Refinancing

    Refinancing Commercial Propertyto Unlock Equity

    When to refinance, how appraisals shape your take-out, and structuring options to lower rate or extend amortization across Alberta and BC.
    May 20268 min read
    A well-timed refinance can lower your rate, extend amortization, and pull tax-efficient equity out of properties you already own.
    Refinancing is the most under-used tool in a commercial owner’s toolkit. Most borrowers treat their mortgage as a fixed expense — something to renew at maturity and otherwise ignore. The owners who treat refinancing as an active strategy are the ones who unlock equity for their next acquisition, lower their carrying cost when rates dip, and extend amortization to free up cash flow when they need it most.

    At Max Capital Financial we structure commercial mortgage refinancing across Alberta and BC every week — from $1M strip-mall refis in Red Deer to $50M+ multifamily take-outs in Vancouver. This guide covers when to refinance, how appraisals drive your take-out, the structuring options on the table in 2026, and the mistakes that quietly cost owners money.

    Five reasons to refinance commercial property

    1. Pull equity to fund the next acquisition

    The most powerful use of a refinance is to recycle equity into another deal. If a property you bought three years ago has appreciated and stabilized, the new appraised value supports a larger loan — and the difference between the new loan and the existing balance lands in your account, tax-deferred. That capital becomes the down payment on your next acquisition without selling, triggering capital gains, or losing your existing cash-flowing asset.

    2. Lower your rate

    Rates move. A 5-year term taken in 2021 at 3.5% renewing into a 5.5% market still hurts — but a 5-year term taken in 2023 at 6.75% has real room to come down in 2026 if the bond market cooperates. A refinance (not a renewal) lets you shop the whole market, not just your incumbent lender’s renewal offer, which is almost never their sharpest quote.

    3. Extend amortization to free up cash flow

    A property carrying a 15-year amortization throws off a lot less cash than the same property on a 25- or 30-year amortization. If you’re acquiring more property, supporting tenant improvements, or just want to improve DSCR for the next file, extending amortization on a refinance is one of the cleanest cash-flow plays available.

    4. Consolidate or restructure

    A blanket refinance can roll multiple smaller mortgages — a first, a second, a vendor take-back, a high-rate bridge — into a single conventional first at a much lower blended cost. We see this constantly on portfolios that grew deal-by-deal and never got re-papered.

    5. Take out a private or bridge lender

    If you used a private bridge to close fast, complete a renovation, or stabilize a building, refinancing into a conventional or insured first is the planned exit. The earlier you start the take-out file, the cleaner the handoff — most refinances need 60 – 90 days from application to funding.

    How appraisals drive your take-out

    Every commercial refinance lives or dies on the appraisal. Lenders advance against appraised value, not your purchase price, your insured replacement cost, or your assessment notice. Three valuation approaches matter:

    • Income approach — capitalizes net operating income (NOI) at a market cap rate. This is the dominant method for income-producing commercial assets and the lever most under your control
    • Direct comparison — looks at recent comparable sales per square foot or per door. Important in active markets and on smaller assets
    • Cost approach — replacement cost minus depreciation plus land. Mostly used as a sanity check on newer or special-use assets
    Because the income approach drives most files, every dollar of NOI you can document cleanly translates to roughly $14 – $20 of appraised value at typical 5 – 7% cap rates. That’s why refinance prep starts with the rent roll and the operating statement, not the loan application.

    How to position the appraisal

    Push rents to market on any below-market leases before the appraiser walks the building
    Document recent capex (roof, HVAC, parking, suite upgrades) — it supports value and lengthens economic life
    Clean up vacancy and bad debt; one chronically vacant unit can drag the entire NOI
    Provide a 12-month trailing operating statement and a current rent roll dated within 30 days
    Highlight comparable sales the appraiser may not have seen — they take submitted comps seriously when they’re credible
    For multifamily on the path to CMHC MLI Select, position the file for insured underwriting; the value used is often higher than conventional

    What lenders will advance — the LTV / DSCR test

    Your refinance loan is the lower of two numbers:
    • LTV (loan-to-value) — typically 65 – 75% of appraised value on conventional commercial; up to 85 – 95% on CMHC MLI Select insured multifamily
    • DSCR (debt-service-coverage) — most lenders want NOI to cover annual debt service by 1.20 – 1.40x; insured multifamily can clear with a 1.10 – 1.20x DSCR
    On a stabilized asset, DSCR is usually the binding constraint — the property simply can’t support a loan large enough to hit max LTV. This is where amortization length and rate both matter: a longer amortization or a lower rate shrinks annual debt service and lets you borrow more against the same NOI.

    Conventional vs. CMHC-insured refinances

    On 5+ unit multifamily, you almost always have two paths and should price both:
    • Conventional refinance — faster, less paperwork, no insurance premium, typically 65 – 75% LTV, 25-year amortization, 5-year term, market commercial rates
    • CMHC-insured refinance (MLI Select) — slower (90 – 120 days), insurance premium added to loan, but unlocks 85 – 95% LTV, 40 – 50-year amortization, 5 – 10-year terms, and 100 – 200+ basis points lower rates
    For owners with appreciation to extract, the CMHC route usually wins on equity pulled and on long-term cost — even after the insurance premium. For owners who just need a quick rate-and-term refi, conventional is faster and cleaner. Run both, then choose.

    Costs to budget into the refinance

    Appraisal: $3,500 – $15,000+ depending on asset complexity
    Phase 1 environmental: $2,500 – $5,000; sometimes Phase 2 follow-up
    Building condition assessment: $4,000 – $10,000 on larger files
    Legal: $3,500 – $10,000 for refinance closing
    Lender fee: typically 0.25 – 1.0% of loan amount on commercial; often nil on insured multifamily
    CMHC premium: 1.75 – 6.0% of loan amount on insured files (added to the loan)
    Pre-payment penalty on the existing mortgage — often the biggest single cost; size the new loan to absorb it
    Title insurance, registration, tax adjustments — small but real
    Most of these costs roll into the new loan, so the refinance is cash-flow neutral at close. The pre-payment penalty is the variable that makes or breaks the math — always get it in writing from your existing lender before you commit to the refi.

    When to start the file

    The single biggest mistake we see is owners starting the refinance conversation 30 days before maturity. By that point, you’ve lost leverage — your only realistic option is renewing with the incumbent on whatever terms they put in front of you.

    Start the conversation 6 – 9 months before maturity. That gives time to position the rent roll, order an appraisal that supports your number, run a competitive lender process, and close with no gap between the old and new mortgages. For an equity-pull refinance mid-term, start the conversation as soon as you have a use for the capital — strong files routinely fund in 60 – 90 days.

    Common refinance mistakes

    Renewing instead of refinancing: the renewal offer is rarely the market rate — always shop
    Skipping the appraisal prep: a $3M appraisal vs a $3.4M appraisal is a $300K equity-pull difference at 75% LTV
    Forgetting the pre-payment penalty: it can wipe out the rate savings if you break a closed term too early
    Not pricing the CMHC path: on multifamily, the insured option is often dramatically better and gets ignored because it’s “more work”
    Under-extending amortization: a 20-year amortization on a stabilized asset leaves DSCR room — and borrowing capacity — on the table
    Going to one lender: a brokered process with three live term sheets routinely beats a single relationship lender by 25 – 75 bps

    Where we're seeing strong refinance activity in 2026

    Edmonton and Calgary — multifamily owners refinancing from conventional into MLI Select to extract equity for new acquisitions
    Vancouver and Victoria — rate-and-term refis on stabilized rental and mixed-use assets as 2021 vintage terms come up for renewal
    Kelowna — owners pulling equity from appreciated assets to fund new development and value-add acquisitions
    Red Deer and secondary Alberta markets — strong NOI growth on industrial and retail supporting larger refinance proceeds than owners expect

    How Max Capital structures refinances

    We start every refi with the same three questions: what’s the property worth today, what does the take-out lender need to see, and what’s the cleanest path from where you are to where you want to be? From there we run a competitive process across our bank, credit-union, life-co, MIC, and CMHC-approved lender network — and bring back live term sheets so you can choose on full-cycle cost, not headline rate.
    No deposits. No fees until funded. Send us the rent roll and the existing mortgage statement and we’ll come back with a refinance plan within 48 hours.

    Thinking about a refinance?

    Send us the property and the existing mortgage details. We’ll model conventional and insured options side-by-side.
    • Lower rate & longer amortization options
    • Side-by-side conventional vs. CMHC modeling
    • Equity-pull structures on stabilized assets
    • $0 until funded
    Unlock Equity

    Let's structure your refinance.

    Lower your rate, extend your amortization, or pull equity for the next deal — structured across our full Western Canadian lender network.
    No deposits · No fees until funded