A fixed interest rate stays the same for the agreed period instead of moving with changing market conditions.
Fixed interest rate means the borrowing rate stays the same for the agreed period instead of moving with changing market conditions. The borrower knows the rate in advance for that period, which can make budgeting easier.
Fixed interest rate matters because predictability is one of the biggest reasons borrowers choose a structured loan product. If the rate stays fixed, the borrower has fewer surprises when planning their monthly obligations.
It also matters because people sometimes treat “fixed” as if it means universally cheaper. It does not. A fixed rate is about stability, not a guarantee of the lowest possible borrowing cost.
In Canadian consumer credit, fixed rates are common on products such as Personal Loan agreements. The borrower accepts a set rate and typically a defined repayment path. That can make the product easier to compare with income and debt obligations during underwriting.
The tradeoff is that a fixed rate may not benefit if market rates later fall. That is why borrowers compare fixed and Variable Interest Rate options in light of both affordability and risk tolerance.
A borrower takes a three-year personal loan at a fixed rate. The scheduled payment is easier to plan because the rate does not change during the agreed term. The borrower sacrifices some flexibility in exchange for stability.
Fixed interest rate is not the same as “best rate.” It simply means the rate does not float during the agreed period.
It is also not the same as Variable Interest Rate, where the rate can move up or down under the product rules.