The Bank of Canada’s decision to leave its overnight rate at 2.25% kept borrowing costs unchanged, but not the pressure facing borrowers heading into a heavy renewal cycle. The hold follows a year‑over‑year uptick in inflation to 2.4% and an unemployment rate that climbed to 6.8% in December.
Analysts across the mortgage industry said the pause entrenched a buyers’ market in many regions while underlining renewed focus on debt service and job security.
Buyers’ market deepens as competition rose
“While this rate hold provides some stability, other factors such as economic uncertainty, potential job loss and affordability are continuing to put downward pressure on the housing market,” Victor Tran, mortgage and real estate expert at Rates.ca, said.
“The housing market is currently very much in buyers’ favor. Motivated sellers should be aware of the increased competition and price accordingly.”
Tran said renewal and refinancing volumes rise as purchase activity cools.
“Even as the market slows, renewal activity is increasing, with homeowners searching for more competitive rates or exploring options such as extended amortizations to keep monthly mortgage payment costs in check,” he said.
According to Rates.ca’s mortgage quoter, renewal quotes as a share of total quotes rose by 16 percentage points year over year in December 2025, underscoring how borrowers shifted from buying to defending their existing positions.
Fixed, variable and the renewal crunch
Recent bond‑yield volatility and lender competition for renewals meant some pricing pockets improved despite the hold.
“Recently there have been some decreases on three‑year fixed rates, making them competitive with five‑year fixed rates,” Tran said.
“While a three-year fixed rate sets up a homeowner to take advantage of a potentially lower interest rate environment in several years, it also can keep prepayment penalties in check if the homeowner decides to sell within the three-year term.”
Licensed mortgage broker and LowestRates.ca expert Leah Zlatkin said the pause left affordability “essentially unchanged” but gave borrowers clearer sightlines.
“Affordability stays essentially unchanged with today’s hold, and that stability is important for buyers who have been waiting for clearer signals,” Zlatkin said.
“Rates are expected to remain relatively steady in the near term, which gives buyers clearer direction after months of uncertainty.”
She pointed to a growing gap between borrower perceptions and how mortgage pricing actually works.
“Some buyers and homeowners are still waiting for the right moment, in part because there’s confusion about what Bank of Canada decisions actually influence,” Zlatkin said.
“Fixed mortgage rates are driven by the bond market, not the policy rate, and those have already moved higher. At this point, waiting for a meaningfully lower fixed rate is unlikely to deliver the savings many people are hoping for.”
Renewals, job risk and borrower psychology
Bank of Canada research indicated that about 60% of mortgages renewing in 2025 and 2026 are still expected to face higher payments, even after substantial rate cuts from mid‑2024 peaks, with average increases of around 10% for 2025 renewals and 6% for those in 2026.
Refinancing emerged as another safety valve. “Homeowners that are looking into refinancing are interested in consolidating debt and freeing up liquidity to ride out today’s challenging times,” Tran said.
Yet he warned that falling prices could limit how much equity borrowers could tap.
The maximum conventional refinance remains capped at 80% of appraised value, less registered loans, meaning any price decline directly erodes accessible equity.
Zlatkin said more borrowers use the current pause to renegotiate, extend terms or reconsider product mix rather than to rush into new purchases.
“We’re seeing fewer new purchase applications, alongside increased activity tied to renewals and refinancing,” she said.
“With fewer buyers competing for listings, softer pricing in some markets, and higher inventory, prepared buyers are finding more room to negotiate.”
CMP


