Home Calculators Amortization Calculator

Mortgage Amortization
Calculator — Canada

Full payment schedule, all six payment frequencies including accelerated bi-weekly and weekly, prepayment impact simulator, year-by-year interest vs. principal chart, and period comparison — all calculated with Canada's semi-annual compounding mortgage math.

Full Schedule
6 Payment Frequencies
Prepayment Simulator
Interest vs Principal Chart
Mortgage Details
Built on Canadian mortgage math: nominal rate compounded semi-annually, converted to your chosen payment frequency. Accelerated bi-weekly = monthly payment ÷ 2, paid 26× per year — equivalent to one extra monthly payment annually.
$
$
20.0% of purchase price
%
Nominal rate, compounded semi-annually per CAD law
Insured mortgages: max 25 years. Uninsured: up to 30 years.
★ Accelerated pays the equivalent of one extra monthly payment per year — can save years and thousands in interest.
$
Added to every regular payment. Typically limited to 10–20% increase/yr.
$
Applied once per year to principal. Most lenders allow 10–20% of original balance.
Payment Amount
per month
Mortgage Amount
principal borrowed
Total Interest
% of borrowed
Total Cost
principal + interest
Mortgage-Free Date
actual amortization
Interest vs. Principal by Year
Principal
Interest
All Payment Frequencies — Side by Side
Frequency Payment Annual Total Total Interest Actual Amortization vs. Monthly
Accelerated payments use the monthly payment amount divided by 2 (bi-weekly) or 4 (weekly), resulting in 13 "months" of payments per year instead of 12. This extra payment goes entirely to principal reduction, cutting years off your amortization and saving significant interest — without requiring a larger single payment.
Amortization Period Comparison (monthly payments)
As of December 15, 2024: insured mortgages (under 20% down, up to $1.5M) have a maximum 25-year amortization, unless the buyer is a first-time buyer or purchasing new construction, in which case 30 years is permitted. Uninsured mortgages have no maximum amortization set by Ottawa — lenders set their own limits.
Amortization Schedule
Year Payment Interest Principal Cumul. Interest Balance
All calculations use Canadian semi-annual compounding mortgage math as required by the Interest Act. Actual payments may vary slightly by lender due to rounding, first-payment timing, and term renewal terms. This tool is for illustrative purposes — consult a licensed mortgage professional for a formal commitment.
Understanding Canadian Mortgage Amortization

In Canada, mortgages use nominal rates compounded semi-annually — not monthly like in the United States. This is mandated by the federal Interest Act and means the math is slightly different from US mortgage calculators. A 5.24% Canadian rate does not equal a 5.24% effective rate — you need to convert it properly, which this calculator does automatically.

Amortization vs. term: These are two different concepts that many buyers confuse. Your amortization period is the total time to pay off the mortgage (typically 25 years). Your term is how long your current rate is locked in (typically 5 years). At renewal, rates are renegotiated — your amortization simply continues from where it left off.

Accelerated Bi-Weekly Magic
Switching from monthly to accelerated bi-weekly is the single most impactful cost-free change most Canadians can make. You pay half your monthly amount every 2 weeks — 26 payments/year versus 24 — making the equivalent of one full extra payment per year, which cuts ~3–4 years off a 25-year mortgage and saves tens of thousands in interest.
Prepayment Privileges
Most Canadian closed mortgages allow you to prepay 10–20% of the original principal as a lump sum annually, and increase your regular payments by the same amount — without penalty. Open mortgages allow unlimited prepayment but charge higher rates. Check your specific lender's terms before making large lump-sum payments.
The 30-Year Amortization Rule
As of December 15, 2024, 30-year amortizations are available for insured mortgages for first-time home buyers and anyone purchasing newly-built homes. All other insured mortgages remain capped at 25 years. Uninsured mortgages (20%+ down) have no federal maximum — lenders typically offer up to 30 years, with some going to 35.
Term Renewal Strategy
At each 5-year renewal, your new rate is applied to the remaining balance for the remaining amortization. If rates have dropped, request a lower rate from your current lender — or shop around. Mortgage brokers can access 40+ lenders. Even 0.25% lower can save thousands over the remaining amortization.
Free Mortgage Strategy Session
Tell us where you are in your buying journey — Cromsby Real Estate will help you optimize your payment strategy.