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Mortgage penalties by Canadian Banks

 

Mortgage penalties by Canadian banks are day light robberies.

It’s easy to get caught in the posted mortgage rate trap at the big Canadian banks.

No, you won’t have to pay the posted rate on your next mortgage. Pretty much nobody does that any more. The real danger is that posted rates will be used to calculate the penalty if you ever have to break your mortgage, probably costing you thousands of extra dollars from all Canadian banks.

A mortgage penalty compensates the Canadian bank for the interest payments it loses out on when you break a mortgage contract. It’s punitive in many cases.

Every  round of quarterly Canadian  bank earnings reports, it’s worth thinking for a moment about how those wonderful profits and dividends for investors are generated. One way is by using posted instead of lower discounted rates when calculating how much to penalize a client breaking a mortgage.

With houses as expensive as they are today, it’s crucial to get the lowest mortgage rate you can. Keep the same level of focus when inquiring about mortgage penalties. Although it’s hard to imagine the need to break a mortgage on a house you’re just buying or living in happily, it can happen. 70% Canadian adjust their five-year fixed rate mortgage before maturity, although many do it to refinance or move to a bigger house rather than to break the mortgage outright.

Mortgage penalties are straight forward if you have a variable-rate mortgage – expect to pay the equivalent of three months’ interest in most cases.

With a fixed-rate mortgage

the penalty is set at the higher of three months’ interest or a calculation called the interest rate differential, or IRD.

The must-ask question when negotiating a fixed-rate mortgage: Do you use discounted or posted rates to calculate these penalties?

This is important because using posted rates can result in a much higher penalty. For some real world numbers, let’s use the mortgage prepayment calculators all lenders now provide on their websites.

They show penalties for paying all or a portion of your remaining mortgage balance (to find them, Google your Canadian banks name and “mortgage prepayment calculator”)

Let’s use an example of someone who, three years ago, set up a $250,000 five-year mortgage and has a balance owning of $200,000. Assuming an original mortgage rate of 3.64 per cent with a discount of 1.5 percentage points, the mortgage prepayment calculators at several big banks showed penalties ranging from $5,000 to $7,600 or so.

Alternative Lenders

A check with some alternative lenders found penalties ranging from $1,800 to $2,800. These are very rough comparisons because lenders differ a fair bit in what information they ask you to supply. But you get the picture – the big banks apply penalties with a sledgehammer.

As well as producing revenue for lenders, inflated mortgage penalties also help trap clients who might otherwise move their business to another lender. Imagine you want to refinance your mortgage or buy a bigger home and your bank won’t come across with a competitive rate. You say you’ll change banks, only to find out how prohibitively expensive it is to break your mortgage.

Few of Canadian banks have a stated policy of offering clients only a small discount off the posted rate if they want to add on to their mortgage to buy a more expensive house. You may be able to negotiate something better than a trivial discount, but your bank knows your leverage is limited because of the penalty you face if you go.

Alternative lenders often have better rates than the big banks, and they typically have cheaper penalty fees. Why do so many Canadians use their banks for mortgages, Please figure it out yourself?

Navtaj Chandhoke

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Navtaj Chandhoke
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