Dominion Lending CentresPart of the DLCG, Canada's #1 mortgage originator · $84.5B in 2025.
Residential Calculators

The quoted rate is not the price.

Lender fee, broker fee, legal, appraisal, a renewal fee if you stay — the shorter the term, the more those fees change the real cost of any mortgage, and nowhere more than private and alternative lending. This calculator solves the true APR of the whole package over your real timeline, shows the exit-early trap, and prices it against a B-side placement so you know what the alternative is worth.

The offer in front of you

Mortgage amount
$
Quoted rate
%

Private firsts commonly quote 7–10%; seconds 10–14%.

Payments
Term length12 mo
Lender fee
%

Typically 1–3% of the mortgage on firsts, more on seconds.

Broker fee
%

On private deals the broker fee is charged to you and disclosed in writing before you commit.

Legal + appraisal
$

Private deals usually have you pay both sets of legal fees.

Your real timeline

Months you'll actually need it12 mo

Be honest here — this number moves the true APR more than the rate does.

Compare the alternative

B-side 1-year rate
%

Desk rate for a 1-year fixed, B-side, today.

B-side lender fee
%
14.95%
TRUE APR, all-in
8.99%
The rate on the commitment
$94,500
What actually lands of the $100,000

The gap between the quoted rate and the true APR is the fees, spread over how long you actually keep the money.

Where the money goes over 12 months

Monthly payment
$749 (interest-only)
Interest paid
$8,990
Lender + broker fees
$3,000
Legal + appraisal
$2,500
Total cost of funds
$14,490
Cost per $100K per month
$1,208

Total cost over 12 months — private vs B-side placement

Placement gap: $7,182 over 12 months. That's what getting the file to a B lender instead is worth — when the file can be placed. Speed, CRA urgency, or a credit event sometimes make private the only lane; then the job is the exit plan.

Guardrails — shown, not hidden

If you exit at 6 months instead
true APR 20.66%
Fees don't shrink with time
Day-one fees over fewer months = higher APR
Watch the fine print for
Minimum-interest clauses (often 3 months), per-diem interest, holdbacks
If you'll need it 18+ months
A B-side or repair-first route usually wins

Private lending is a bridge, not a destination — priced fairly for speed and flexibility, expensive as a place to live. Before any commitment you must receive formal written cost-of-borrowing and broker-fee disclosure; this tool is shopping math, not that disclosure. We place private files with the exit written down before the entry.

What this calculator does that most don't
  • Solves the actual IRR of your cash flows — quoted rate, lender fee, broker fee, legal, renewal fees, and the month you actually exit — not 'rate plus fees' eyeballed
  • Shows the exit-early trap in numbers: the same day-one fees over 6 months instead of 12 pushes a quoted 8.99% past a 20% true APR
  • Prices the file against a B-side 1-year at today's desk rate, so the value of better placement is a dollar figure, not a claim
  • Honest by construction: set every fee to zero and the true APR equals the quoted rate — the gap you see IS the fees
Want a real plan, not just an estimate?
Send Ramin exactly what you just calculated — your scenario rides along automatically, so the first conversation starts at your numbers, not at zero.
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Why is the true APR so much higher than the quoted rate?+

Because the fees are charged on day one and the term is short. A 3% fee package on a 12-month mortgage adds roughly 3% to the annual cost all by itself — and if you exit at month 6, the same fees compress into half the time and add roughly 6%. On a typical private first quoted at 8.99% with standard fees, the true APR lands around 15%.

What fees are normal on a private mortgage?+

A lender fee of about 1–3% of the mortgage on firsts (more on seconds), a broker fee of about 1–2% — on private deals the borrower pays the broker, disclosed in writing — plus legal for both sides and an appraisal. All of it typically comes off the advance, so you receive meaningfully less than the face amount while paying interest on all of it.

What happens at the end of the term?+

The full balance is due. If the exit isn't ready, most private lenders will renew — for a renewal fee, often around 1%, and sometimes at a reset rate. Renewing twice can quietly cost more than the original fee package. This is why we write the exit plan — sale, B-side refinance, or completed credit repair — before the entry.

Is interest-only a red flag?+

No — interest-only is the standard structure for a bridge and keeps the payment manageable while you fix what needs fixing. The risk isn't the payment structure; it's reaching the term date without a credible way out. A private mortgage without an exit plan is the actual red flag.

When does private lending genuinely make sense?+

When speed or the file leaves no alternative: a CRA balance about to become a lien, a purchase closing in days, an active consumer proposal with equity, construction draws, or a credit event that B lenders won't touch yet. Used for months with a written exit, it's a fair tool. Used for years, it's an expensive place to live — and usually a placement failure.

Do I get formal cost disclosure?+

Yes — before you commit, your broker must provide written cost-of-borrowing and fee disclosure showing the APR with fees included, and on private deals the broker's own fee must be disclosed in writing as well. This calculator is shopping math so you can pressure-test an offer; the regulated disclosure documents are what you sign against.

Related: Private & bridge lending programs → · Your dated route back to prime → · Closing costs by lending lane →