Unlike some countries where paying down a mortgage early is simply free, most Canadian closed mortgages come with a specific annual limit on how much extra you can pay without penalty — a prepayment privilege, typically 10-20% of the original principal per year. Go past it, and the penalty on a fixed-rate mortgage can be a genuinely large number.

How the Privilege Works

Lenders set an annual prepayment privilege, commonly 15% or 20% of the original loan amount (not the current balance), resetting each year on your anniversary date. Some lenders also allow a separate "payment increase" privilege — raising your regular payment amount by a percentage, which compounds the effect over the term.

Worked Example

On the $520,000 original loan amount, with a 15% annual prepayment privilege:

Item Amount
Original loan amount $520,000
Annual privilege (15%) $78,000
Lump sum applied in year 3 $30,000 (within privilege)
Approx. interest saved over remaining term ~$14,000-$18,000
Approx. time cut off amortization ~1.5-2 years

That $30,000 lump sum stays comfortably within the $78,000 annual allowance, so it's applied penalty-free, directly reducing principal.

What Happens if You Go Over the Privilege

On a closed, fixed-rate mortgage, exceeding your annual privilege triggers a penalty calculated as the greater of:

  • Three months' interest on the excess amount, or
  • The Interest Rate Differential (IRD) — roughly, the difference between your contract rate and the current rate the lender could get on a similar mortgage for your remaining term, applied to the excess amount and remaining time.

The IRD can be substantial when rates have dropped significantly since you signed — which is often exactly when someone is motivated to prepay or refinance in the first place, since a bigger IRD often shows up alongside a lower available rate.

Variable-rate mortgages work differently: most variable-rate closed mortgages use only the three-months'-interest penalty, without an IRD calculation, since there's no fixed-rate spread to measure against. This makes breaking a variable mortgage meaningfully cheaper than breaking a fixed one, in most cases.

Common Mistakes

Borrowers frequently assume their prepayment privilege resets on the calendar year — it typically resets on the mortgage's anniversary date instead, which can mean unused privilege from one year doesn't carry over, and a large prepayment made just before the anniversary might be smarter timed just after it, to get a fresh allowance sooner.

Borrowers also confuse "prepayment privilege" with "no penalty ever" — the privilege is specifically an allowance, not a full elimination of penalties; anything beyond it is still subject to the IRD or three-month-interest calculation.

A third mistake: not checking whether unused privilege is "use it or lose it." Most lenders don't allow you to bank an unused 15% allowance from one year into the next — it simply resets.

Where This Calculator Has Limits

It can't calculate your exact IRD penalty without your lender's specific posted rates and remaining term, since that formula is lender-proprietary and varies. It also assumes a standard closed mortgage — open mortgages typically allow unlimited prepayment without penalty, at the cost of a meaningfully higher interest rate.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is there ever truly no penalty for prepaying?

Yes — open mortgages allow unlimited prepayment penalty-free, though they carry higher rates than closed mortgages as a tradeoff.

Does my privilege apply to lump sums, higher regular payments, or both?

Depends on the lender — many separate these into two distinct privileges (e.g., 15% lump sum plus a 15% payment increase allowance), so check your specific mortgage documents.

Can I estimate my IRD penalty myself?

Roughly, but not precisely — your lender's exact posted-rate comparison table is needed for an accurate number; online estimates are directional only.

Does prepaying always make sense?

Usually it reduces total interest paid, but it's worth weighing against other uses of that cash — paying off higher-interest debt first, or maintaining an emergency fund, can sometimes be the better move.

Do variable-rate mortgages have prepayment privileges too?

Yes, typically similar percentage-based privileges, with a simpler three-months'-interest penalty (no IRD) for amounts exceeding the allowance.

Related Tools

Amortization Calculator · Renewal Planner · Mortgage Calculator

Educational content, not financial advice. Prepayment privileges and penalty calculations vary significantly by lender and mortgage type — confirm your specific terms with your mortgage documents or lender directly. Written by the MortgagePro Global team.