8 Ways to Save $45K on Your Mortgage (Beyond Rate)
Discover 8 mortgage savings strategies that save Canadians an average of $45,000. Learn CMHC fee porting, penalty avoidance, and refinance blend tactics most people miss.
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Here’s something most people get wrong about mortgages: they think the lowest interest rate is the biggest way to save money.
After helping thousands of people with their mortgages, I can tell you the interest rate is only about one-tenth of where your real savings come from. The other nine-tenths? That’s what we’re going to talk about.
These strategies save clients an average of $45,000 on a $500,000 mortgage. Your results will vary based on your situation, but the potential is huge.
Port Your CMHC Fees (Most People Don’t Know This Exists)
You probably know you can port your mortgage when you move to a new house. But did you know you can also port your CMHC Insurance fees?
This one’s a big money saver that almost nobody uses.
Here’s how it works: When you move to a more expensive house, CMHC gives you credit for the insured amount from your first home. You only pay insurance fees on the additional amount you’re borrowing.
Real Example
Say your first home cost $250,000 and you’re buying a new one for $500,000. Instead of paying CMHC fees on the full $500,000, you only pay on the extra $250,000. That’s thousands of dollars in savings.
Always ask your lender: “Are you porting my CMHC fees?” If they say no, ask why. This should be available to you.
Request a Partial Charge Registration
When a lender registers your mortgage on your property title, they can do it two ways:
- Full charge: They register 100% of your purchase price
- Partial charge: They only register the amount you’re actually borrowing
Most lenders will do a partial charge if you ask. And this simple request can cut your Closing Costs dramatically.
Real Client Example
A client bought a home for $2 million and borrowed $1 million. The lender initially quoted $3,000 for title insurance based on registering the full $2 million purchase price.
By requesting a partial charge of just the $1 million loan amount, the title insurance fee dropped to $700. That’s $2,300 saved with one simple question.
Bonus: A partial charge also gives you more flexibility later. If you want to access equity through another lender down the road, you’ll actually be able to do it.
Pick the Right Lender for Penalty Calculations
Think you’ll never break your mortgage early? Think again. Most people keep their mortgage for only three years before they sell, move, refinance, or make some other change.
Mortgage penalties vary wildly between lenders. Here’s what you need to know:
Variable rate mortgages: Most charge a simple three months’ interest penalty. Pretty straightforward.
Fixed rate mortgages: This is where it gets tricky. Banks calculate penalties two different ways:
- Posted rate method: Used by most big banks. They use their regular posted rate (before discounts) to calculate your penalty.
- Discounted rate method: Used by alternative lenders. They use your actual discounted rate to calculate penalties.
Just by choosing a lender that uses the discounted rate method, you can save nearly half on potential penalties. No other changes needed.
Use Refinance Blends to Avoid Penalties
Some lenders charge you a penalty when you refinance, even if you’re staying with them. Others offer something called a “refinance blend” that lets you refinance with zero penalty.
Here’s how it works: Say you got a 5-year fixed mortgage and need to refinance after one year. You have four years left on your term.
The lender will:
- Keep your original money at your original rate
- Add the new refinance amount at the current 4-year rate (matching your remaining term)
- Blend it all together into one payment
- Charge you nothing
Before you sign with any lender, ask: “Can I refinance this mortgage later without a penalty?” If they say no, consider switching lenders.
Choose Variable Over Fixed (Usually)
Looking at 25 years of data, variable rates have consistently been cheaper than fixed rates.
The average 5-year fixed rate over that time? About 5.75%. The average 5-year variable rate? About 4.75%. That’s a full percentage point difference.
I know what you’re thinking: “But what if rates go up?”
Here’s the thing about variable rates:
- They’re tied to the economy
- They increase in small chunks (usually 0.25% at a time)
- Lenders watch the market carefully between increases
- If an increase hurts the economy too much, they pause
Plus, variable rate mortgages have way lower penalties if you need to break them early. And you can usually lock in to a fixed rate anytime during your term.
Variable rates are especially safe during tough economic times. When the economy struggles, big rate increases are unlikely.
Think About Adding a Line of Credit
Whether you should get just a mortgage, just a line of credit, or both depends on what’s happening in your life over the next year.
Consider adding a line of credit if you’re expecting:
- A big annual bonus
- An inheritance
- Money from selling another property
- Any other large chunk of cash
Here’s why: Mortgages have lower rates than lines of credit. But if you pay down your mortgage too much, you’ll get hit with a penalty. Lines of credit have no penalty for paydowns.
The smart move? If you’re getting a big payment soon, make your mortgage smaller and your line of credit bigger. Then pay down the line of credit when the money comes in.
Get a Segmented Line of Credit
If you do get a line of credit, ask for a segmented one. This lets you divide your total credit into separate chunks for different purposes.
For example, with a $200,000 line of credit, you could:
- Put $50,000 in one segment for a car loan
- Use another segment for investment properties
- Keep another for stock market investing
Each segment gets its own statement. This makes accounting way easier, especially at tax time. Your accountant will thank you.
Don’t Obsess Over Prepayment Options (Unless You’ll Actually Use Them)
Most big lenders let you prepay 10% of your mortgage each year on a 5-year fixed. Some let you prepay up to 20%.
But here’s the question: Will you actually use this?
Look at your budget honestly. If you can’t afford to make extra payments, then prepayment options don’t matter for you.
Watch Out for Too-Good-To-Be-True Rates
Some super low rates come with nasty strings attached:
- You can’t refinance
- You can’t make extra payments
- You can’t discharge the mortgage except by selling
I’ve seen people accept these rates without reading the fine print. Then they want to access equity for renovations and discover they’re completely stuck.
The lowest rate is not always the best rate. You need to look at the whole picture.
Add Renovation Money to Your Purchase
Many lenders let you add improvement funds to your mortgage at purchase. Usually up to $40,000 or 10-20% of your purchase price, depending on the lender.
Why this is smart:
- You finance renovations at your mortgage rate instead of credit card rates
- You move into your dream home immediately
- You avoid refinancing penalties later
Here’s the process:
- Give your lender renovation quotes
- An appraiser confirms your home will be worth the projected value after renovations
- The lender holds the renovation funds in trust
- You complete the work
- The lender releases the money to you
The tricky part? Many contractors want a big deposit upfront. A good mortgage broker can provide an approval letter showing the contractor that funds are guaranteed upon completion. This usually solves the problem.
The Big Picture
These eight strategies work together to save serious money. Some will apply to your situation, others won’t. But knowing about them gives you power.
When you’re shopping for a mortgage, don’t just ask about rates. Ask about:
- Porting CMHC fees
- Partial charge registration
- How they calculate penalties
- Refinance blends
- Adding renovation funds
Most mortgage brokers and even bank staff don’t know about all of these strategies. Now you do.
The families who save the most money aren’t the ones who find the lowest rate. They’re the ones who understand how mortgages actually work and ask the right questions.
Your mortgage is probably your biggest financial commitment. Taking the time to understand these strategies can put tens of thousands of dollars back in your pocket.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is porting CMHC fees and how does it save me money?
What's the difference between full charge and partial charge mortgage registration?
How do mortgage penalty calculations differ between lenders?
What is a refinance blend and how does it help me avoid penalties?
Should I choose a variable or fixed rate mortgage?
When should I add a line of credit to my mortgage?
What are segmented lines of credit and why are they useful?
Can I add renovation money to my mortgage when buying a home?
Disclaimer: LendCity Mortgages is a licensed mortgage brokerage, and our team includes experienced real estate investors. While we are qualified to provide mortgage-related guidance, the broader financial, tax, and legal information in this article is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial planning, tax, or legal advice. For matters outside mortgage financing, we recommend consulting a Chartered Professional Accountant (CPA), licensed financial planner, or qualified legal advisor.
Written by
LendCity
Published
December 22, 2025
CMHC Insurance
Mortgage default insurance from Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation. For 1-4 unit investment properties, investors must put 20%+ down (no insurance available). However, CMHC offers MLI Select for 5+ unit multifamily properties, and house hackers can access insured mortgages with 5-10% down.
Closing Costs
Fees paid when completing a real estate transaction, including legal fees, land transfer tax, title insurance, appraisals, and adjustments.
Equity
The difference between a property's current market value and the remaining mortgage balance. If your home is worth $500,000 and you owe $300,000, you have $200,000 in equity. Equity builds through mortgage payments, appreciation, and property improvements.
Fixed Rate Mortgage
A mortgage where the interest rate stays the same for the entire term, providing predictable monthly payments regardless of market changes.
Interest Rate
The cost of borrowing money, expressed as a percentage. It determines how much you pay on top of the principal borrowed.
Mortgage Penalty
A fee charged for breaking your mortgage early, calculated as either 3 months' interest or the Interest Rate Differential (IRD), whichever is greater.
Refinance
Replacing an existing mortgage with a new one, typically to access equity, get a better rate, or change terms. Investors commonly refinance to pull out capital for purchasing additional properties (cash-out refinance) while retaining ownership of the original property.
Porting
Transferring your existing mortgage to a new property without penalty, keeping your current rate and terms. Useful when moving before your term ends.
Prepayment Privileges
Terms in your mortgage that allow extra payments without penalty, typically 10-20% of the original balance annually. Helps pay off your mortgage faster.
Mortgage Broker
A licensed professional who shops multiple lenders to find the best mortgage rates and terms for borrowers. Unlike banks, brokers have access to dozens of lending options.
Hover over terms to see definitions, or visit our glossary for the full list.