What happens legally when you switch?
Most people are unaware of the legal effect of
switching lenders. When you renew you are essentially starting
the process again discharging the existing mortgage, taking
out a new one, and beginning the whole payment process, albeit
at a lower principal amount. As such, you should treat this as
just as important a process as the first time you arranged the
mortgage. Remember your situation will most likely have changed
since then, and you require a different product with different
terms attached to suit your situation.
In most Provinces a switch of the current or lower
balance requires only a simple assignment of interest in the mortgage
to be executed by all parties and registered on title. This assignment
also attaches the specific terms that will have legal effect, and
replaces those of the transferring institution. So even though
the old mortgage is still registered on title, all those old terms
and conditions registered by your previous lender will be completely
replaced by those of your new lender under the assignment of interest.
Moreover, the form that you are holding in your
hand from the lender who did your previous mortgage financing,
has a rate that probably is not as competitive as it could be.
Don't let the hassle from the first time you negotiated dictate
you just signing the form and sending it back to the lender it
will most probably cost you in the form of higher rates.
The lenders count on 70% of renewers just signing
the form and mailing it in they are not forcing you but
they are preying on human nature to embrace convenience. However,
let a Gibbard Hoffart Financial Group Mortgage Consultant do the work for you the
same convenience, at a much lower cost to you and a product and
terms that will suit your current situation. The fact is that it
is likely another lender will give you what you want at a rate
you want there are no legal implications to you switching |