Should you renew your mortgage now or wait for a rate drop in 2026?
Should you renew your mortgage now or wait for a rate drop in 2026?
You’re approaching the end of your mortgage term in 2026 and you’re wondering:
“Do I renew right away or wait for a rate drop?”
This is THE big question everyone asks after the shock of rising rates… and now the hope of a rate drop.
1. Understand the 2025–2026 context: why the decision is so delicate
Since the 2022 peak, rates have started to gradually come down. We’re in an environment where:
- Rates are higher than in 2020–2021, but lower than their peak.
- Markets still anticipate some rate decrease, but nothing is guaranteed in either magnitude or pace.
- Banks and lenders adjust their fixed and variable rates based on these expectations.
Result:
Renewing your mortgage now gives you stability,
but waiting can either save you… or cost you if rates rise or fall less than expected.
2. Renewal vs waiting: what are the real risks?
A. If you renew now
Advantages:
- You secure a known rate for 1, 3, 5 years, depending on the chosen term.
- You protect your budget against a surprise rate increase.
- You can shop: at the mortgage renewal, you can switch lenders without penalty at term maturity.
Disadvantages:
- If rates drop sharply in 2026–2027, you may be “stuck” with a higher rate until the end of your new term.
- Breaking this new term to take advantage of a big rate drop could cost a significant penalty (especially fixed, due to the IRD).
B. If you wait for a rate drop
Advantages:
- You could obtain a better rate if the rate drop materializes before your renewal.
- You avoid tying yourself too early to a rate that might seem high in 12–24 months.
Disadvantages:
- If rates stabilize or rise, you renew at a higher rate than what you could have secured now.
- You live with uncertainty about future payments, which complicates your budget.
- If you’re already under financial pressure, betting on a hypothetical rate drop increases your risk.
3. Key factors to consider before deciding
3.1. Your risk and uncertainty tolerance
- If you sleep poorly whenever rates move, securing a rate now (or soon) has a lot of value.
- If you’re comfortable with some volatility, you can consider more flexible strategies (variable, shorter terms).
3.2. Your current financial situation
- Tight budget, little room to maneuver
- → Priority: protect your payment against a rate increase.
- A mortgage renewal with a fixed rate and a mid/long term is often wiser.
- Good financial cushion, stable income
- → You can accept more uncertainty to benefit from a possible rate drop (variable rate or shorter term).
3.3. Your life plans (time horizon)
- You plan to move in 1–3 years?
- → Avoid locking yourself into a long fixed term with a heavy penalty. Consider:
- Shorter term (1–3 years)
- Open mortgage (rarely optimal long-term, but useful in the very short term)
- Portable mortgage if you plan to buy another property.
- You want to stay in the home long-term (5–10 years+)?
- → A fixed term of 3–5 years can lock in your borrowing cost for a good period.
3.4. Type of rate: fixed or variable?
Fixed rate:
- You lock in your rate for the term duration.
- Ideal if you want absolute certainty about your payment amount.
- If a big rate drop occurs, you’re stuck unless you accept a penalty.
Variable rate:
- Your payments or the interest/principal portion can move with the market.
- You capture a rate drop more quickly.
- But if rates rise again, your payments or your amortization suffer.
4. Concrete strategies for a 2026 renewal
Scenario 1: Your term ends in 2026, but you can renew early
Some lenders allow an early renewal a few months before the due date, sometimes up to 4–6 months without penalty.
Possible strategy:
- Shop 4–6 months before the due date.
- If a good fixed or variable rate is offered:
- Lock it in to protect against a near-term increase.
- If rates drop again before the renewal date, some lenders adjust downward before the final signing (to be verified).
- If offers are not competitive, wait closer to the due date, monitoring the market.
Scenario 2: You’re still far from the due date and consider breaking your term
Here, the penalty becomes crucial:
- For fixed rate, the penalty can be:
- 3 months of interest, OR
- the rate differential (IRD), often much higher if rates have fallen since signing.
- For variable rate, the penalty is usually 3 months of interest.
Rule of thumb:
Don’t break your mortgage solely in the hope of a future rate drop without detailed calculation.
You must compare:
- Total penalty cost
- VS
- Realistic interest savings on the new term with a better rate.
Often, the payoff isn’t worth it if the anticipated rate drop is modest.
Scenario 3: You’re torn between acting now or waiting, but you want a compromise
You can combine several levers:
- Choose a shorter term (1–3 years)
- You renew now, stabilizing your short-term situation.
- You keep the door open to benefit from a rate drop later, without being locked in for 5 years.
- Opt for a variable rate, but monitor
- You accept variable payments while awaiting a rate drop.
- If a good fixed-rate offer appears, you can sometimes convert your variable to fixed with the same lender (check conditions).
- Mix fixed and variable rates (if your lender allows)
- Divide the mortgage into tranches (e.g., 50% fixed, 50% variable) to smooth risk.
5. Mortgage, renewal, and shopping: don’t stay prisoner to your bank
At the mortgage renewal, you have a huge advantage:
- You can switch lenders at renewal without penalty.
- You can pit competition on the rate, but also on:
- Prepayment privileges
- Portability options
- Flexibility for future refinancing
Many people accept the first offer from their institution, often not the best.
In 2026, every tenth of a percent on the rate counts, especially with large amounts.
6. So… should you renew now or wait for a rate drop?
There isn’t a single answer, but here are guidelines:
- Prioritize security, your budget is sensitive, you want peace of mind
- → Lean towards a renewal as early as possible, with a fixed rate and a term that matches your horizon (often 3 or 5 years).
- Waiting for a rate drop is a risky bet for you.
- If you have good maneuvering room, you can tolerate payment variation and you believe in a gradual rate decline
- → You can:
- Either wait closer to your 2026 due date, while actively monitoring offers.
- Or choose a variable rate or a shorter term at renewal to be able to take advantage of a potential rate drop more quickly.
- If you’re considering moving or a major life change in a few years
- → Prioritize flexibility (short term, portability options, or a more open product), even if the rate isn’t the absolute lowest.
7. Conclusion: your best ally is a strategy, not a forecast
No one can precisely predict rates in 2026–2027.
What you can control, however, is:
- the resilience of your budget
- Your risk tolerance
- The duration of your next term
- The type of rate (fixed/variable)
- The quality of your mortgage renewal (conditions, flexibility, penalties)
Rather than playing at guessing the next rate drop, build a mortgage strategy tailored to YOUR reality, which remains viable even if rates don’t move as expected.
If you want, I can help you outline a concrete plan based on:
- Your mortgage amount
- Your term’s maturity date
- Your income situation and risk tolerance
- and by simulating different renewal options and their impact on your payments.