Developer Construction Financing in Canada
Construction Financing for Commercial Real Estate
Developer construction financing in Canada is a specialized form of commercial real estate lending used to fund ground-up builds, major conversions, and speculative development projects. It is designed for real estate developers, investors, and builder-operators who are undertaking projects intended for resale, rental income, or commercial occupancy.

Developer Construction Financing in Canada
Construction financing for developers is assessed based on the project’s viability, the development team’s experience, and the projected value of the completed asset. Cedar Commercial arranges commercial construction loans Canada-wide, working with chartered banks, credit unions, CMHC, and alternative lenders that are active in this segment of the market.
What Developer Construction Financing Is
Developer construction financing is a draw-based loan facility that advances funds progressively as a project moves through verified construction milestones. Unlike a conventional mortgage, which is secured against an existing income-producing property, a construction loan is secured against a project in progress. The lender releases funds in stages as construction advances, confirmed by an independent inspector or quantity surveyor before each draw.
During the construction period, borrowers pay interest only on the amount drawn to date. Because the full loan is not advanced on day one, interest costs are lower in the early stages and increase as the project progresses. This structure preserves developer cash flow during the period when the asset is not yet generating revenue.
Construction loan terms in Canada typically range from 12 to 36 months, depending on project size and complexity. The expectation from the outset is that the construction facility will be repaid upon project completion, either through a term mortgage on the completed stabilized asset or, in the case of a for-sale development, through sales proceeds. Lenders will require a credible and well-supported exit strategy before advancing funds.
Loan-to-cost ratios for commercial construction loans in Canada typically range from 65 to 75 percent of total project costs. Lenders may also apply a loan-to-value test against the projected completed value, and the more conservative of the two calculations will govern the maximum loan amount.
Types of Projects We Finance
Real estate development financing in Canada covers a broad range of project types across asset classes and markets. The following are the most common categories we arrange construction financing for.
Multi-Family Residential Developments
Purpose-built rental apartment buildings, condominium developments, and stacked townhouse projects across urban and suburban markets. Multi-family construction is one of the most active segments for construction financing for developers in Canada, and a wide range of lenders are familiar with underwriting these projects. CMHC-insured construction financing is available for qualifying rental apartment developments and can offer materially better terms than conventional alternatives.
Mixed-Use Projects
Developments combining residential units with ground-floor retail, office, or hospitality components. Mixed-use projects require lenders who understand the different income streams, leasing structures, and stabilization timelines involved. The financing structure for a mixed-use build often needs to account for these differences across the project’s various components.
Commercial Buildings
Office buildings, retail centres, industrial facilities, and hospitality developments built for investment or owner-occupancy. Commercial construction loans for these asset types are assessed against the projected net operating income of the completed building, the strength of any pre-leasing, and the developer’s track record in delivering and managing comparable assets.
Land Development and Speculative Construction
Speculative construction financing Canada covers projects built without committed end buyers or tenants in place, where the developer is taking a position on absorption, market pricing, or lease-up velocity. Land development financing covers the servicing, subdivision, and preparation of raw land for construction. Both categories involve higher risk than pre-sold or pre-leased projects and are assessed accordingly, with lender appetite varying significantly by market and asset type.
Construction Financing Options
Traditional Construction Loans
Conventional construction loans from chartered banks and credit unions are available for developers with strong project fundamentals and a demonstrable track record. These facilities are structured as interest-only draw loans with floating rates, typically priced at prime plus a spread, and are governed by a draw schedule tied to construction milestones. Loan-to-cost ranges from 65 to 75 percent on most conventional deals. Terms range from 12 to 36 months with the expectation of a conventional term mortgage takeout upon stabilization.
CMHC-Insured Construction Financing
CMHC’s Rental Construction Financing Initiative provides insured construction and permanent financing for purpose-built rental apartment developments that meet program eligibility criteria. CMHC-insured construction financing offers lower interest rates, higher loan-to-cost ratios, and the ability to roll the construction facility into a long-term insured mortgage upon stabilization. The trade-off is a more detailed application process, longer timelines, and compliance requirements that need to be built into the project plan from the outset. For qualifying multi-family rental projects, CMHC financing is often the most cost-effective structure available.
Mezzanine and Structured Financing
Mezzanine financing fills the gap between the senior construction loan and the developer’s equity position. It is typically used when the senior loan does not provide sufficient proceeds to complete the project without injecting more equity than the developer prefers to commit. Mezzanine capital sits behind the senior lender in the capital stack, carries a higher interest rate reflecting the increased risk, and is secured through a second charge or equity pledge. Structured financing solutions combining senior debt, mezzanine, and in some cases preferred equity are more common on larger or more complex development projects.
Who This Financing Is For
Construction financing for developers in Canada is suited to three primary borrower profiles. Each brings different project structures, equity positions, and lender requirements.
Real Estate Developers
Developers building projects for resale, income, or long-term hold. This includes condominium developers, purpose-built rental developers, industrial developers, and commercial builders. Lenders assess the developer’s track record on comparable projects, the strength of the project’s approvals and design, and the realism of the development proforma. Experienced developers with a history of on-time, on-budget delivery will access better pricing and terms than first-time developers, though both can be accommodated with the right project fundamentals.
Investors and Joint Ventures
Investors financing construction projects alongside or independent of an operating developer. Joint venture structures, where one party provides capital and another provides development management, are common in larger projects and require financing structures that account for the respective roles and risk exposures of each party. Lenders will assess both the financial strength of the capital partner and the development experience of the operating partner.
Builder-Operators
Companies that both build and operate the completed asset, such as purpose-built rental operators, industrial owner-occupiers, hotel developers, and senior living operators. For builder-operators, the construction loan is typically structured with a planned takeout to permanent financing on the completed, stabilized asset. The permanent financing terms will be influenced by the projected operating performance of the completed building, and lenders benefit from understanding both the construction and stabilized phases of the deal at the outset.
Key Lending Considerations
Commercial construction loans in Canada are assessed against a more demanding set of criteria than conventional commercial mortgages. Lenders are funding a project that does not yet exist, and their risk exposure evolves throughout the construction period. The following factors carry the most weight in the underwriting process.
Project Feasibility and Approvals
Lenders want to see that the project has received, or is well-positioned to receive, the necessary municipal permits and development approvals. Projects still in early planning stages without approved drawings or permits carry more uncertainty and are harder to finance at competitive terms. A fully permitted project with a fixed-price construction contract and a qualified general contractor presents a materially different risk profile than a project in the pre-approval stage.
Pre-Sales and Lease-Up Expectations
For condominium and for-sale developments, pre-sale thresholds are a standard lending requirement. Most lenders want to see meaningful pre-sales, often in the range of 50 to 70 percent of units, before advancing construction funds. This reduces the lender’s exposure to absorption risk. For rental and commercial projects, lenders assess the realism of the lease-up projections in the proforma and may require pre-leasing commitments before advancing the full loan amount.
Developer Experience
The track record of the development team is one of the most consistently weighted factors in construction loan underwriting. Lenders want evidence that the borrower has successfully completed projects of comparable scale, complexity, and asset class. A first-time developer or a team moving into an unfamiliar asset class will typically face higher equity requirements and more conservative loan terms than an experienced team with a demonstrated history.
Loan-to-Cost and Loan-to-Value
Loan-to-cost is calculated against the total approved project budget, including land, hard costs, soft costs, financing costs, and contingency reserves. Loan-to-value is calculated against the projected completed value as determined by an independent appraisal. Lenders apply both tests and advance the lesser of the two. A well-prepared project budget with realistic contingency reserves, typically five to ten percent of hard costs, and a credible completed value appraisal will support a stronger financing outcome than a budget that appears optimistic or underestimated.
Why Work With a Commercial Mortgage Broker
Developer construction financing is not a commodity product. Lenders vary considerably in their appetite for different asset classes, project sizes, markets, and borrower profiles. Some lenders are active in multi-family rental construction but not in speculative commercial. Others have the capacity for large urban projects but a limited appetite for suburban or secondary market developments. Rates, advance rates, draw structures, and covenant requirements differ across the lender market in ways that are not always visible to borrowers approaching lenders directly.
An experienced commercial mortgage broker brings current knowledge of which lenders are actively quoting construction facilities, what their credit appetite looks like at a given point in time, and how to present a transaction in the format that a specific lender will receive most favourably. This matters particularly in a market where lender appetite can shift with credit conditions, interest rate movements, or changes in regulatory policy.
Structuring the loan request correctly from the outset also has a direct impact on outcome. A construction loan application that includes a well-prepared proforma, a credible cost budget, a qualified contractor package, and a clearly articulated exit strategy will move through the approval process more efficiently and attract better terms than one assembled without that discipline.
Cedar Commercial works with capital sources across chartered banks, credit unions, CMHC, and alternative lenders active in developer construction financing across British Columbia, Alberta, and Ontario. We know which lenders are suited to which projects, and we structure transactions to give them the best opportunity to proceed.
Get Construction Financing for Your Project
If you are planning a ground-up development, a major conversion, or a speculative construction project in Canada, Cedar Commercial can review your project and outline realistic financing options.
We arrange commercial construction loans across multi-family residential, mixed-use, commercial, and industrial asset classes. We work with developers, investors, and builder-operators at all stages of the project cycle, from early feasibility through to construction draw management and permanent financing takeout.
Reach out to schedule a no-obligation consultation. We will review your project, identify the right lenders for your asset class and market, and provide clear guidance on how to proceed.
At a Glance
- Loan-to-Cost: Up to 75% of total project costs
- Loan-to-Value: Up to 75% of completed value
- Mortgage Amounts: $100,000 to $100 million
- Interest Structure: Floating rate, interest-only on amounts drawn
- Term: 12 to 36 months
- Rate Estimate: Prime + 1% to 2% (conventional stabilized projects)
- Provinces Served: British Columbia, Alberta, Ontario
What is the difference between loan-to-cost and loan-to-value in construction financing — and which one determines my loan amount?
Construction lenders apply two distinct tests when sizing a loan, and understanding both is essential for accurately forecasting how much financing you can access. The lower of the two calculations governs — whichever test produces the smaller loan amount is the binding constraint.
Loan-to-Cost (LTC)
LTC measures the loan amount as a percentage of the total project cost — the sum of every dollar invested in the project, including land, hard construction costs, soft costs, financing costs, and contingency. Most lenders advance 65 to 75 percent of total project cost.
Example: Total project cost of $8,000,000 × 70% LTC = maximum loan of $5,600,000. The borrower must contribute the remaining $2,400,000 in equity.
LTC is the primary sizing tool in early-stage underwriting because the total cost is known before the project is built. It ties the lender’s exposure directly to actual investment in the project.
Loan-to-Value (LTV) — As-Complete
LTV measures the loan amount as a percentage of the projected completed value of the finished project — what the property will be worth once built and stabilised, as estimated by an independent appraiser. Most lenders apply a test of 65 to 75 percent of the appraised value.
Example: As-complete appraised value of $9,500,000 × 70% LTV = maximum loan of $6,650,000. In this case, LTC is the binding constraint at $5,600,000.
In practice, the two tests interact in ways that matter for project planning. A development project in a strong market — where the as-complete value significantly exceeds total cost — will typically be LTC-constrained, meaning the borrower’s equity requirement is set by the cost of building the project. A project in a compressed or uncertain market — where projected value is close to or below total cost — may become LTV-constrained, meaning the appraiser’s view of completed value limits what the lender will advance, regardless of how efficiently the project is built.
For developers planning a project budget, running both calculations before approaching a lender gives a realistic picture of the equity required, avoiding surprises during the underwriting process.
LTV ensures the loan does not exceed a prudent percentage of the collateral value, protecting the lender if the market shifts or the project is realised below its projected cost.
What should a construction project budget include — what do lenders actually want to see?
A construction project budget is one of the most scrutinised documents in a construction loan application. Lenders use it to size the loan, calibrate the draw schedule, and assess whether the project is financially viable. A budget that is incomplete, internally inconsistent, or missing standard cost categories signals inexperience and directly affects how lenders view the application.
A complete construction project budget for a commercial development in Canada is structured around three main categories:
Hard Costs
- Site preparation, demolition, and earthworks $480,000
- Foundation and structural work $1,850,000
- Building envelope (exterior walls, roofing, windows) $1,420,000
- Mechanical, electrical, and plumbing systems $1,680,000
- Interior finishes and fit-out $920,000
- Site works, landscaping, and parking $350,000
- Total Hard Costs $6,700,000
Soft Costs
- Architectural and engineering fees- $420,000
- Municipal permits, development charges, and levies – $310,000
- Legal and title costs – $95,000
- Project management and construction oversight – $200,000
- Marketing, leasing, or sales costs – $130,000
Total Soft Costs $1,155,000
Financing and Carrying Costs
- Construction loan interest (interest reserve)$480,000
- Lender and broker fees$165,000
Contingency
- Hard cost contingency (7.5% of hard costs)$502,500
What is an interest reserve in a construction loan and how does it work?
An interest reserve is a portion of the approved construction loan set aside to cover interest payments during the construction period. Rather than requiring the borrower to service the loan with external cash flow during months when the project generates no revenue, the lender pre-approves a budget for interest costs and automatically draws from it as interest accrues on the outstanding loan balance.
It works as follows. At the time of loan approval, the lender and borrower agree on an interest reserve amount — calculated based on the projected draw schedule, the loan’s floating rate, and the expected construction timeline. This reserve is built into the total approved loan amount, not funded separately. As each draw advances and the loan balance grows, interest accrues on the drawn balance. That interest is deducted from the reserve rather than requiring a cash payment from the borrower.
How the reserve is calculated
The interest reserve is modelled against the projected draw schedule. On a project where draws increase steadily over 18 months at a rate of prime plus 1.75%, the average outstanding balance over the construction period — weighted for when each draw occurs — drives the total interest cost. Lenders typically add a buffer to the calculated reserve to account for rate movements or timeline slippage.
Simple illustration: On a $6M construction loan drawn evenly over 18 months at 8% all-in, the average outstanding balance is approximately $3M. Interest cost ≈ $3M × 8% × 1.5 years = $360,000 interest reserve.
What happens if the reserve runs out
If the construction period extends beyond the projected timeline or if interest rates increase materially above the reserve assumption, the interest reserve can be depleted before the project reaches completion. When that happens, the borrower must fund interest payments from external sources — or negotiate an increase to the reserve, which requires lender approval and may require additional equity.
This is one of the most common sources of cash flow stress on construction projects. Modelling the interest reserve against a downside timeline — six months longer than the base case — is prudent planning before any loan is advanced.
Not all construction loans include a built-in interest reserve. Some lenders advance the interest reserve as part of the total loan facility; others require the borrower to service interest from their own cash during construction. This structural difference affects the borrower’s equity requirement and cash flow planning significantly, and it is one of the key variables to compare when evaluating competing construction loan term sheets.
What are construction holdbacks and how does provincial lien legislation affect my cash flow in Canada?
A construction holdback is a mandatory retention of a percentage of each draw advance — typically 10 percent — that the lender holds back until the statutory lien period under provincial construction or builders’ lien legislation has expired. The holdback exists to protect subcontractors, suppliers, and other parties who have contributed labour or materials to the project and have the right to file a lien against the property if they are not paid.
The holdback is not a fee. It is the borrower’s money — held in trust by the lender until the lien exposure is cleared. Once the lien period closes and the lender is satisfied that no valid liens have been filed, the holdback is released to the borrower. The timing of that release, and the specific legislative requirements that govern it, vary by province.
| Province | Governing Legislation | Holdback Rate | Basic Lien Period |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ontario | Construction Act | 10% | 60 days from publication of Certificate of Substantial Performance, or 45 days from last supply |
| British Columbia | Builders Lien Act | 10% | 45 days from completion, abandonment, or last supply |
| Alberta | Builders’ Lien Act (NOLA) | 10% | 45 days from completion, abandonment, or last supply |
The practical cash flow impact is significant on larger projects. On a $6 million construction loan with a 10 percent holdback, up to $600,000 of approved loan funds are withheld from the borrower at any given time during construction. The borrower and their general contractor must plan for this gap — subcontractors will expect payment from the GC for completed work, and if the GC has not accounted for the holdback lag in their own cash flow, payment disputes can arise that create project delays.
Key points for borrowers:
- The holdback applies to each draw individually — it is not calculated once at the end. On each draw advance, 10 percent is retained, and the holdback balance accumulates throughout the project.
- Substantial performance matters. In Ontario specifically, the lien period clock on the holdback starts running from the date a Certificate of Substantial Performance is published — a step that requires deliberate action by the project owner. Delays in publishing the Certificate extend the period before the holdback can be released.
- Lenders will not release the holdback until the lien period has expired and a clean title search confirms no liens are filed. Budget for the holdback release to occur 6 to 10 weeks after substantial completion — not at the same time as the final draw.
What happens if my construction project goes over budget in Canada — what are my options?
Cost overruns are one of the most common and most stressful events in commercial construction, and how they are handled depends heavily on how the loan was structured at the outset, the lender’s relationship with the borrower, and how early the overrun is identified. The earlier the problem surfaces, the more options the borrower has. Overruns discovered in the final third of a project, when draws are nearly exhausted and leverage to renegotiate is limited, are the most difficult to resolve.
Option 1 — Borrower Equity Injection
The most straightforward resolution. The borrower funds the overrun from their own capital — cash reserves, equity in other assets, or available credit — without requiring any change to the construction loan. This is why lenders value borrower liquidity and net worth as part of underwriting: sponsors who can absorb a 10 to 15 percent cost overrun independently represent a substantially lower risk than those who cannot.
Option 2 — Loan Increase (Cost Overrun Facility)
Some construction loans include a pre-approved cost overrun facility — a separate tranche of financing available if costs exceed the approved budget by a defined threshold, typically five to ten percent. Lenders who offer this structure will have assessed the as-complete value to confirm headroom exists. This must be negotiated into the original facility — it cannot typically be added after the fact.
Option 3 — Supplemental Private or Mezzanine Financing
If the primary lender cannot or will not increase the facility, and the borrower’s own capital is insufficient, additional capital can be raised from private lenders or mezzanine providers. These sources move faster than institutional lenders and can step in to fund overruns. The cost of this capital is higher, and its availability depends on the lender holding the first mortgage being agreeable to junior financing, not always guaranteed.
What happens if overruns go unaddressed
If a borrower cannot fund an overrun and the approved loan is exhausted before the project is complete, the lender will typically stop advancing funds. An incomplete building is illiquid collateral — difficult to sell, often impossible to refinance, and generating no income. This scenario is the most severe outcome of an underfunded project, and it is why lenders require meaningful contingency reserves and why pre-funding that contingency realistically in the budget is not optional.
The most effective protection against overrun exposure is budget discipline at the start. Engage a quantity surveyor to independently validate hard cost estimates before submitting the application. Fund a contingency of at least seven to ten percent of hard costs — not as a line item that lenders can choose to exclude, but as a genuine reserve the borrower understands they may need. And structure the loan with enough flexibility — through an overrun facility or committed borrower liquidity — to absorb variance without triggering a funding crisis.
What is take-out financing and how do I plan for it from the start of a construction project?
Take-out financing is the term loan or permanent mortgage that replaces the construction loan once the project reaches completion and stabilisation. Construction loans are short-term instruments — typically 12 to 36 months — and they are explicitly not designed to be held long-term. The take-out is the lender’s exit from the construction exposure, and demonstrating a credible path to take-out financing is a prerequisite for most institutional construction lenders before they will advance a single dollar.
The type of take-out financing depends on the project type:
Multi-Family Rental
CMHC-insured financing through the MLI Select program is the most common and most favourable take-out for eligible multi-family rental developments. The CMHC take-out can be committed at the construction stage — providing the developer with certainty on the permanent financing before the project is built. Cedar Commercial arranges both the construction facility and the CMHC take-out in coordinated sequence.
Income-Producing Commercial
Conventional institutional term financing — from a bank, credit union, or life company — is the standard take-out for stabilised industrial, retail, office, or mixed-use assets. The construction lender will want to see a commitment letter or a strong preliminary indication from a term lender before or shortly after advancing the construction loan.
For-Sale Developments
Condominium, freehold, or land subdivision projects typically repay the construction loan through sales proceeds rather than a term mortgage. Lenders assess pre-sales coverage — the percentage of units sold under binding purchase contracts — as the primary take-out indicator. Most lenders require a minimum pre-sale threshold (often 60 to 80 percent of units) before advancing construction funds.
Planning take-out financing from day one means understanding three things before the construction loan is committed. First, what are the qualifying criteria for the intended take-out at stabilisation — the DSCR, occupancy rate, income level, or pre-sale percentage the project must achieve before term financing is available? Second, what is the realistic timeline from construction completion to stabilisation — and is the construction loan term long enough to cover both phases? Third, if stabilisation takes longer than planned, what bridge financing is available to extend the construction loan while the take-out is arranged?
Can a first-time developer get construction financing in Canada — and what does it take?
Yes, but with more significant conditions than an experienced developer would face, and with a realistic understanding of what lenders require to get comfortable with an untested sponsor. First-time developers are not automatically disqualified from construction financing in Canada. What they cannot access is the full flexibility, leverage, and pricing that a proven developer with a track record commands. The gap between a first project and a third or fourth is real, and the path through it requires preparation.
What lenders look for in a first-time developer application, in lieu of a project track record:
- A credible general contractor with a strong track record on comparable projects. The GC’s experience partially substitutes for the developer’s. A first-time developer working with a well-regarded GC who has completed five similar projects reduces the lender’s execution risk considerably. This is often the single most important compensating factor.
- Higher equity contribution. First-time developers can expect lenders to advance at a lower loan-to-cost ratio — typically 60 to 65 percent rather than the 70 to 75 percent available to experienced sponsors. The additional equity requirement reflects the lender’s view of the increased execution risk and acts as a larger financial cushion if the project encounters problems.
- Strong borrower financial position. Net worth, liquidity, and the capacity to absorb cost overruns without depending on the lender to rescue the project are critical. A first-time developer who can demonstrate that they have the financial depth to weather a 15 percent cost overrun from their own resources is in a fundamentally better position than one whose equity is fully committed to the project.
- A simpler, less complex first project. A single-phase, single-asset, single-use development in an established market is a more fundable first project than a mixed-use multi-phase development in an emerging market. Scope complexity compounds execution risk, and lenders adjust their appetite accordingly.
- A well-prepared, complete application package. A first-time developer who arrives with a full quantity surveyor’s cost estimate, a signed general contract, a completed appraisal, and a clear take-out strategy is demonstrating the professional competence that compensates for the absence of a track record. An incomplete or poorly prepared application signals the opposite.
- An experienced project manager or co-sponsor. Some first-time developers bring in an experienced co-sponsor — a partner or advisor with a relevant track record — to satisfy the lender’s sponsor experience requirement while retaining the development economics. This is a legitimate and commonly used structure for the first project.
What documents do I need to apply for construction financing in Canada?
Construction financing applications are more documentation-intensive than conventional commercial mortgage applications because the lender is underwriting a project that does not yet exist. Every document in the package serves a specific underwriting purpose, and a complete, well-organised submission is the single most effective way to accelerate the approval process and demonstrate sponsor credibility.
Project Documents
- Architectural drawings and specifications — current design drawings sufficient to confirm scope, scale, and market appropriateness
- Municipal permits and approvals — building permit, rezoning approval, development permit as applicable; or a clear path to these if not yet issued
- Construction contract — signed agreement with the general contractor, including scope, fixed price or GMP, and schedule; or a detailed tender and contractor shortlist if contract is not yet executed
- Quantity surveyor report — independent cost estimate validating the project budget; required by most institutional lenders above $3M
- Project budget — detailed line-item budget covering all hard costs, soft costs, financing costs, and contingency
- Construction schedule — milestone timeline with start and projected completion dates
- Appraisal — as-complete and, for income properties, as-stabilised appraisal from a qualified commercial appraiser
Property and Market Documents
- Land ownership documents — title search and existing encumbrances; confirmation of unencumbered equity if land is already owned
- Phase I Environmental Site Assessment — required on most projects; Phase II if Phase I identifies concerns
- Market study or feasibility analysis — third-party demand analysis supporting projected rents or sale prices; required for larger or complex projects
- Pro forma financial model — projected income and expenses at stabilisation, DSCR calculation, and return metrics
- Pre-sales evidence — signed purchase contracts for for-sale projects; pre-leasing evidence or letters of intent for commercial income projects
Borrower / Sponsor Documents
- Personal and corporate financial statements (2–3 years)
- Personal net worth statement
- Tax returns — personal and corporate (2–3 years)
- Developer bio or track record summary — previous projects with scope, cost, completion date, and outcome
- Corporate structure chart — ownership and entity relationships
- Evidence of equity contribution — confirmation of funds available to meet the equity requirement
Take-Out Financing Evidence
- Pre-application or preliminary commitment from the intended term lender
- CMHC eligibility assessment or pre-screening for multi-family rental projects
- Pre-sales summary and purchase contract schedule for condominium projects
- Evidence of refinancing capacity at stabilisation based on projected NOI and current market lending criteria
Not every document is required at initial application — lenders will typically issue a term sheet based on a preliminary package and then request a complete file for full credit approval. A commercial mortgage broker prepares the application in the format and sequence that each specific lender expects, which reduces the back-and-forth that slows approval timelines and signals to lenders that the project is being managed professionally.
What is the difference between construction financing and a commercial renovation loan in Canada?
The distinction matters because the two products are structured differently, underwritten differently, and draw on different lender appetites. Using the wrong framing when approaching a lender — presenting a renovation as construction, or vice versa — can result in misaligned expectations and a slower or unsuccessful approval process.
| Feature | Construction Financing | Commercial Renovation Loan |
|---|---|---|
| Project scope | Ground-up build, full conversion, or substantial redevelopment where the asset is fundamentally changed or newly created | Improvements to an existing operating asset — capital repairs, suite upgrades, system replacements, or partial fit-outs |
| Property income during work | None — the property generates no revenue during the construction period | Often partial — renovation projects on occupied buildings may generate rental income while some areas are under improvement |
| Loan structure | Full draw-based facility with interest reserve, holdback, and QS oversight | Can be structured as a term loan, line of credit, or a simpler draw facility depending on project scope |
| Security basis | First mortgage on land and improvements; as-complete value governs sizing | First or second mortgage on the existing property; current value plus improvement value governs sizing |
| Lender requirements | Full construction documentation — drawings, permits, QS report, GC contract, take-out evidence | Scope of work, contractor quotes, and property financial statements; less intensive than full construction underwriting |
| Typical cost threshold | Generally applicable when renovation costs exceed 50–70% of existing property value, or when the property must be vacated to complete the work | Generally applied to improvement budgets below that threshold on operating properties |
In practice, the line between a significant renovation and a construction project is not always obvious, and lenders apply their own criteria. A full gut renovation of a vacant commercial building — where the structure is retained but everything inside is replaced — may be underwritten as construction financing by some lenders and as a renovation loan by others, depending on scope and cost relative to property value.
For borrowers planning significant capital improvements on an existing commercial property, the most useful first step is describing the project scope accurately and letting the lender or broker determine which product structure fits. Accurately framing the project — rather than trying to fit it into a product category — produces better results in lender conversations and avoids misaligned expectations about documentation, timeline, and advance rates.
