Variable Interest Rate

A variable interest rate can change over time under the terms of the credit agreement.

Variable interest rate means the borrowing rate can change over time under the terms of the credit agreement. Instead of staying fixed for the whole period, the rate may move as the lender’s reference conditions or pricing basis changes.

Why It Matters

Variable interest rate matters because it introduces uncertainty into borrowing cost. A borrower may start with an attractive rate, but future changes can make the debt more expensive than expected.

It also matters because many flexible borrowing products in Canada use variable-rate structures. If readers do not understand that the rate can move, they may underestimate future payment pressure.

How It Works in Canada

In Canada, variable-rate language commonly appears on Line of Credit products and can also appear on certain loan structures. The lender’s disclosure explains how the rate is determined and how changes affect interest cost.

That makes Cost of Borrowing disclosures especially important. A variable rate is not just a number on day one. It is a pricing mechanism that can change the account experience later.

Practical Example

A borrower takes a line of credit with a variable rate tied to the lender’s pricing basis. The account feels manageable at first, but later rate increases make carrying the same balance more expensive. The debt amount did not change much, but the cost of carrying it did.

Common Misunderstandings and Close Contrasts

Variable interest rate is not the same as Fixed Interest Rate. The entire point is that the rate can move.

It is also not automatically worse. Some borrowers accept rate variability in exchange for flexibility or a lower starting price. The key issue is whether the borrower understands the risk.

Knowledge Check

  1. What is a variable interest rate? It is a rate that can change over time under the agreement rules.
  2. Why does a variable rate matter? Because the cost of carrying the debt may rise or fall later even if the balance does not change much.
  3. Is a variable rate always a bad choice? No. It may suit some borrowers, but it requires understanding the risk of future change.