A Saskatchewan mortgage renewal offer is fair only if it compares well against the current Canadian benchmark range and does not hide expensive penalty or switching conditions. Check the offer before you accept your lender's renewal letter.
Start with the offered rate and payment. Then compare the rate against the current FairRate benchmark, check the maturity date, and review whether the lender is offering a fixed term, variable term, or blended option.
For Saskatchewan borrowers, the renewal decision should also include local closing-cost context if you plan to switch lenders or refinance. A lower rate matters most when the savings beat the full cost of changing lenders.
If the renewal offer is above the benchmark range, use the FairRate checker before signing. If you are considering switching before maturity, read the IRD penalty guide first so you do not compare rate savings without the break cost.
It depends on the quoted rate, remaining balance, term, amortization, fees, and penalty wording. Compare the renewal rate against the current Canadian benchmark before accepting.
Yes. A renewal offer is not automatically the lender's best rate. Borrowers can ask for a better rate, compare broker offers, or switch lenders if the savings justify the costs.
Only compare that after checking the payout penalty. A lower new rate can still lose money if the IRD or discharge costs are too high.