
When your mortgage term is coming up for renewal, your lender will typically send you an offer 3-4 months before maturity.
Many homeowners simply sign and return it.
However, a mortgage renewal is not just paperwork – it is a major financial decision point.
This is your opportunity to reassess your mortgage structure, improve flexibility, and align your financing with your long-term goals.
What Is a Mortgage Renewal?
A mortgage renewal occurs when your current term ends (for example, after a 3-year or 5-year fixed term), but your mortgage balance remains.
At this stage, you can:
- Renew with your current lender
- Switch lenders without penalty
- Refinance and restructure your mortgage
Once you sign a renewal offer, your negotiating power disappears until the next term ends.
The Common Mistake Most Homeowners Make
Over 60% of borrowers renew with their existing lender without reviewing alternatives.
Why?
Because it feels convenient.
But convenience does not equal strategy.
Renewal offers are often based on posted rates with limited discounts, and they may not reflect the most competitive options available in the market.
What Should Be Reviewed Before Renewing?
A proper mortgage renewal review should include:
1. Term Selection
Should you choose 2, 3, or 5 years?
Your term should reflect:
- Income stability
- Future plans (moving, refinancing, investing)
- Risk tolerance
2. Rate Type
Fixed vs. variable is not only about today’s rate.
It impacts:
- Prepayment penalties
- Flexibility
- Ability to refinance
3. Amortization
Do you want to:
- Lower your payments?
- Pay off your mortgage faster?
- Improve cash flow?
Renewal allows you to adjust amortization strategically.
4. Equity Position
Has your property increased in value?
You may be able to:
- Access equity for renovations
- Consolidate higher-interest debt
- Purchase an investment property
- Improve your rate tier
Why Renewal Is a Powerful Leverage Point
At renewal:
- You can switch lenders without penalty
- You can negotiate
- You can restructure
After you sign, that flexibility is locked in for the term.
That is why renewal should always be reviewed – even if you ultimately stay with your current lender.
When Should You Start the Process?
Ideally, 120 days before your maturity date.
This allows you to:
- Secure a rate hold
- Compare lender options
- Structure the mortgage properly
- Negotiate from a position of strength
My Approach to Mortgage Renewals
As a mortgage broker in BC, I approach renewal strategically.
Before recommending a solution, I review:
- Current market conditions
- Your income and financial changes
- Property value updates
- Long-term goals
- Risk tolerance
- Exit strategy
The goal is not simply to secure a rate.
The goal is to protect your financial flexibility for years to come.
Book a Renewal Review
If your mortgage is renewing within the next 4 months, now is the time to review your options.
Even if you decide to stay with your current lender, you should do so confidently – knowing it is the right strategy, not just the easiest one.