Renewal, Refinancing and Home Equity
Canada-first explanations of mortgage renewal, switching, porting, refinancing, and HELOC vocabulary.
Many borrowers think the mortgage story ends at closing. In Canada, renewal, switch, porting, refinance, and HELOC decisions are a major part of long-term mortgage management.
Use This Section When
- your mortgage term is ending and a renewal offer has arrived
- you are thinking about switching lenders or refinancing
- you want to access home equity through a HELOC or layered structure
- you need to understand the tradeoffs of porting, second mortgages, or readvanceable products
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Why This Section Matters
Renewal and refinance language can sound harmless even when it changes your rate, penalty exposure, collateral structure, or access to home equity. These pages explain the tradeoffs in plain language.
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In this section
- HELOC
What a home equity line of credit means in Canada and how revolving home-equity borrowing differs from a standard mortgage.
- Mortgage Renewal
What mortgage renewal means in Canada and how borrowers should read renewal statements, compare offers, and decide whether to stay or switch.
- Mortgage Switch
What a mortgage switch means in Canada and how straight switches, registration costs, and qualifying rules can differ from a refinance.
- Porting
What porting means in Canada and how a borrower may move an existing mortgage to a new property.
- Readvanceable Mortgage
What a readvanceable mortgage means in Canada and how it combines mortgage repayment with reusable home-equity credit.
- Second Mortgage
What a second mortgage means in Canada and how it differs from a HELOC or a refinance.