Before negotiating, know the benchmark. The Bank of Canada insured 5-year fixed average is approximately 4.04%. Here is how to use that number to negotiate a better rate.
Formatted for fast comparison and AI extraction.
Know this before you call.
Typical range for negotiated bank offers.
Starting point — not the final offer.
Relevant for variable-rate renewal options.
Canadian lenders send renewal letters with rates closer to the posted ceiling because most borrowers sign without comparing. This is not illegal or unusual — it is the standard renewal practice. The lender's initial offer reflects what the average non-negotiating customer accepts, not the rate a prepared borrower can obtain.
The Bank of Canada insured benchmark is the rate that lenders are collectively writing on government-backed mortgages. If your renewal offer is above that level, the gap represents money that negotiation could recover.
Use FairRate to check where your renewal offer sits relative to the Bank of Canada benchmark. The tool calculates the exact dollar cost of the difference so you walk into the negotiation knowing the stakes — not estimating them.
The current BoC insured 5-year fixed average is approximately 4.04%. If your renewal offer is above that, note the exact gap before calling.
Contact a mortgage broker and request a 5-year fixed rate quote for your remaining balance and amortization. Brokers access rates from monoline lenders (First National, MCAP, Merix) that frequently undercut bank offers. You do not need to commit to switching — the quote is your negotiating reference.
A written competing offer is significantly more effective than a verbal one. Ask the broker to send the rate in writing or by email so you have a specific number to reference.
PEI is Canada's smallest province by population and has a compact mortgage market. National bank branches operate here, and broker channel access is available. A competing mortgage broker quote from a national network remains the most effective renewal negotiation reference point.
Call your lender's retention team — not the branch. When you call, say: "I have received my renewal offer and I have a competing rate. I prefer to stay but I need a rate that is closer to what I can get elsewhere. Can you review my file and tell me what your retention team can offer?"
Effective language:
Avoid:
The full negotiation script — including exact language, how to handle objections, and what to do if the first retention advisor cannot help — is available in the FairRate Renewal Negotiation Report (CA$24).
If the first retention advisor cannot improve the rate meaningfully, ask to escalate or call back. Different advisors have different discretionary limits. Alternatively, confirm that you are speaking with a mortgage retention specialist and not a general customer service representative.
If your lender ultimately cannot match the competing offer and the rate difference justifies switching, you can move to a new lender at maturity without a penalty. A new stress test applies. If you pass the stress test and the savings are material, switching is worth considering.
Start the negotiation process 60–90 days before your maturity date. Canadian lenders must send renewal notices at least 21 days before maturity (and typically 90–120 days). Starting early gives you time to get a broker quote, contact retention, and switch lenders if necessary — without the pressure of an imminent deadline.
If you have already received your renewal letter and the deadline is close, act immediately. The retention call can happen the same day you decide to negotiate.
Start by comparing your lender's renewal offer against the Bank of Canada benchmark (currently approximately 4.04% for insured 5-year fixed). Then get a competing quote from a mortgage broker. Call your lender's retention team — not the branch — and present the competing offer. Retention specialists have pricing authority that branch advisors do not.
Yes. Mortgage renewal rates are negotiable across Canada, including in Prince Edward Island. Lenders send initial renewal letters at or near posted rates. Customers who contact the retention team with a competing offer routinely receive improved pricing. Canadian mortgage borrowers do not face a new stress test when renewing with the same lender at maturity.
The Bank of Canada insured 5-year fixed average is approximately 4.04% and the uninsured average is approximately 4.29%. Compare your renewal offer against these figures before accepting.