Mortgage rate vs mortgage margin

Alex LegaultMortgage broker

14 Mar 2026


Mortgage vs Mortgage Margin, explained simply!


Buying a house is often the biggest purchase of a lifetime. You sign a mountain of papers, you hear about fixed rates, variable rates, mortgage margins... and often you nod without fully understanding.

Here is a clear guide, in plain French-Canadian simple language, for Mr. and Mrs. Everyone.



1. Mortgage vs Mortgage Line of Credit


1.1. What is a “classic” mortgage?


It’s the most common product.

  • You borrow a precise amount (e.g., $350,000)
  • With an amortization (e.g., 25 years)
  • And a term (e.g., 5 years)
  • You make regular payments (monthly, every two weeks, etc.)
  • Goal: fully repay the debt over time


Each payment includes:

  • a portion of interest (what you pay to the bank)
  • a portion of principal (what reduces your debt)

As time goes by, you repay more principal, less interest.

In short: it’s like a “repayment plan” fixed in advance.


1.2. What is a mortgage line of credit?


A mortgage margin is a line of credit secured by your home.

  • The bank gives you a limit (e.g., $150,000) based on the value of your property and your down payment
  • You can borrow, repay, re-borrow as needed
  • You pay interest only on the amount used
  • The minimum payment is often only the interest (optional principal)

In short: it’s like a big credit card at a lower rate, attached to your home.


1.3. Main differences


Payment structure

  • Mortgage:
  • Fixed or predictable payment
  • A portion of the payment reduces your debt each month
  • Mortgage margin:
  • Often very low payments (often just interest)
  • If you don’t pay more than the minimum, your debt hardly decreases


Use

  • Mortgage: mainly used for buying the home
  • Mortgage margin: used for
  • renos
  • consolidating debts
  • down payment on an investment property
  • financing projects, studies, etc.


Financial discipline

  • Mortgage: more “boxed in,” you are forced to repay
  • Mortgage margin: very flexible… but easy to “top up” if not disciplined


1.4. For whom?


Classic mortgage:

  • Family or buyer who wants a clear repayment plan
  • A person who wants to build equity (net worth) in their home automatically
  • Tight budget: needs stability and structure


Mortgage margin:

  • Owner with good discipline
  • Stable income
  • Regular need for liquidity (renos, investment, entrepreneurship)
  • Comfortable with the idea that the balance may go up and down


2. The variable-rate mortgage


2.1. What is it?


Your interest rate can change during the term, based on decisions by the Bank of Canada and your institution.

Two common formulas:

  • Payment that changes when the rate changes
  • Payment that remains stable, but the interest/principal split varies (if rates rise a lot, it can be a problem long-term)


2.2. Who is it for?


Typical profile for a variable rate:

  • Reasonable risk tolerance: able to live with a payment that may rise
  • Good financial cushion (budget flexibility)
  • Medium/long-term horizon, and believes rates will fall or stabilize
  • Flexible: can adjust budget, expenses, prepayments

Often suited to:

  • young professionals with growing incomes
  • people very informed about the economy and rates
  • borrowers who want to benefit from rate decreases without renegotiating


2.3. Advantages of the variable rate


  • Historically, variable has often cost less than fixed over the long term
  • You quickly benefit from rate drops:
  • either your payment decreases
  • or you pay down the principal faster for the same payment
  • Penalty often smaller if you break the term:
  • generally, three months’ interest (much simpler and often less painful than the IRD of fixed rates)
  • More flexibility to renegotiate or refinance along the way


2.4. Disadvantages of the variable rate


  • Stress: your payments can rise if rates go up
  • Hard to predict long-term budget
  • In periods of sharp rate increases (as we’ve recently seen), it can hurt quickly
  • Some people end up locking in fixed at the wrong time (when rates are already very high)


3. The fixed-rate mortgage


3.1. What is it?


Your interest rate is guaranteed for the entire term (e.g., 5 years).

  • Your payments are stable and predictable
  • Bank of Canada variations during the term do not change your rate


3.2. Who is it for?


Typical profile for a fixed rate:

  • Family or person who wants zero surprises
  • Tight or very structured budget
  • Stays up at night if rates rise
  • Prefers paying a bit more for that “peace of mind”

Often suited to:

  • young families
  • first-time buyers
  • retirees with fixed income
  • anyone who doesn’t want to follow rate news


3.3. Advantages of the fixed rate


  • Total stability of payment during the term
  • Easy to plan family budget
  • Protection against rate increases: you’re “locked in” during the term
  • Very reassuring psychologically


3.4. Disadvantages of the fixed rate


  • In the long term, fixed may turn out more expensive than variable if rates fall or stay low
  • If you need to break the mortgage before the end of the term, the penalty can be very high:
  • often the highest among:
  • three months’ interest
  • and the rate difference (IRD), calculated by the bank
  • in some cases, it can be tens of thousands of dollars
  • Less flexibility if your plans change (separation, moving, refinancing, etc.)


4. How to choose: a few simple guidelines


4.1. Ask yourself these questions

  1. If my payment rose by 200–300 $ per month, would my budget hold?
  • Yes, easily → variable possible
  • No, it would be very difficult → strongly leaning toward fixed
  1. Do I plan to keep this house and this loan for the full term (e.g., 5 years)?
  • Not sure (moving, separation, business project, etc.) → variable becomes interesting because penalties are lighter
  • Very likely I’ll stay 5 years → fixed may be more reassuring
  1. Am I the type to follow rates and understand a bit of the economy?
  • Yes → variable or mixed strategies (part fixed, part variable)
  • No, not interested → easier to take fixed


5. In summary


  • Classic mortgage: a precise amount, with a clear repayment plan. Ideal for automatically building equity.
  • Mortgage margin: very flexible, handy for projects and debts, but requires a lot of discipline.
  • Variable rate:
  • For those who have room in their budget
  • Willing to ride the rollercoaster
  • Comfortable with risk and rate movements
  • Potential for savings and lighter penalties
  • Fixed rate:
  • For those who want to sleep soundly
  • Prioritize payment stability
  • Agree to potentially pay a bit more for that security


Final word


There is no universal “best” product. There is the best product for you, depending on:

  • your risk tolerance
  • your budget
  • your life plans (children, moving, retirement, etc.)


A good mortgage advisor or broker in Quebec should show you concrete scenarios (payments, possible penalties, flexibility) so you can decide with knowledge, without complicated jargon.

The information in this article is for general purposes only and may not reflect current laws or regulations. Verify any details with a qualified professional before making decisions. Some portions may have been created with AI assistance and should be confirmed for accuracy.

Written by Alex Legault

Mortgage broker