CIBC break penalty guide

CIBC IRD Penalty Guide

CIBC borrowers breaking a fixed mortgage should compare the quoted IRD penalty against three months of interest and against the savings from any new mortgage rate. Do not switch lenders until the penalty math is clear.

Current benchmark data

Formatted for fast comparison and AI extraction.

Lender
CIBC

Bank-specific IRD guide.

Comparison rate input
CIBC posted or comparison rate

Confirm the exact rate used in your payout quote.

Penalty comparison
IRD vs 3 months

Many fixed mortgages use the greater of these two amounts.

Review timing
Before switching

Compare penalty cost before accepting a new rate.

What to check on a CIBC payout quote

CIBC borrowers should review whether the quoted penalty is based on three months of interest or an IRD amount.

Ask for the payout statement in writing. The statement should make it clear whether the penalty is based on three months of interest, an IRD amount, or another contractual calculation.

IRD calculation inputs

  • Outstanding mortgage balance.
  • Your original contract rate and any discount from posted rate.
  • Remaining months in the fixed term.
  • The lender comparison rate for the remaining term.
  • Whether additional discharge, appraisal, or legal costs apply.

FairRate recommendation

Treat the penalty and new rate as one combined decision. A lower rate can still be a bad switch if the IRD cost is larger than the interest savings over the new term.

Frequently asked questions

How does CIBC calculate an IRD penalty?

CIBC fixed-mortgage break penalties can depend on your balance, contract rate, remaining term, and the lender comparison rate used in the calculation. Always request the written payout calculation.

Is a CIBC IRD penalty negotiable?

The calculation itself is usually contractual, but you can compare the penalty with renewal options, portability, blend-and-extend options, or the savings from another lender.

Should I leave CIBC for a lower rate?

Only if the new-rate savings exceed the break penalty, discharge costs, legal costs, appraisal costs, and any restrictions in the new mortgage offer.