What are the current mortgage rates in Ontario?
Shocking update: Want the real scoop on mortgage rates in Ontario right now? Read this first.
Quick snapshot you can use today
Mortgage rates in Ontario move fast. Lenders set fixed and variable rates based on Bank of Canada policy, bond yields, and lender profit margins. If you need a number, typical ranges (as a reference point around June 2024) were:
- 1-year fixed: ~5.00%–6.00%
- 3-year fixed: ~4.50%–5.50%
- 5-year fixed: ~4.00%–5.25%
- Variable: Prime minus 0.50% to prime plus 0.50% (prime ~6.70% in mid-2024)
Rates today may differ. For live, lender-quoted Ontario mortgage rates, contact a local broker or check major Canadian bank rate pages.
Why mortgage rates change (simple breakdown)
- Bank of Canada policy rate: When the BoC raises or lowers the overnight rate, mortgage rates generally follow. Fixed rates lag, variable rates move faster.
- Government bond yields: Longer-term fixed rates track 5-year bond yields. If yields rise, fixed rates rise.
- Lender competition and margins: Banks, credit unions, and online lenders price differently to win business.
- Your profile: Credit score, down payment, amortization, property type, and location change the rate you qualify for.

Fixed vs. variable — which wins?
- Fixed mortgage: Predictable monthly payments. Best if you want stability or expect rates to rise.
- Variable mortgage: Lower initial rates. Best if you can tolerate rate swings and want potential savings if rates fall.
- Short-term (1–3 years): More flexibility, useful for people who plan to sell or refinance soon.
- Long-term (5 years): Locks a rate longer, good for budgeting and peace of mind.
How to get the best Ontario mortgage rate (practical playbook)
- Shop multiple lenders: Bank rates are a starting point. Brokers access promos and exclusive products.
- Improve your profile: Bigger down payment, stronger credit score, and stable income yield better offers.
- Consider prepaid privileges: A slightly higher rate with more prepayment flexibility can save interest long-term.
- Lock vs. float: Lock a quoted rate if you’re closing soon. Float if you expect rates to fall and you can risk small increases.
Quick checklist before you apply
- Get a mortgage pre-approval.
- Compare APR and penalties, not just headline rates.
- Ask about blended-rate options and open vs. closed features.
Tony Sousa is a local Ontario realtor and mortgage-savvy advisor. If you want current, personalized rate quotes and a strategy that matches your timeline, reach out: tony@sousasells.ca | 416-477-2620 | https://www.sousasells.ca
Need live numbers? Call or email Tony — he’ll pull current lender rates, clarify total costs, and map the right mortgage type to your goals.



















