Variable Borrowers Have Ridden the Descent. Renewing Borrowers Are Climbing.
The point here is simple. The "rate-cut story" of 2024–2025 was real. The Bank's key interest rate page documents the descent: from 3.25% in December 2024, to 3.00% in January 2025, to 2.75% in March, to 2.50% in September, and to 2.25% from late October 2025 through the early-2026 announcements. Variable-rate borrowers tracked that path down in real time. Their payments moved with it.
The renewal cohort did not. Pandemic-vintage five-year fixed mortgages are rolling off rates that, in many cases, started with a 1. They are renewing onto a plateau set by today's bond yields and lender spreads, not by the cuts that preceded them. CMHC's most recent industry data confirms the scale: the 2025 mortgage market was dominated by renewals, marking the peak of a multi-year cycle, and most renewing borrowers in 2026 still face significant increases in interest costs even as renewal volumes ease. The Bank of Canada's own 2025 Financial Stability Report estimated that roughly 60% of all outstanding Canadian mortgages would renew across 2025 and 2026, with a clear majority of those facing higher payments at renewal — though most increases land below what borrowers were stress-tested for. For the household-side view of that pressure, the TD Bank survey on renewal anxiety is the clearest read.
That is the structural fact under the news. The June 10 decision moves the variable-rate dial. It does not move the renewal cliff.
Hold vs. Hike: Two Conditional Paths
The Bank's own framing makes the scenario analysis cleaner than usual. A hold at 2.25% on June 10 leaves the variable-rate floor where it is. It keeps the easing option alive if oil moderates and the U.S. trade picture darkens. For fixed-rate renewals, it changes very little — those rates are pinned by longer-term bond yields, which CMHC notes have remained elevated even as the policy rate has fallen. A hike — whether 25 basis points on June 10 or signalled for a later meeting — does the opposite: variable rates move up immediately, prime rises in step, and the language of "consecutive increases" floated in the April deliberations becomes the operative path until energy prices stabilize.
The table below summarizes the practical asymmetry for the two main borrower cohorts heading into the decision.
The point of the table is not to predict. It is to make the asymmetry visible. Hold is the path most quoted in headlines. Hike — or the threat of consecutive hikes — is the path the Bank itself has now put on the record.