If you bought a Toronto home in 2020, 2021, or 2022, your mortgage is renewing in 2026 — and the rate you locked in feels like science fiction now. Sub-2% fixed rates are gone. Your renewal lands at roughly 4.4% to 4.8% on a 5-year fixed. That means the average GTA renewer is looking at about $622 more per month — a 24% jump.
About 1.15 million Canadian mortgages renew in 2026. Roughly 60% of all outstanding Canadian mortgages renew in 2025 or 2026 combined. This is the largest renewal cycle in Canadian history. The good news: there is a playbook. The bad news: most homeowners auto-renew with their existing bank because they ran out of time to do anything else. That's the most expensive mistake you can make.
Why this renewal cycle is different
Two cohorts are converging in the same window. The first is the 2021 five-year fixed cohort — homeowners who locked in at historic lows of 1.5% to 2.5% during the pandemic. The second is the 2023 three-year cohort — homeowners who took a short term in 2023 hoping rates would fall sharply by now. They didn't fall as much as people hoped. Both groups are landing in the same 12 to 18 month window.
The result: lenders are slammed, banks are tightening renewal offers, and the timeline pressure is real.
The four scenarios — which one are you?
Once you calculate your new payment (use Ratehub's calculator or call a mortgage broker), you fall into one of four buckets. Each one has a different playbook.
1. Small bump ($0–$300/month more)
Small remaining balance, decent equity, healthy income. Shop the renewal hard. Don't auto-accept the bank's first offer — get 2 to 3 competing quotes from a broker. A 0.20% rate difference on $400K saves $5,000 to $10,000 over five years.
2. Big bump ($300–$1,200/month more)
The majority of GTA renewers. Talk to a mortgage broker about extending amortization to 30 years (lower monthly payment), refinancing into the best fixed rate available, or consolidating high-interest debt at the same time.
3. Refinance scenario ($1,200+/month or cash needs)
The payment shock would destabilize you, or you have other financial moves to make. A full refinance lets you extend amortization, pull equity, and consolidate other debts in one transaction.
4. Sell + downsize
The math fundamentally doesn't work. Equity is meaningful. The home is bigger than the household needs. Selling at today's softer prices and moving into something smaller can reduce mortgage costs and free up tax-free principal residence equity.
Extending amortization — pros and cons
On a $700K mortgage at 4.5%, extending from 20 years to 30 years drops your monthly payment by roughly $700. Pros: protects cash flow, lets you stay in the home, lets you redirect savings into TFSA/RRSP. Cons: more total interest over the life of the mortgage (~$200K more), slower equity build, and you don't want to be paying a mortgage at 75.
For most GTA renewers in scenario 2 or 3, extending amortization is the right move. The math says financial stability today is more valuable than $200K saved over 30 years — especially if you can deploy that cash flow into TFSAs, RRSPs, or simply not living on the edge.
When selling actually beats renewing
Five signals that selling is the smarter move:
- The new payment would push your mortgage costs above 40% of gross household income.
- You have meaningful (say $500K+) tax-free principal residence equity that could be redeployed.
- The home no longer fits your life — kids out of the house, maintenance wearing you down.
- Your income picture has shifted (retirement, job loss, business slowdown).
- You'd be moving anyway in 1 to 3 years.
If two or three of those apply, run the sale-and-downsize math before renewing. You can always renew and stay if the math doesn't favor selling — but discover it now, not after a year of unaffordable payments.
What to do this week
If your renewal is in 2026 or early 2027, here are three things to do this week:
- Find your exact renewal date on your latest mortgage statement.
- Call your lender and request a written discharge statement assuming a closing date 90 days out — get the exact penalty in writing.
- Talk to a mortgage broker — they shop multiple lenders for you. I'm happy to refer you to two I trust.
If you want to walk through the renew-vs-sell math for your specific situation, the conversation is free and I'll be real with you either way.
Have questions about your specific situation?
The first conversation is free — 15 minutes, no pressure. I'll give you real input either way.
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