How long does it take to discharge a mortgage?
How fast can you completely wipe a mortgage off your title? Read this and know the exact timeline.
Quick answer up front
Most mortgage discharges happen between 1 and 60 days after you pay off the loan. In ideal cases (electronic systems, clear payoff, and a cooperating lender) it can be done in 24–72 hours. In slower cases (manual paperwork, missing information, or tax/arrears issues) it can take 4–8 weeks. Rarely, complications push it to 90 days or more.
What is a mortgage discharge and why it matters
A mortgage discharge removes the lender’s lien from your property title. Until it’s registered, that lien still appears on title searches and can block sales, refinances, or clean transfers. If you paid off the mortgage, a quick discharge protects your equity and keeps deals moving.

Typical timelines by scenario
- Payoff at sale (closing): If your lawyer or notary handles the discharge during closing and the lender provides an electronic discharge, registration often posts within 1–5 business days. If the lender issues paper documents, plan for 1–3 weeks.
- Full mortgage payoff outside a sale: After final payment, the lender issues a discharge or release. Electronic discharges: 1–7 days. Paper discharges: 2–6 weeks.
- Refinance or transfer of equity: Lender coordination and title work can add time. Expect 7–30 days depending on parties involved.
Common delays and how to avoid them
- Missing payoff statement or incorrect payoff date: Request a written payoff figure and check dates. A wrong figure freezes the process.
- Outstanding taxes, utilities or condo fees: Clear these before asking for discharge.
- Lender backlog or policy: Ask the lender for an electronic discharge option. Follow up twice: when they confirm payoff and when they file the discharge.
- Lawyer/notary processing delays: Hire a responsive closing professional. Confirm they will register the discharge the same day they receive it.
What to do step-by-step to speed the discharge
- Get an exact written payoff figure and expiry date from the lender.
- Pay through your lawyer/notary or get written confirmation of receipt.
- Ask the lender for electronic registration to the land registry.
- Have your lawyer confirm registration and request the discharge registration number.
- Run a title search after registration to confirm the lien is removed.
Local notes (Canada/Ontario example)
In Ontario, many lenders submit discharges electronically to the land registry; those often register within 1–5 business days. Paper discharges still appear, and they take longer. Always confirm with your lawyer or title company.

Final word — act like the owner of the closing process
Don’t assume lenders or registry offices will move fast. Track payoff, demand electronic discharge, and have a proactive lawyer. That’s how you cut a 6-week wait into a 48-hour reality.
For expert help in the Toronto area or to move your discharge quickly and cleanly, contact Tony Sousa: tony@sousasells.ca | 416-477-2620 | https://www.sousasells.ca



















