Broker floor: 4.54% · Bank average: 4.79% · Stress test qualifying rate: 6.54%. For excellent credit (750+) borrowers doing a purchase in Nova Scotia.
Paid report options after the free check: Rate Fairness Report CA$24 · Full Renewal Decision Report CA$49. No broker calls. No data sold.
Fixed rate mortgages are priced from the Government of Canada 5-year bond yield (currently approximately 3.12%) plus a lender spread. The broker floor adds approximately 1.00% to the bond yield; the bank average adds approximately 1.35%. For excellent credit borrowers, an additional 0 basis points applies above the excellent-credit baseline.
The result for a 1-Year fixed mortgage with excellent credit is a broker floor of 4.54% and a bank average of 4.79%. 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 $2,778/month — $137 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 | 4.54% | Lowest rate available through the broker channel for this profile |
| Bank average | 4.79% | 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 | 6.54% | Rate used to calculate maximum qualifying mortgage (contract rate + 2%, min 5.25%) |
Nova Scotia municipalities levy a Deed Transfer Tax (DTT) on real estate transactions.
Halifax Regional Municipality charges 1.5%. Other municipalities range from 0.5% to 1.5%. Confirm the rate with your municipality before closing.
Mortgages in Nova Scotia are regulated by the Nova Scotia Utility and Review Board. Nova Scotia borrowers qualify at the federal stress test rate. Halifax has experienced significant price appreciation in recent years, pushing more buyers toward insured mortgage thresholds.
| Value threshold | Tax rate |
|---|---|
| Above prior bracket | 1.0%–1.5% depending on municipality |
Excellent credit (750+ credit score) qualifies you for the most competitive mortgage rates available in Canada. Lenders view this tier as low-risk, providing access to broker-channel rates and strong negotiating leverage.
With excellent credit, you qualify for rates at or near the broker floor — the lowest tier available in the market. Your bank renewal offer may still start higher, but you have the strongest position to negotiate it down.
Improving your credit tier: Excellent credit borrowers are at the top tier. Focus on maintaining this status: keep credit utilization below 30%, avoid new credit applications within 90 days of a mortgage application, and ensure all accounts remain current.
To maintain excellent credit: make all payments on time, keep utilization low, and monitor your credit report annually for errors through Equifax or TransUnion.
A 1-year fixed term provides maximum flexibility. Borrowers who expect rates to fall within 12 months or who anticipate selling, refinancing, or having major life changes in the near term benefit most from the shorter lock-in period.
Typical borrower profile: Typical 1-year fixed borrowers include those expecting rate declines, sellers within 12 months, or borrowers waiting to qualify for a larger mortgage. The break penalty is the smallest of any fixed term.
Rate vs 5-year benchmark: 1-year fixed rates currently sit approximately +0.50% versus the 5-year fixed broker floor. Shorter terms can carry a premium when the market prices in future rate declines or when lenders price renewal risk into the shorter commitment.
Tradeoff vs 5-year fixed: Choosing 1-year over 5-year means renewing five times in a decade versus twice. Each renewal is an opportunity to benefit from lower rates — or a risk of higher rates. The net outcome depends on the rate path, which is impossible to predict with certainty.
A purchase mortgage in Nova Scotia requires full stress test qualification at 6.54% (your contract rate plus 2%, minimum 5.25%). This qualifying rate determines your maximum insured or conventional mortgage amount regardless of your actual contract rate.
Stress test: All new purchase mortgages require qualification at the stress test rate of 6.54%. Your lender calculates your maximum mortgage based on your gross income at 6.54%, not the actual contract rate — meaning you may qualify for a smaller mortgage than the contract payment suggests.
CMHC insurance: Fixed rate purchases with less than 20% down are CMHC-eligible on homes under $1,500,000 (as of December 2024). Premiums are added to your mortgage principal at closing.
Special considerations: For Nova Scotia purchases: factor land transfer tax, legal fees, home inspection, and title insurance into your total closing cost budget. No provincial first-time buyer LTT rebate applies in this province.
For a 1-Year fixed mortgage at a contract rate of 4.54%, the federal stress test qualifying rate is 6.54% (the contract rate plus 2%, minimum 5.25%).
On a $500,000 mortgage at the qualifying rate of 6.54% over a 25-year amortization, the monthly payment would be approximately $3,361/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, 1-Year fixed mortgage rates for excellent credit borrowers (750+ credit score) in Nova Scotia range from approximately 4.54% (broker floor) to 4.79% (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 new purchase mortgages require qualification at the stress test rate of 6.54%. Your lender calculates your maximum mortgage based on your gross income at 6.54%, not the actual contract rate — meaning you may qualify for a smaller mortgage than the contract payment suggests.
With a 1-Year fixed mortgage at 6.54% (stress test qualifying rate), a $500,000 mortgage on a 25-year amortization requires approximately $125,425 in gross annual income to qualify at a 32% GDS ratio. Excellent credit borrowers in Nova Scotia should work with a broker to confirm their specific qualifying income.
Choosing 1-year over 5-year means renewing five times in a decade versus twice. Each renewal is an opportunity to benefit from lower rates — or a risk of higher rates. The net outcome depends on the rate path, which is impossible to predict with certainty.