this post was submitted on 06 Jun 2026
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me_irl
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There are always going to be pros and cons to any situation but as a Canadian I'm thankful our system is setup where the amortization is set but you redo financing regularly. I'd hate to have to buy a house and be paying a set percentage the rest of the life of the mortgage it causes situations just like this.
That said, I wish we could claim the interest paid on our homes with our taxes which we can't.
Unfortunately being forced to refinance can also screw you over, like it did a few years ago to a lot of people who had it locked in at 2-3% and then had to get it at 5-6% instead, massively increasing their monthly payments.
I've been open variable I like that my rates went up and down with prime over the last 5 years but didn't sit at an artificial low only to poison pill me at the end of the term. I'm renegotiating right now and as I told my broker if anyone tells me they know what the rates are going to do in 1 year let alone 6 months I have a bridge to sell them lol
As far as I know they still have opportunities to refinance if rates go down (get new mortgage at lower rate, pay off old mortgage in full). There are probably fees associated with it, but you aren't necessarily trapped at the high rate for the full period.
On the other hand, in our system there's a real risk that you may struggle to afford your home simply due to rates climbing.
Ya as I said Pros and Cons.
My parents at one point in the 80's had a 3 month mortgage term because the rates were like 20%
There are also adjustable mortgages in the US, and as another commenter already pointed out, if rates go down you can always refinance, and you'll have the ability to permanently lock in that lower rate. So I would argue that the Canadian system actually had no advantages at all over the American system.