Mortgage Rates in Ontario, Explained Honestly
Rates move daily and the headline number a bank posts is rarely the rate you actually get. Instead of showing a figure that's out of date by the time you read it, I'll give you a live quote based on your real situation — usually the same business day.
A posted rate is a teaser, not your rate
Two people applying on the same day can be offered very different rates — because rate depends on your credit, your down payment, the property, and which lender's program fits your file. A single number on a website can't account for any of that, and it goes stale within hours.
So rather than post a figure I can't keep accurate (and that wouldn't be your rate anyway), I do the honest thing: I take your details, shop my 140+ lender network, and come back with the real, current options you actually qualify for — with the trade-offs explained in plain English.
What actually determines your rate
These are the factors a lender weighs. Get them working in your favour and the rate follows — that's the part I help you with before we ever submit.
Credit Profile
- Score and history
- Stronger credit unlocks better-priced lenders
- Bruised credit has options too — at different pricing
Down Payment / Equity (LTV)
- How much you put down or have built up
- Loan-to-value drives which programs apply
- Under 20% down is default-insured
Insured vs Uninsured
- Insured (high-ratio) files often price lower
- Refinances and homes over $1.5M are uninsured
- Each follows a different rate sheet
Property & Use
- Owner-occupied, rental, or second home
- Property type and location
- Rentals and unique properties price differently
Income Type
- Salaried, commission, or self-employed
- How income is documented
- Self-employed files have tailored programs
Term & Rate Type
- Fixed vs variable
- Term length (e.g., 3 vs 5 years)
- Amortization period
Fixed vs Variable — in plain English
Fixed locks your rate and payment for the term — certainty and easy budgeting, usually at a small premium.
Variable moves with the lender's prime rate — potential savings if rates fall, but your cost can rise. The right choice depends on your risk comfort and plans, not on which is "cheaper" today.
Insured vs Uninsured
Insured (less than 20% down, or insurable) files are backed by default insurance and often see the lowest posted pricing.
Uninsured / conventional files — refinances, rentals, homes over $1.5M, or 20%+ down — follow a separate rate sheet. Knowing which lane you're in is half of getting the right rate.
The mortgage "stress test"
For most mortgages, federal rules (OSFI's B-20 guideline) require lenders to qualify you at the higher of your contract rate plus 2%, or 5.25% — not just the rate you're offered. This protects you if rates rise, but it also affects how much you can borrow. I'll factor it in up front so there are no surprises at approval. Some alternative and private lenders qualify differently.
How I earn you a competitive rate
One file, many lenders
I take your application once and shop it across 140+ banks, credit unions, monolines, and alternative lenders — you don't chase each one.
Usually no cost to you
On most residential files the lender pays the broker, so my help comes at no fee to you. Specialty/commercial files are disclosed up front.
Structured to qualify
I position your credit, down payment, and income so your file presents at its strongest — which is what actually moves the rate.
Plain-English options
You get the real choices with the trade-offs explained, not a sales pitch — so you decide with confidence.
Want your rate — the real one?
Tell me about your situation and I'll come back with live, current options you actually qualify for. Free, no obligation, usually the same business day.
Rates and approvals are subject to lender criteria and conditions (O.A.C.) and are not guaranteed. This page is general information, not financial or mortgage advice.

