Mortgage Basics
Canada-first mortgage basics covering what a mortgage is, how amortization and term work, and how payments are structured.
Mortgage basics is the starting point for the site. These pages explain how a Canadian residential mortgage is structured before you get into qualification rules, closing documents, renewals, or arrears.
Use This Section When
- you need the plain-language meaning of the core mortgage itself
- you are mixing up amortization, term, maturity, and payment timing
- you want the basic structure clear before comparing products or qualification rules
- you need a foundation before reading renewal, HELOC, or arrears pages
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Why This Section Matters
Borrowers often hear several time-based mortgage terms at once: term, amortization, maturity, payment date, and renewal date. Confusing them leads to bad comparisons and misleading expectations, especially when borrowers move from an approval conversation to a closing or renewal conversation.
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In this section
- Amortization Period
What an amortization period means in Canada and how it affects mortgage payments, renewal strategy, and total borrowing cost.
- Maturity Date
The maturity date is the end of the current Canadian mortgage term, when the borrower usually renews, switches, refinances, or repays the balance.
- Mortgage
A plain-language definition of a mortgage in Canada and how it fits borrowing, closing, renewal, and repayment.
- Mortgage Payment
What a mortgage payment includes in Canada and how rate type, amortization, and payment frequency affect it.
- Mortgage Principal
What mortgage principal means in Canada and how it differs from interest, balance, and payment amount.
- Mortgage Term
What a mortgage term means in Canada and how it differs from amortization, maturity, and renewal.
- Payment Frequency
How Canadian mortgage payment frequency works, including monthly, bi-weekly, and accelerated payment schedules.