Rate Held at 2.25% — What It Means for Waterloo Region
The Bank of Canada held its overnight rate at 2.25% on June 10, 2026 — the fifth consecutive hold since October 2025. The decision matched market expectations, but the tone of the announcement was notably more cautious than previous holds.
Headline inflation rose to 2.8% in April, driven by higher energy prices and the effect of the consumer carbon tax elimination dropping out of the year-over-year calculation. Core inflation has moved down to around 2%, and so far there is limited evidence of energy price pressures spreading broadly to other goods and services. That said, the Bank was direct: Governing Council will not let higher energy prices become persistent inflation. Canada's GDP edged down 0.1% in Q1 2026, and the unemployment rate sits at 6.6% as of May -- softening but not deteriorating sharply.
The Bank signalled that July 15 is a live decision. If energy prices stay elevated and begin feeding into broader inflation, the next move could be a hike. If economic growth stays weak and the labour market softens further, a cut remains possible. The Bank was clear that it will respond as needed -- and that uncertainty is the defining feature of this moment. For Waterloo Region homeowners, the local picture adds useful context: 627 homes sold through MLS in May, up 10% from April, with an average sale price of $744,032 across all residential types. Homes are selling in an average of 24 days and inventory sits at 4.0 months -- a balanced market where the right pricing, presentation, and patience still wins.
If your mortgage is up for renewal in the next 6 to 12 months, the fixed vs variable conversation is worth having before July 15. Reach out to Melanie and Warren for a straight-talk conversation about what the current rate environment means for your specific situation in Kitchener, Waterloo, or Cambridge.