, some lenders offer the option to recalculate the payment downward.