Manulife Bank is offering its clients the opportunity to “Win a ‘mortgage-free’ month while learning how to be mortgage free for life.” The Bank’s online contest invites consumers to take a few minutes to learn about a unique mortgage product before they answer a simple question.

On December 2, five names will be drawn from the correct responses and five cheques for $1,500 each will be sent out, just in time for the holiday season. “It’s really a ‘learn and earn’ kind of contest,” says Roman Fedchyshyn, president and CEO of Manulife Bank of Canada.

“The Manulife One flexible mortgage account is a truly unique product – there is no account exactly like it in Canada today. We want Canadians to take a couple of minutes to understand what makes the account so different and how it works, so they’ll see how it can take years off their mortgage and save them thousands in interest. It’s happening in Australia and in the U.K.”

It is an all-in-one personal borrowing and chequing account, says Fedchyshyn, that combines a client’s chequing and short-term savings accounts with their mortgage. The result is that every time a client receives a paycheque or makes a deposit, he says, rather than depositing the money into a chequing account where the money sits “idle,” earning the client virtually nothing — that income pays down the outstanding balance of their mortgage account.

When the client needs to use that money for monthly expenses, the funds can be easily withdrawn and the balance is automatically increased. Interest is calculated on a daily basis, so every extra dollar in the account reduces the client’s debt and their related interest payments. Over the years, the flow of income through the account could save clients thousands of dollars in interest and help them pay off the mortgage years sooner.

Before Manulife introduced Manulife One, an outside research firm did in- depth analysis of the Canadian market. The researchers concluded that a typical Canadian could pay off a 20-year mortgage in 13 or 14 years and save $20,000 to $30,000 without doing anything differently than they are today, says Fedchyshyn.