Compare variable mortgage terms before choosing flexibility
Variable mortgage terms can affect your rate, payment flexibility, renewal timing, and exposure to prime-rate changes. Use RateBuddy to compare variable rates by term length before deciding whether a short-term or longer-term variable mortgage fits your budget and risk comfort.
5-Year variable mortgage rate options
Use the payment filters to estimate costs for this variable term. RateBuddy shows current variable mortgage rate options with lender details, estimated payments, and term-specific rate insights.
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Adjust the purchase price, down payment, amortization, and payment frequency to see how your estimated mortgage payments change across the rate options below.
The "Trigger Rate" Trap
Daily InsightMany variable mortgages have fixed payments. If Prime rises, your payment might not cover the interest. Ask your lender: "What is my exact trigger rate?" so you aren't hit with a surprise lump-sum payment.
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Choosing a Variable Term
With a variable rate, your interest rate moves with the lender's prime rate. The term you choose determines how long you are committed to that specific discount (e.g., Prime - 0.90%).
A 3-year variable is often chosen by those who want flexibility to break early, while the 5-year variable is the standard choice, offering the deepest discount from prime for a longer guaranteed period.
- Expecting rate cuts (Bank of Canada)
- Prioritizing lower breakage penalties
- Wanting the option to lock into Fixed later
- Payments may fluctuate with Prime
- Budgeting requires comfort with risk
- Discounts vary by lender & province
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How to compare variable mortgage terms in Canada
Variable mortgage terms let you borrow with a rate that can move when lender prime rates change. The term length affects how long your variable-rate agreement lasts, how soon you can renew, and how much flexibility you may have if your plans or the rate market changes.
What changes when you choose a different variable term?
The term can affect your lender options, rate discount, payment rules, prepayment flexibility, conversion options, and renewal timing. A lower variable rate can be useful, but borrowers should also compare how the mortgage handles payment changes, trigger-rate risk, and early exit penalties.
Who may prefer shorter variable mortgage terms?
Shorter variable terms may suit borrowers who want flexibility, may sell or refinance sooner, or want to reassess their mortgage as market rates change. They can also be useful for borrowers who do not want to commit to a longer variable-rate term.
Who may prefer longer variable mortgage terms?
Longer variable terms may suit borrowers who are comfortable with rate movement and want to keep a variable structure for a longer period. Before choosing a longer variable term, compare the rate discount, payment adjustment rules, conversion options, and penalties if you need to break the mortgage early.
Variable Rate Questions
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