Can I pay off my mortgage early before closing?
Want to pay off your mortgage before closing? Here’s the fast, no‑fluff truth.
Short answer — Yes, but you must coordinate it
You can pay off a mortgage before closing, but it’s not a solo move. Mortgages and liens are legal claims on title. The lender holds the lien until they issue a mortgage discharge or lien release. Paying early is possible, but you need a lender payoff statement, a title company or lawyer handling closing, and a clear plan for funds transfer.
Why it’s not as simple as sending a check
Lenders calculate a precise payoff amount called a mortgage payoff statement or payoff letter. That number includes principal, accrued interest to a specific date, and any fees or prepayment penalties. If you send money early without a formal payoff, the lender may not release the lien until the official payoff date or until closing paperwork is signed.
Common issues:
- Payoff amount changes daily due to interest accrual.
- Banks require exact wiring instructions or certified funds.
- Some loans have prepayment penalties or timing rules.
- Liens from other parties (taxes, contractors) must be cleared separately.

Practical steps to pay off a mortgage before closing (do this)
- Request a mortgage payoff statement from your lender. Ask for it to be valid through a specific date.
- Share that payoff statement with your title company or real estate lawyer. They must confirm instructions.
- Confirm wiring instructions and payoff amount the morning of the intended payoff. Banks change details to avoid fraud.
- Check for prepayment penalties or conditional release clauses in your mortgage. Some mortgages require a release form.
- Clear other liens separately: property tax liens, builder liens, or judgements. A title search identifies these before closing.
- Coordinate closing date and funds flow so the lender can record the discharge and the title company can file it.
Example that clarifies
Imagine a $300,000 mortgage with $2,400 monthly interest accrual. The lender issues a payoff statement valid through June 20. If you wire funds June 15, the bank will still compute interest to the payoff date. If the wire arrives late or with wrong details, lien remains, delaying closing. The fix: use the title company’s wire instructions and confirm receipt.
Risks and things to watch for
- Prepayment penalties: Check your mortgage contract.
- Multiple liens: One paid lien doesn’t clear others.
- Recording delays: Discharge must be recorded with the land registry — that can take days.
- Fraud prevention: Banks may change payoff details by phone. Always verify in writing.
Bottom line — be surgical, not emotional
Paying off a mortgage before closing is doable and sometimes smart. It must be coordinated with your lender and the closing agent. Get the payoff statement, use the title company, verify wiring instructions, and confirm recording. That process removes the lien and clears title for sale or refinance.
Need help coordinating a mortgage payoff or clearing liens in Toronto? I handle payoff statements, title searches, and closing coordination every day. Email: tony@sousasells.ca | Call: 416-477-2620 | https://www.sousasells.ca



















