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C$600,000 Home Loan Repayments (Canada 2026)

Monthly repayments, total interest, and full cost breakdown for a C$600,000 home loan in Canada at 6.0% interest over 25 years.

Monthly Repayment

C$3,865.81

C$600,000 home loan ยท 6.0% interest ยท 25 year term ยท Canada 2026

Loan Amount

C$600,000

Interest Rate

6.0% p.a.

Total Interest

C$559,743

Total Repaid

C$1,159,743

Full Repayment Breakdown

DetailAmount
Loan PrincipalC$600,000
Annual Interest Rate6.0%
Loan Term25 years (300 months)
Monthly RepaymentC$3,865.81
Total Interest PaidC$559,743
Total Amount RepaidC$1,159,743

How Much Does a C$600,000 Home Loan Cost Per Month in Canada?

A C$600,000 home loan in Canada at 6.0% interest over 25 years costs C$3,865.81 per month. Over the full term you'll repay C$1,159,743 in total, meaning the interest cost alone is C$559,743 โ€” 93% of the original loan amount.

To reduce the total cost, consider making extra repayments when possible, or choosing a shorter loan term if your budget allows. Even small additional monthly payments can save thousands in interest over the life of a home loan.

Use our Loan Affordability Calculator to check whether this repayment fits your income, and our Loan & ROI Calculator to compare different scenarios.

โš ๏ธ Disclaimer: These calculations are estimates based on a fixed interest rate and do not account for rate changes, fees, or individual lender terms. Always get a formal quote from a licensed lender before committing.

What Does a C$600,000 Home Loan Cost in Canada?

A C$600,000 home loan is increasingly common in Canadian metro areas outside the highest-cost cities. At 6% interest over 25 years, monthly repayments sit around C$3,800โ€“C$4,000. With a 20% deposit on a C$750,000 property, you'd borrow C$600,000 and avoid CMHC insurance.

Properties above C$1,000,000 require a minimum 20% down payment and are ineligible for CMHC insurance โ€” so a C$600,000 mortgage could represent an 80% LTV on a C$750,000 purchase or a smaller deposit on a lower-value property.

At C$600,000, you're approaching the higher end of what most Canadian households can comfortably service. Lenders will stress-test your ability to afford payments at the Bank of Canada's qualifying rate (typically 2% above your contract rate), which effectively limits how much you can borrow relative to income.

Frequently Asked Questions

Enter your loan amount, interest rate, and desired term into the relevant fields. The calculator will show your monthly repayment, total interest, and total amount repaid. Adjust the inputs to model different scenarios.
Your gross income, existing debt obligations, credit score, deposit size, and the current interest rate environment all affect what you can borrow and at what rate. Most lenders limit housing costs to 28โ€“35% of gross monthly income.
A longer term means lower monthly payments but more total interest paid. A shorter term costs more monthly but far less overall. The right choice depends on your cash flow situation and how aggressively you want to build equity. Many borrowers choose a longer term for flexibility but make extra payments to shorten the effective term.
Most consumer loans in the UK, Australia, and South Africa allow early repayment with limited or no penalty on variable-rate products. US mortgages rarely have prepayment penalties. Fixed-rate products may have early repayment charges โ€” always check your agreement before making extra payments.
A higher credit score signals lower risk to lenders and results in a lower interest rate. The difference between an excellent and average credit score can be 1โ€“3 percentage points on a personal loan or mortgage โ€” translating to thousands in additional interest over the loan term.

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