On June 10, 2026, the Bank of Canada is expected to announce its latest rate decision — and all signals point to another hold at 2.25%. After cutting aggressively from a high of 5.0% in 2024, the BoC has been in pause mode since April 2026, navigating a tricky combination of weak economic growth, trade uncertainty, and an oil-price shock that is keeping inflation risk alive.

For Ontario home buyers and sellers in Barrie, the GTA, and Simcoe County, the rate hold has real practical implications. Here's exactly what it means for you.

2.25%
BoC Policy Rate
~4%
Fixed Rate (some brokers)
3.4%
Lowest Variable Rate

WHY THE BOC IS HOLDING

The Bank of Canada's challenge right now is a genuine dilemma. On one hand, Canada's economy is soft — GDP growth is forecast at just 1.1% for 2026, the weakest in nearly a decade excluding COVID. Employment growth has been sluggish, and sectors exposed to US tariffs have shed jobs.

On the other hand, an oil price spike driven by geopolitical tensions is putting upward pressure on inflation. Cutting rates into rising inflation would be a policy mistake — so the BoC is holding steady and watching.

⚠️ Key Risk to Watch

Bond markets are pricing a small but real probability of a rate hike by July 2026 if inflation accelerates. Fixed mortgage rates have already risen at major banks because bond yields spiked on oil price fears. If you're renewing or buying, a mortgage broker may offer meaningfully better fixed rates than your bank right now.

WHAT THIS MEANS FOR ONTARIO MORTGAGE RATES

The BoC policy rate directly affects variable-rate mortgages. With the rate at 2.25%, bank prime rates sit around 4.45%. The lowest variable mortgage rates available through brokers are around 3.4% — a significant improvement from the 6%+ rates of 2023.

Fixed rates are more complicated. Lenders price fixed rates off government bond yields, not the BoC rate. Because bond yields have jumped on oil-shock fears, some major banks are now quoting fixed rates higher than what independent mortgage brokers can offer. As of June 2026, some brokers are offering 5-year fixed rates around 4% — well below what many banks are advertising.

Variable vs. Fixed: What Should You Choose?

  • Variable rate: Makes sense if you believe the BoC will cut further. The risk is a potential hike if inflation spikes. Best for buyers with financial flexibility.
  • Fixed rate: Provides certainty. With some brokers offering ~4%, locking in now protects against any surprise hikes. Best for first-time buyers and those on tighter budgets.
  • Short-term fixed (1–2 year): A middle path — lock in now, renegotiate when the rate picture is clearer in 2027.

WHAT THIS MEANS FOR ONTARIO HOME BUYERS

If you've been sitting on the sidelines waiting for rates to drop further, the picture is more nuanced now. Rates have dropped dramatically from their peak — variable rates around 3.4% represent a massive improvement in affordability. But the window for further cuts may be narrowing, with inflation risk creeping back in.

Meanwhile, Ontario's housing market still has record-high inventory — over 67,000 homes for sale across the province as of April 2026, which is 52% above the 10-year average. That means buyers still have significant leverage in negotiations.

✅ Buyer Opportunity Right Now

The combination of improved rates (variable ~3.4%), record inventory, and motivated sellers means this is one of the better buying windows in years for Southern Ontario. In Barrie and Simcoe County, average prices are around $675,000 — significantly below the 2022 peak — with homes sitting on market an average of 27 days, giving you time to negotiate properly.

If you're a buyer, remember that at onepercentsold.ca we offer up to 50% cash back on the buyer's agent commission, capped at $25,000. On a $700,000 home with a 2.5% buyer commission, that's potentially $8,750 back in your pocket at closing. That's real money that helps with closing costs, moving expenses, or immediate home improvements.

WHAT THIS MEANS FOR ONTARIO HOME SELLERS

The rate hold is a mixed signal for sellers. On the positive side, stable rates give buyers confidence to commit — unlike the rate-hike environment of 2022–2023, buyers aren't rushing to lock in before rates get worse. Demand is returning, with Ontario home sales up 4.3% from March to April 2026.

The challenge: inventory is at a 15-year high. You are competing with more listings than at any time since 2009. Sellers who price strategically and present their homes well are still selling — but the days of any-price-will-work are over.

Seller Tips for the June 2026 Market

  • Price at market, not above it. Overpriced homes are sitting. Properly priced homes are still moving in 2–4 weeks.
  • Presentation matters more than ever. With buyers having 67,000+ options, your home needs to stand out. Professional photography is non-negotiable.
  • Offer a competitive buyer's agent commission. With record inventory, buyer agents will show well-incentivized listings first.
  • Control your costs. At 1% listing commission with onepercentsold.ca, you save thousands on the listing side — which gives you more room to price competitively and offer a full buyer's commission.

📊 Barrie & Simcoe County Snapshot — June 2026

Average home price: $675,547 | New listings (last 28 days): 619 | Median days on market: 27 | Market type: Balanced to buyer-favoured. Sellers who price right and present well are finding buyers. Overpriced properties are accumulating days on market quickly.

THE JUNE 10 ANNOUNCEMENT: WHAT TO EXPECT

Bond markets as of early June 2026 are pricing a very high probability of a hold at 2.25%. A cut is possible but unlikely given the oil-price inflation concern. A hike is a small but non-zero risk if inflation data surprises to the upside before the announcement.

The most likely outcome: hold at 2.25%, with cautious language acknowledging both cut and hike risks. The BoC will likely signal that future decisions depend entirely on how the inflation picture evolves as the oil shock works through the economy.

For practical purposes: don't wait for the announcement to act. If you're a buyer who has been pre-approved and found a home you like, rates today are near their best levels of this cycle. If you're a seller, listing now captures the traditional summer buying season while inventory is starting to draw down from its April peak.

READY TO MAKE YOUR MOVE?

Whether you're buying or selling in Barrie, the GTA, or Simcoe County — let's talk about what the current rate environment means for your specific situation. Free, no-obligation consultation.