What to Say to Your Lender at Mortgage Renewal
Check whether your Canadian mortgage renewal offer looks competitive, fair, questionable, or expensive before accepting.
A Canadian mortgage renewal offer should be reviewed before you accept it. The first offer is often a starting point, not the final number.
Free preview first. Paid reports are optional. Your information is not sold to lenders.
How to judge the offer before signing
Compare the rate
Look at the quoted rate from your lender, the term length, and whether it is fixed or variable. Do not compare unlike products.
Estimate the payment impact
Even a 0.25% to 0.50% gap can become meaningful depending on your mortgage balance and amortization.
Ask for a review
Use benchmark context to ask the retention team or lender representative whether they can improve the offer before you sign.
Signs the renewal quote deserves a second look
- ✓ The offer arrived as a simple renewal letter with little explanation.
- ✓ The lender asks you to accept quickly without showing benchmark context.
- ✓ The rate is meaningfully higher than recent comparable offers you have seen.
- ✓ The term, penalties, prepayment privileges, or portability rules are unclear.
- ✓ You have not asked for a retention review or a competing quote yet.
What to say to your lender
A calm, specific ask usually works better than threatening to leave. The goal is to make the lender justify or improve the quote.
Get a written FairRate report before you respond
The free check gives you the first signal. The paid reports are designed to give you a clearer written summary before you call the lender, negotiate, or decide whether to compare elsewhere.
What this page is not
FairRate does not place your mortgage or sell your lead.
Use it as educational context before speaking with a licensed professional.
A better offer depends on your profile, lender, timing, and product.
Frequently asked questions
Is my Canadian mortgage renewal offer fair?
It depends on the quoted rate, term, rate type, balance, province, and current market context. FairRate helps you compare those inputs so you are not relying only on the lender’s first offer.
Should I accept my first mortgage renewal offer?
Not automatically. A first renewal offer may be negotiable. Before accepting, ask for a rate review, understand the product terms, and consider whether another lender or broker quote would improve your position.
Does switching lenders require a stress test?
In many cases, switching lenders can involve qualification requirements that staying with your existing lender may not. That is one reason renewal negotiation matters: your current lender knows switching can create friction.
Will FairRate sell my information to lenders?
No. FairRate is not a lead-generation site. The business model is paid reports, not selling borrower inquiries to banks, lenders, or brokers.
Regulatory Disclaimer: FairRate Canada is an independent consumer-paid mortgage renewal rate-checking report. We are not a mortgage broker, lender, brokerage, or rate marketplace. We do not arrange mortgages, sell leads, collect lender commissions, or receive referral fees of any kind. We are not licensed under any provincial mortgage brokering legislation, including the Mortgage Brokerages, Lenders and Administrators Act (Ontario) or equivalent provincial statutes. Rate context uses public Canadian mortgage-rate data and Bank of Canada published data. Results do not represent a guaranteed rate, a rate offer, lender approval, or financial advice. Always consult a licensed mortgage professional before making any mortgage decision.