Broker floor: 4.35% · Bank average: 4.75% · Stress test qualifying rate: 6.35%. For fair credit (620–679) borrowers doing a refinance in Saskatchewan.
Paid report options after the free check: Rate Fairness Report CA$24 · Full Renewal Decision Report CA$49. No broker calls. No data sold.
Variable rate mortgages float with the Bank of Canada prime rate (currently 4.45%). The broker floor reflects prime minus 0.85%, adjusted for credit tier. The bank average reflects prime minus 0.45%. For fair credit borrowers, an additional 75 basis points applies above the excellent-credit baseline.
The result for a 10-Year variable mortgage with fair credit is a broker floor of 4.35% and a bank average of 4.75%. These are the two anchors used to evaluate any offer. On a $500,000 mortgage, the benchmark payment is approximately $2,641/month and this combination's rate produces approximately $2,726/month — $85 more than the 5-year fixed excellent-credit benchmark.
Rates are illustrative based on Bank of Canada benchmark data and do not constitute a lender quote. Verify current rates with your lender.
| Rate anchor | Rate | What it means |
|---|---|---|
| Broker floor | 4.35% | Lowest rate available through the broker channel for this profile |
| Bank average | 4.75% | Typical rate at major bank retail branches |
| Posted ceiling | 5.99% | Bank's starting-point rate before discounting — never pay this without negotiating |
| Stress test qualifying rate | 6.35% | Rate used to calculate maximum qualifying mortgage (contract rate + 2%, min 5.25%) |
Saskatchewan charges a Land Title Transfer Fee rather than a traditional Land Transfer Tax.
On a $300,000 property, fees are approximately $1,980. Saskatchewan has no true Land Transfer Tax — only this registration fee, making it one of the lowest closing-cost provinces.
Mortgages in Saskatchewan are regulated by the Financial and Consumer Affairs Authority of Saskatchewan (FCAA). Saskatchewan borrowers qualify at the federal stress test rate. The province offers some of Canada's most affordable housing markets.
| Value threshold | Tax rate |
|---|---|
| Up to $500 | $25 minimum |
| Above prior bracket | $0.30 per $100 on first $30K + $0.65 per $100 above $30K |
Fair credit (620–679 credit score) limits your mortgage options and results in a meaningful rate premium. You may need to work with a mortgage broker to access B-lender options, or take 12–18 months to improve your credit before applying.
Fair credit borrowers typically pay approximately 75 basis points above excellent credit borrowers. On a $500K mortgage, this is approximately $85/month or $1,020/year in estimated additional cost — a material difference over a 5-year term.
Improving your credit tier: Improving from fair to excellent credit could reduce your rate by approximately 0.75%, saving an estimated $85/month on a $500K mortgage or $5,100 over 5 years. Building credit for 12–18 months before applying can significantly improve your rate.
To improve from fair credit: pay all bills on time for 12+ months, reduce credit card balances below 30% utilization, avoid new applications, and dispute any errors on your credit report. A secured credit card can help rebuild history if your existing credit is thin.
A 10-year fixed term is Canada's longest commonly available mortgage term. It carries a meaningful rate premium but provides maximum rate certainty over a decade.
Typical borrower profile: 10-year fixed borrowers are typically older borrowers near retirement, those on strict fixed budgets, or borrowers highly confident they will not refinance or break the mortgage for 10 years.
Rate vs 5-year benchmark: 10-year fixed rates carry a significant premium over 5-year rates — currently approximately +0.75% above the 5-year fixed broker floor. This reflects both the longer commitment and the lender's rate risk over a full decade.
Tradeoff vs 5-year fixed: A 10-year term offers the highest payment certainty but at the highest rate cost. IRD penalties on a 10-year fixed mortgage can be extremely large in a declining rate environment. Only commit if you are highly confident you won't need to break the term.
A mortgage refinance in Saskatchewan replaces your existing mortgage to access equity, consolidate debt, or change terms. Refinances require full stress test requalification at 6.35%, regardless of whether you stay with the same lender.
Stress test: All refinances require requalification at 6.35%, even with the same lender. Your maximum refinance amount is limited by your gross income at the qualifying rate — you may not be able to access as much equity as you expect, particularly if your income hasn't grown proportionally with home values.
CMHC insurance: Refinances cannot be CMHC-insured. Any refinance results in a conventional (uninsured) mortgage, even if your original mortgage was insured. Maximum loan-to-value for a refinance is 80% of the property value.
Special considerations: For Saskatchewan refinances: breaking your existing mortgage before maturity triggers a penalty — typically 3 months' interest for variable mortgages and the greater of 3 months' interest or IRD for fixed mortgages. Model the penalty against the rate or equity benefit before proceeding.
For a 10-Year variable mortgage at a contract rate of 4.35%, the federal stress test qualifying rate is 6.35% (the contract rate plus 2%, minimum 5.25%).
On a $500,000 mortgage at the qualifying rate of 6.35% over a 25-year amortization, the monthly payment would be approximately $3,304/month. Lenders apply a 32% Gross Debt Service (GDS) ratio to determine the qualifying income, meaning total housing costs — principal, interest, property tax, and heat — cannot exceed 32% of your gross income.
Stress test calculations are for illustrative purposes only. Your lender will apply the qualifying rate to your specific balance, amortization, and income documentation.
Based on current Bank of Canada benchmark data, 10-Year variable mortgage rates for fair credit borrowers (620–679 credit score) in Saskatchewan range from approximately 4.35% (broker floor) to 4.75% (bank average). The posted ceiling is 5.99%. These are illustrative rates based on BoC fallback data — actual rates vary by lender, insured status, and individual profile. Always verify with your lender.
All refinances require requalification at 6.35%, even with the same lender. Your maximum refinance amount is limited by your gross income at the qualifying rate — you may not be able to access as much equity as you expect, particularly if your income hasn't grown proportionally with home values.
With a 10-Year variable mortgage at 6.35% (stress test qualifying rate), a $500,000 mortgage on a 25-year amortization requires approximately $123,475 in gross annual income to qualify at a 32% GDS ratio. Fair credit borrowers in Saskatchewan should work with a broker to confirm their specific qualifying income.
A 10-year term offers the highest payment certainty but at the highest rate cost. IRD penalties on a 10-year fixed mortgage can be extremely large in a declining rate environment. Only commit if you are highly confident you won't need to break the term.