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Pay Off Your Mortgage or Invest? The Canadian Guide

You've got some extra cash. Maybe a bonus, an inheritance, or you're simply spending less than you earn. The question hits every Canadian homeowner at some point: should I pay down my mortgage faster, or invest that money?

There's no universal right answer — but there is a framework that makes the decision clear for your specific situation.

The Core Math

The decision boils down to one comparison: your mortgage rate vs. your expected after-tax investment return.

The Rule: In Canada, mortgage interest is generally not tax-deductible (unlike the U.S.). That means a 5% mortgage rate requires a 5% after-tax return to break even — not before-tax. This makes the hurdle rate higher than most people think.

Option 1: Pay Down Your Mortgage

Let's say you have a $400,000 mortgage at 4.5% with 20 years remaining. Adding an extra $500/month to your payments would:

5.5 yrs Shaved Off Amortization
$72K+ Interest Saved
4.5% Guaranteed "Return"

Why this works

  • Guaranteed return: Every dollar paid toward principal saves you interest at your mortgage rate. No market risk.
  • Peace of mind: Mortgage freedom is a powerful psychological benefit that helps many homeowners sleep better.
  • Cash flow freedom: Once your mortgage is paid off, your monthly cash flow increases dramatically.
  • Builds equity: You own more of your home sooner, providing a buffer if property values dip.

The downside

  • Liquidity trap: Money locked in your home isn't easily accessible. You'd need a HELOC or to sell to access it.
  • Opportunity cost: If investments return more than your mortgage rate, you're leaving money on the table.

Option 2: Invest the Extra Cash

If you invested that same $500/month in a diversified portfolio returning an average of 7% annually over 20 years:

$260K+ Portfolio Value
$140K+ Investment Gains
7% Avg. Annual Return

Tax-advantaged accounts make it even better

Account Tax Benefit Best For
TFSA Growth and withdrawals are 100% tax-free Flexible savings — accessible anytime without tax hit
RRSP Contributions are tax-deductible; taxed on withdrawal High earners who expect lower income in retirement
FHSA Tax-deductible contributions + tax-free withdrawal for first home First-time buyers still saving for a down payment

RRSP Trick: Contribute to your RRSP, then use the tax refund to make a lump-sum mortgage payment. This way you get the best of both worlds — tax-sheltered investing and mortgage reduction.

When to Prioritize Mortgage Paydown

  • Your mortgage rate is above 5% and your risk tolerance is low
  • You're within 5–10 years of retirement and want to eliminate the payment
  • You have no other high-interest debt (credit cards, car loans)
  • Market volatility keeps you up at night

When to Prioritize Investing

  • Your mortgage rate is below 4% and you have a long time horizon (10+ years)
  • You have unused TFSA or RRSP room to capture tax advantages
  • You're comfortable with market fluctuations
  • You have an employer RRSP match (free money — always take it first)

The Best Answer? Often Both.

For most Canadians, the optimal strategy is a split approach:

  1. Max out TFSA contributions — the tax-free growth is too good to pass up.
  2. Take any employer RRSP match — it's an instant 100% return.
  3. Use remaining extra cash for mortgage prepayments — guaranteed savings with zero risk.

Want help optimizing your mortgage strategy?

Book a free consultation — I'll review your mortgage terms and help you decide the smartest use of your extra cash.

Book Your Free Consultation →

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