Interest Rates & Your Buying Power
Interest rates don’t just change your monthly payment—they change the price range you can qualify for, how competitive your offer can be, and what kind of home you can realistically target in the GTA and Southern Ontario. Here’s how to think about it in today’s buyer-leaning market.
Your buying power is largely driven by the monthly payment your income can support. When rates rise, a bigger share of your payment goes to interest instead of principal, which means the same monthly budget qualifies for a smaller mortgage. In practical terms, higher rates compress your price range and often push buyers to adjust expectations on location, property type, or finishing.
Most buyers focus on “What’s the mortgage payment?”—but lenders look at a broader picture: stress-test qualifying rate, debt-to-income ratios, and your overall credit profile. That’s why two buyers with the same income can get very different approvals. In the GTA market, getting a clean pre-approval and understanding your real ceiling before you shop prevents heartbreak and helps you move quickly when the right home appears.
The good news is that in a buyer’s market, you often have more negotiating room: longer condition periods, inspection clauses, and price discussions are more common than during peak competition. That flexibility can partially offset higher borrowing costs—especially if you can negotiate a better purchase price or secure seller-friendly terms that reduce your risk.
The smartest move is to run scenarios: what you qualify for today, what the payment looks like at different rates, and what a small rate change does to your monthly cash flow. If you want, I’ll help you map your buying power and translate it into a clear search plan (neighbourhoods, home types, and a realistic offer strategy).