Mortgage Renewal · Homesellers
Variable rate holders approaching renewal have a calculable decision window right now. Bōdie runs the numbers against your actual balance, penalty structure, and current rate spreads.
Should I break my mortgage and lock in a fixed rate?
For variable rate holders in Canada who purchased between 2019 and 2022, the current window is one of the most calculable refinancing opportunities in three years. The spread between break penalties and forward interest savings has a specific number attached to it. On a $650,000 mortgage at current rates, the three-month interest penalty is approximately $4,100 and the 24-month savings from locking into today’s five-year fixed can exceed $7,800. The math clears, but whether it clears for your specific balance and lender requires a calculation against your actual numbers.
01 The Opportunity
Variable rate holders who purchased between 2019 and 2022 are sitting in a specific position right now. Their renewal dates land inside a six-month window where the overnight rate forecast and five-year fixed spreads are closer than they have been in three years.
That is not a general market observation. It is a calculable opportunity with an expiry date. Bōdie pulled the current penalty exposure for a break-and-relock on a $650,000 mortgage at current rates.
Three-month interest penalty on a variable mortgage: approximately $4,100. Interest savings from locking into today’s five-year fixed versus riding variable through renewal: approximately $7,800 over 24 months. The math clears.
02 The Analysis
Most homeowners find out their refinancing options after the renewal papers have already arrived. At that point, the conversation shifts from strategy to ratification.
The decision window is not at renewal. It is in the 120 to 180 days before renewal, when lenders are still competing for your business and penalties are still negotiable. After renewal papers arrive, the leverage is gone.
Bōdie puts the numbers in front of you while the decision is still yours.
03 What the Numbers Show
A proper break-and-relock analysis covers four specific inputs: your estimated renewal date and how it aligns with the current rate forecast window, your lender’s penalty structure, the break-even point at which accumulated savings exceed the penalty cost, and comparable fixed and variable rate offers in your market at current spreads.
Without all four inputs, you are making a multi-thousand dollar decision on incomplete information.
04 The Rate Context
The Bank of Canada’s overnight rate path has significant implications for variable rate holders approaching renewal. Five-year fixed rates, which are tied to Government of Canada bond yields rather than the overnight rate, have moved independently. The current spread between variable and five-year fixed is narrower than it has been since 2021.
For homeowners with renewals landing between Q2 2025 and Q4 2026, this specific spread condition is the relevant variable, not the headline rate announcements.
Rate decisions through 2025 are data-dependent, with inflation trajectory and labour market conditions as the primary inputs. That uncertainty is exactly why locking in a calculable outcome now can outperform waiting for a clearer signal that may arrive after your optimal window has closed.
05 How Bōdie Calculates
Bōdie is the AI interface into Bōde AI, built into your Bōde Homeowner Dashboard. It pulls your property’s estimated renewal parameters, applies current lender penalty structures, and surfaces the break-even analysis in under two minutes.
The output is specific to your mortgage balance, your lender, and your market. It is not a rate comparison tool. It is a decision model.
Common Questions
The standard penalty is three months’ interest on the outstanding balance. On a $650,000 mortgage at current rates, that is approximately $4,100. Fixed rate mortgages use an Interest Rate Differential calculation that is typically higher.
The optimal window is 120 to 180 days before your renewal date. Within this period, most lenders will allow you to lock in a rate or negotiate a switch without a full break penalty. After renewal papers are issued, negotiating leverage is significantly reduced.
Yes, if the interest savings over the remaining term exceed the penalty cost. On a $650,000 balance at current spreads, the 24-month savings can exceed the penalty by $3,000 to $5,000. The specific number depends on your balance and lender.
Variable rate mortgages use a three-month interest penalty. Fixed rate mortgages use the greater of three months’ interest or the Interest Rate Differential. IRD penalties can be substantially higher for mortgages originated at 2020 to 2021 fixed rates.
No. Bōdie surfaces the data and decision model. A licensed mortgage broker executes the transaction. Bōdie’s analysis tells you whether the conversation with a broker is worth having before you have it.
Welcome to Bōde
Bōde is a licensed real estate platform operating in Alberta, BC, and Ontario. The platform handles every stage of the sale: listing on MLS and 1,000+ additional sites, marketing, offers, and closing. Pricing is $949 flat plus GST, or 1% capped at $10,000 plus GST, only when the property sells. The Homeowner Dashboard is free. Bōdie, the AI interface into Bōde AI, tracks ten categories of homeownership value continuously.
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