If you’re a realtor looking for your next wave of business, it’s already here. Roughly 1.2 million Canadians are up for mortgage renewal this year and next — and most of them are about to see their payments jump significantly. That’s a massive opportunity for you to step in, solve a real problem, and close more deals.
Why the Renewal Wave Matters
Here’s what’s happening. Homeowners who locked in pre-COVID or during-COVID rates got historically low interest rates. Those terms are expiring. When they renew, their rate goes up — and so does their monthly payment.
But it gets worse. When you renew a mortgage, you keep the remaining amortization. So if someone started with a 25-year term and they’ve got 14 years left, they renew at a higher rate but still have to pay it off in 14 years. That combination — higher rate plus shorter amortization — crushes monthly payments.
A lot of homeowners maximized their debt ratios when they first bought. They were already stretched at the lower payment. Now that payment is going up, and they’re in trouble.
The Refinancing Strategy That Saves Clients Money
This is where a smart mortgage broker who understands investment financing becomes the hero.
Instead of just accepting the renewal, we look at structuring it as a refinance. We’re not necessarily giving the client extra cash — what we’re doing is resetting their amortization. We bring them back up to a 25- or even standardized 30-year amortization periods, which drops their monthly payment to something they can actually afford.
Think about that. Same property. Same mortgage balance. But a dramatically lower monthly payment because we extended the payoff period. For a homeowner who’s panicking about renewal, that’s a game-changer.
If your clients closed 3-5 years ago, they’re hitting renewal right now — and their payments are likely crushing cash flow. Book a free strategy call with LendCity and we’ll show you how to extend the amortization and drop those payments back to something actually affordable.
How Realtors Turn Renewals Into Closed Deals
So here’s how you, as a realtor, use this to close more deals.
Step one: Go through your past transactions from three to five years ago. Every one of those clients is either coming up for renewal or already in it. Reach out to them.
Step two: Let them know what’s coming. Most people don’t think about their mortgage until the renewal letter shows up. By then, they’re reactive. You want to be proactive.
Step three: Present the options. There are really three paths:
- Refinance to extend amortization — Lower the payment by stretching the term. They keep the property, keep building equity, and breathe easier every month.
- Shop the renewal rate — Many lenders assume clients won’t shop around. Their renewal offers are often not aggressive. A mortgage broker can compare rates across dozens of lenders and frequently beat the renewal offer.
- Sell or downsize — If the payment truly doesn’t work and refinancing can’t fix it, selling becomes the smart move. And that’s where you come in as their realtor.
Every single one of these options generates business for you. You either connect them with a mortgage professional (hello, referral relationship), or you help them sell. Either way, you’re the person who solved their problem.
Don’t Let Clients Just Accept the Renewal Letter
Here’s something most people don’t realize. Banks and lenders send renewal documents expecting clients to sign without shopping around. And many do — because it’s easy.
But those renewal rates? They’re often not competitive. Lenders know most people won’t bother comparing. We’ve seen it over and over — a client brings us their renewal offer, we shop it around, and we save them real money. Sometimes it’s a small difference. Sometimes it’s significant.
Not every renewal rate is bad. Some lenders do offer competitive renewals. But you won’t know unless you check. And your clients deserve that check.
Don’t let your clients just accept whatever renewal rate the bank throws at them — we shop it around and find better rates all the time. Schedule a free strategy session with us to see if we can save your client real money on their next renewal.
Your Action Plan
- Pull your transaction list from three to five years ago
- Reach out to every past client — a quick call or email about the renewal wave
- Connect them with a mortgage professional who can analyze their renewal options
- Position yourself as the solution — whether that’s a referral to refinance or listing their home
The renewal wave isn’t slowing down. 1.2 million Canadians are dealing with this right now. The realtors who reach out first are the ones who’ll close the deals.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many Canadians are affected by the mortgage renewal wave?
Why do mortgage payments increase so much at renewal?
Can homeowners extend their amortization at renewal?
Should clients always shop their renewal rate?
How can realtors benefit from the renewal wave?
What's the difference between renewing and refinancing a mortgage?
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
February 17, 2026
Reading Time
5 min read
Amortization
The period over which a mortgage is scheduled to be fully paid off through regular payments of principal and interest. In Canada, common amortization periods are 25 or 30 years, though the mortgage term (when you renegotiate) is typically 1-5 years.
Cash Flow
The money left over after collecting rent and paying all expenses including mortgage, taxes, insurance, maintenance, and property management.
Hover over terms to see definitions, or visit our glossary for the full list.