Refinancing Personal Loans
When refinancing a Canadian personal loan actually pays off, and how to do it without losing money to fees or a longer term.
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What Refinancing Actually Means
Refinancing means taking a new loan to pay off an old one — usually chasing a lower rate, a different schedule, or folding several debts into a single payment.
Refinancing (a new loan replacing the old) is different from a modification (changing terms on the existing loan with the same lender).
Get Clear on Why You're Doing It
Common reasons: a lower rate, a smaller payment to free up cash flow, consolidating high-interest debt like cards, or adjusting the term. Know your actual goal before you start comparing offers.
Run a refinancing calculator first to estimate the real interest savings over the life of the loan.
Take Stock of Where You Stand
Check your credit score, income, and debt-to-income ratio before applying — these are exactly what a lender will use to set your new rate. A stronger score generally means better terms.
Pull your Equifax and TransUnion reports annually and dispute anything wrong right away.
Shop the Market
Banks, credit unions, and online lenders all price differently. Compare more than just the headline rate — fees, repayment flexibility, and service quality all matter. Make sure the new loan covers the old balance plus any fees.
Compare APR, not just the advertised rate — APR includes fees and gives you the real cost.
Get Your Documents Together
Expect to provide ID, income proof, employment history, and details on the loan you're refinancing. Having it ready in advance moves things along faster.
Be upfront about your full financial picture — withholding anything just risks delays or a rejection.
Read the New Offer Carefully
Check the rate, term, payment, and any prepayment penalties or fees before signing. Confirm the new deal genuinely beats what you currently have.
Ask questions if anything's unclear — a legitimate lender will explain every term plainly.
Close It Out Properly
Once accepted, the new funds typically pay off the old loan directly. Confirm the old account actually closes with a zero balance, then start paying the new loan on schedule.
Keep records of everything — both old and new loan documents, including proof the original was closed.
A Few More Things to Watch
- Check for prepayment penalties on your current loan — they can eat the savings
- A modest credit score improvement can shift your rate meaningfully
- A longer term lowers the payment but can raise total interest
- If consolidating, make sure the new rate genuinely beats your existing debts
- Don't apply to too many lenders at once — multiple hard checks add up
- Confirm the lender is properly licensed
- Have a plan for any freed-up cash flow — ideally more debt paydown or savings
Frequently Asked Questions
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