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Building purpose-built rental housing in Canada is expensive, slow, and loaded with risk. But the federal government wants more rental supply desperately enough to subsidize the financing. That’s exactly what the Rental Construction Financing initiative (RCFi) does—it provides low-cost construction loans backed by CMHC that make projects pencil out when conventional construction financing falls short.
If you’re developing multi-unit rental projects in Canada, RCFi could cut your borrowing costs by hundreds of basis points during the construction phase. Here’s how the program works, who qualifies, and how to structure your application for the best chance of approval.
What Is the Rental Construction Financing Initiative?
RCFi is a CMHC-administered program that provides low-cost construction-period loans for purpose-built rental housing projects across Canada. The program launched in 2017 as part of the National Housing Strategy, and it has been renewed and expanded multiple times since.
The core idea is straightforward. CMHC insures the construction loan, which allows approved lenders to offer financing at rates well below conventional construction lending. In return, developers must commit to specific affordability, accessibility, and energy efficiency standards that go beyond what the market would typically deliver.
This isn’t a grant. It’s a loan—but the terms are dramatically better than what you’d get from a conventional construction lender. Interest rates during construction are typically 200-400 basis points lower than private construction loans, and the loan can transition directly into long-term CMHC MLI Select takeout financing at stabilization.
Why RCFi Exists: The Rental Supply Problem
Canada faces a chronic shortage of purpose-built rental housing. For decades, the economics of building rental apartments simply didn’t work in most markets. Condo development was more profitable, and institutional capital went elsewhere.
The National Housing Strategy set a target of creating hundreds of thousands of new rental units. RCFi is the primary financial tool for making that happen. The program aims to close the gap between the cost of building rental housing and what rental income can support.
The results have been substantial. Since launch, RCFi has committed billions in construction financing across thousands of units in every province. The program has become one of the largest drivers of new rental construction in the country.
How RCFi Works: The Mechanics
RCFi operates through a partnership between CMHC, approved lenders, and developers. Here’s the flow:
Step 1: Pre-Application and Eligibility Screening You submit a pre-application to CMHC with your project concept, site details, proforma, and evidence of meeting program requirements. CMHC screens for basic eligibility before inviting a full application.
Step 2: Full Application If CMHC is interested, you submit detailed construction plans, cost estimates, market studies, environmental assessments, and financial projections. This stage requires significant documentation and professional reports.
Step 3: CMHC Commitment CMHC issues a conditional commitment letter outlining the insured loan amount, terms, and conditions that must be met before funding. This commitment is what you take to an approved lender.
Step 4: Lender Engagement With the CMHC commitment in hand, you approach an approved lender for the actual construction financing. The lender provides the funds; CMHC insures the loan. Because of the insurance, the lender’s risk is minimal, which is why rates are so low.
Step 5: Construction Period During construction, you draw on the loan as work progresses. CMHC and the lender monitor construction milestones. Interest is typically capitalized during the construction period.
Step 6: Transition to Permanent Financing Once construction is complete and the project reaches stabilization (typically 90% occupancy), the construction loan converts to permanent long-term financing—often through CMHC’s MLI Select program. This seamless transition is one of RCFi’s biggest advantages.
Eligibility Requirements
Not every project qualifies for RCFi. The program has specific criteria around affordability, sustainability, and accessibility.
Affordability Requirements
This is where RCFi differs most from conventional financing. Your project must commit to affordability targets:
- A minimum percentage of units must have rents at or below 30% of the median household income for the area
- The specific percentage and affordability depth depend on the scoring tier you’re targeting
- Higher affordability commitments earn better financing terms
- Affordability commitments are registered on title and last for a minimum period (typically 10-20 years depending on the commitment level)
Energy Efficiency Standards
RCFi projects must exceed minimum building code energy standards. The program rewards projects that achieve higher energy performance:
- Minimum requirement: a specified percentage reduction in energy consumption and greenhouse gas emissions compared to the 2015 National Energy Code for Buildings
- Higher reductions earn additional scoring points and potentially better terms
- Projects pursuing net-zero or Passive House certification receive the strongest consideration
Accessibility Requirements
A percentage of units must meet or exceed local accessibility standards:
- A minimum number of units must be fully accessible or adaptable
- Projects offering universal design features across all units score higher
- Common areas must meet full accessibility requirements
Project Characteristics
| Requirement | Details |
|---|---|
| Minimum project size | Typically 5+ rental units |
| Property type | Purpose-built rental (not condo conversion) |
| Tenure | Must remain rental for the affordability commitment period |
| Location | Anywhere in Canada with demonstrated rental demand |
| Borrower | Can be private developers, non-profits, or partnerships |
| Construction type | New construction or substantial renovation |
| Market need | Must demonstrate unmet rental demand in the area |
RCFi Loan Terms
The specific terms vary by project and scoring, but here’s the general range:
| Term | Typical Range |
|---|---|
| Construction loan interest rate | Government of Canada bond yield + small spread (often 200-400 bps below conventional) |
| Loan-to-cost during construction | Up to 95% for affordable projects |
| Construction period | Typically 18-36 months |
| Insurance premium | Rolled into the loan (lower than standard CMHC premiums for qualifying projects) |
| Interest during construction | Capitalized (added to loan balance) |
| Takeout financing | Transitions to CMHC-insured permanent mortgage (often MLI Select) |
| Permanent mortgage amortization | Up to 50 years under MLI Select |
| Permanent mortgage term | Up to 10 years |
The combination of low construction-period rates and 50-year amortization on the permanent takeout makes projects financially viable that would never work under conventional financing.
RCFi vs. MLI Select vs. MLI Standard
Understanding how CMHC’s programs fit together is critical for structuring your development.
| Feature | RCFi | MLI Select | MLI Standard |
|---|---|---|---|
| Purpose | Construction financing | Permanent financing (new or existing) | Permanent financing (existing) |
| Phase | Construction period | Post-construction / acquisition | Acquisition / refinance |
| Interest rates | Very low (insured construction) | Low (insured permanent) | Market (insured) |
| Max amortization | N/A (construction loan) | Up to 50 years | Up to 40 years |
| Affordability required | Yes (strict targets) | Yes (for premium reductions) | Minimal |
| Energy requirements | Yes (above code) | Yes (for premium reductions) | Minimal |
| Max LTV | Up to 95% of cost | Up to 95% of value | Up to 85% of value |
| Typical use | Ground-up rental development | Takeout financing after RCFi, or acquisition of existing rental | Refinance or acquisition |
The strongest development structure uses RCFi for the construction phase and then transitions into MLI Select for the permanent mortgage. This gives you the lowest possible cost of capital across the entire project lifecycle.
The Application Process: What to Expect
RCFi applications are substantial. Plan for a 6-12 month process from initial inquiry to commitment, and budget for professional fees along the way.
Pre-Application Phase (1-2 Months)
- Initial inquiry to CMHC outlining project concept
- Preliminary financial feasibility review
- Site identification and preliminary due diligence
- Early engagement with municipal planning to confirm zoning
Full Application Phase (2-4 Months)
You’ll need to prepare:
- Detailed proforma showing construction costs, operating projections, rental income assumptions, and financial viability
- Architectural plans at a level sufficient for cost estimation
- Market study from a qualified appraiser demonstrating rental demand
- Environmental site assessment (Phase I minimum, Phase II if triggered)
- Energy modelling showing how the project meets or exceeds efficiency requirements
- Accessibility plan detailing compliant and accessible units
- Construction schedule with milestone timelines
- Borrower financial statements and development track record
- Municipal approvals or evidence of approval pathway
CMHC Review (2-4 Months)
CMHC reviews applications through a scoring system that weighs affordability depth, energy performance, accessibility, and project viability. Projects scoring higher get priority and potentially better terms.
During review, expect CMHC to:
- Request additional documentation or clarification
- Commission third-party reviews of cost estimates
- Evaluate your development team’s capacity and track record
- Assess market conditions in your project’s location
Commitment and Closing (1-3 Months)
Once CMHC issues a conditional commitment, you’ll work with your approved lender to finalize the construction loan. Conditions typically include:
- Final construction permits
- Executed construction contract with a qualified general contractor
- Title insurance
- Builder’s risk insurance
- Any remaining environmental or technical requirements
How RCFi Interfaces With Permanent Financing
One of RCFi’s strongest features is the planned transition from construction financing to permanent CMHC-insured mortgage at project completion. Here’s how that works:
During Construction: Your RCFi construction loan funds the build. Interest is capitalized and added to the loan balance.
At Substantial Completion: Once the building is complete and begins lease-up, you enter a stabilization period. The construction loan remains in place during this phase.
At Stabilization: When the project reaches target occupancy (typically 90%), you apply for permanent takeout financing. If the project was structured for MLI Select—which most RCFi projects are—the transition is streamlined because CMHC is already familiar with the project.
Permanent Mortgage Terms: The permanent mortgage under MLI Select can offer up to 50-year amortization, low premiums (especially if affordability and energy targets are met), and competitive interest rates. The long amortization is often the key factor that makes rental projects cash-flow positive from day one.
This construction-to-permanent pathway means you’re not scrambling for takeout financing when the building is done. The exit strategy is built into the original deal structure.
Who Should Consider RCFi?
RCFi works best for specific developer profiles:
Experienced Multi-Family Developers: If you’ve built rental projects before and have the team, track record, and capacity to execute, RCFi is likely the cheapest capital you can access for construction.
Non-Profit Housing Providers: Organizations building affordable and community housing often find RCFi essential for making projects financially viable. The program is specifically designed to serve this sector.
Developers Willing to Commit to Affordability: If your project concept already includes below-market units—whether for mission reasons or to serve a specific market segment—RCFi rewards that commitment with better financing terms.
Developers in High-Demand Rental Markets: Projects in cities with demonstrated rental shortages score well because CMHC wants to direct capital where it’s needed most.
RCFi may not be the right fit if you’re building condos, if your project is small (under 5 units), if you can’t meet affordability or energy targets, or if you need faster timelines than CMHC’s approval process allows.
Success Factors: What Gets Projects Approved
Having worked with developers navigating CMHC programs, certain factors consistently separate approved projects from rejected ones:
Strong proformas with conservative assumptions. CMHC stress-tests your projections. Use realistic rent assumptions, current construction costs from a qualified estimator, and conservative vacancy and operating expense estimates. Overly optimistic proformas get flagged immediately.
Experienced development teams. CMHC evaluates your capacity to execute. First-time developers can qualify, but they typically need strong partners—an experienced general contractor, a qualified project manager, and professional consultants.
Clear municipal pathway. Projects with zoning approvals in place or well-advanced planning applications score better than speculative proposals. CMHC doesn’t want to commit capital to projects that might not get built due to municipal opposition.
Exceeding minimum requirements. Meeting the bare minimum on affordability, energy, and accessibility gets you in the door. Exceeding minimums improves your scoring and potentially your terms. Projects that push toward deeper affordability or net-zero energy performance get priority attention.
Demonstrated rental demand. Your market study needs to show genuine unmet rental demand in your target market. CMHC tracks rental market data closely and will challenge demand assumptions that don’t match their own analysis.
Common Mistakes in RCFi Applications
Underestimating the timeline. RCFi isn’t fast capital. From first conversation to funding can take 12-18 months. If your project timeline can’t accommodate that, you need interim solutions.
Incomplete applications. CMHC won’t process partial applications. Every document on the checklist needs to be included and professional-grade. Missing items mean delays, not flexibility.
Ignoring the affordability math. Committing to affordability targets that make your project financially unviable doesn’t help anyone. Model the impact of below-market rents on your debt service coverage ratio before committing to specific affordability levels.
Not engaging a mortgage broker early. A commercial mortgage broker experienced with CMHC programs can help structure your application, connect you with approved lenders, and navigate the process more efficiently than going it alone.
RCFi vs. Affordable Housing Innovation Fund (AHIF) vs. National Housing Co-Investment Fund (NHCF)
| Feature | RCFi | AHIF | NHCF |
|---|---|---|---|
| Type | Low-cost construction loan | Contribution (grant/loan) | Loan + potential forgivable loan |
| Focus | New rental construction at scale | Innovative housing solutions | New construction + revitalization |
| Best for | Conventional rental projects meeting affordability targets | Innovative approaches (modular, co-op, etc.) | Projects needing grant + loan combination |
| Affordability depth | Moderate to deep | Innovation-focused | Deep affordability required |
| Speed | 6-12 months to commitment | Variable (intake-based) | 6-18 months |
| Repayment | Yes (loan) | Varies by component | Loan portion: yes; forgivable portion: conditional |
Program Impact and Scale
RCFi has become one of the most significant drivers of new rental construction in Canada. The program has committed billions in financing that has enabled tens of thousands of new rental units across the country.
The program’s impact extends beyond the units it directly finances. By demonstrating that purpose-built rental development can be financially viable with the right capital structure, RCFi has encouraged institutional investors and pension funds to re-enter the rental development sector.
Projects financed through RCFi are required to report on affordability, occupancy, and energy performance throughout the affordability commitment period, providing CMHC with data to evaluate and improve the program over time.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can individual investors access RCFi, or is it only for large developers?
What interest rates can I expect under RCFi?
How does RCFi interact with provincial housing programs?
What happens if my project doesn't achieve the committed affordability targets?
Can I use RCFi for a renovation or conversion project?
How long does the entire process take from first inquiry to construction start?
Do I need to work with a specific lender for RCFi?
Next Steps
If you’re planning a multi-unit rental development in Canada, RCFi should be part of your capital structure analysis. The program offers construction-period savings that can make the difference between a project that works and one that doesn’t.
The first step is understanding whether your project concept aligns with RCFi requirements. A broker experienced with CMHC programs can assess your project’s eligibility, help structure your application, and connect you with the right approved lenders. Compare RCFi construction draws with MLI Select permanent takeout at the CMHC MLI hub, model permanent sizing with the MLI max loan calculator, and review real development case studies before you price land.
Book a Strategy Call to Discuss Your Development Financing
Aviso legal: LendCity Mortgages es una correduría hipotecaria autorizada. El contenido de esta página es solo para fines educativos y no constituye asesoramiento legal, fiscal, de inversión, en valores ni de planificación financiera. Las tasas, primas, términos del programa y regulaciones mencionados están vigentes a la fecha de la última actualización de la página y están sujetos a cambios. Cualquier rendimiento de inversión, ingreso por alquiler, ahorro fiscal o cifras de estudios de caso mostradas son solo ilustrativas — no están garantizadas, no son representativas y los resultados individuales variarán. Consulte a un abogado, a un contador profesional colegiado (CPA) o a un distribuidor registrado antes de actuar con base en cualquier información de esta página. Editorial standards.
Escrito por
Scott Dillingham
Publicado
9 de junio de 2026
Tiempo de lectura
13 min de lectura
CMHC
CMHC (Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation) es una corporación de la Corona federal que proporciona seguro de préstamos hipotecarios a los prestamistas cuando los prestatarios tienen menos del 20% de pago inicial, lo que permite a los canadienses comprar viviendas con tan solo el 5% de pago inicial. Para los inversores inmobiliarios, el seguro de CMHC está disponible en propiedades ocupadas por sus propietarios de hasta cuatro unidades, pero generalmente no está disponible para propiedades de inversión no ocupadas por sus propietarios, lo que significa que los inversores suelen necesitar al menos el 20% de pago inicial y deben buscar financiación convencional.
DSCR
Ratio de Cobertura del Servicio de la Deuda - una métrica que compara el ingreso operativo neto de una propiedad con sus pagos de hipoteca. Un DSCR de 1.25 significa que la propiedad genera un 25% más de ingresos de los necesarios para cubrir la deuda. Los prestamistas suelen requerir un DSCR mínimo de 1.0 a 1.25 para préstamos de propiedades de inversión.
CMHC MLI Select
Un programa de CMHC que ofrece primas de seguro hipotecario reducidas y amortización extendida (hasta 50 años) para propiedades multifamiliares con 5 o más unidades que cumplen con los estándares de eficiencia energética o accesibilidad. Popular entre los inversores que escalan a edificios de apartamentos más grandes.
Pase el cursor sobre los términos para ver las definiciones. Consulte el glosario completo para todos los términos.