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Lenders now seeing 60-, 70-, even 90-year mortgages as Canadians struggle with rocketing interest rates

Some banks mostly offer fixed-payment variable mortgages which allows homeowners to keep monthly payments the same, but leaves them vulnerable to paying little off the principal, experts say.

Updated
2 min read
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A fixed-payment variable mortgage keeps your payment steady, but can cause problems when interest rates rise, experts say.


For most homeowners, the standard time to pay off a mortgage is 25 years.

Now, in the face of crippling interest rates, some existing homeowners are seeing their amortization period go as high as 90-years as their ‘fixed-payment’ variable-rate mortgages adjust automatically to rising interest rates while the monthly payment remains the same.

Clarrie Feinstein

Clarrie Feinstein is a Toronto-based business reporter for the Star. Reach Clarrie via email: clarriefeinstein@torstar.ca.

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