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With over 300,000 new residents arriving to Canada (and about 400,000 expected on an annual basis for the next 2-4 years), Canada's banks have been continuously altering and modifying their lending guidelines to accommodate for immigrant-friendly mortgage qualification programs. Today, I want to talk about mortgage qualification for temporary residents, particularly for work permit holders.
What is a Temporary Resident?
Directly from the Government of Canada's website:
"A temporary resident is a foreign national who is legally authorized to enter Canada for temporary purposes. A foreign national has temporary resident status when they have been found to meet the requirements of the legislation to enter and/or remain in Canada as a visitor, student, worker or temporary resident permit holder. Only foreign nationals physically in Canada hold temporary resident status."
So basically, a Temporary Resident is the first step to becoming a Canadian Citizen...but also, it could simply just be a temporary stay in Canada with special privileges to either work, study or live for an extended and/or temporary amount of time. If you eventually intend to become a Canadian citizen, the next step is to apply for your Permanent Residence card, and then finally, after fulfilling a few game-show-like criteria you eventually become an official Canadian citizen! In a best case scenario it could take you 1,095 days (3 years) to become a Canadian citizen as they graduate from Temporary Resident to Permanent Resident, and finally Canadian citizenship.
However, when it comes to purchasing a property, Temporary Residence status is all you need...that means as long as you have a work permit, and have been employed for at least 3 months, you are eligible to qualify for a mortgage to purchase a home.
Here are the key requirements for the Temporary Resident Mortgage program:
And that's it, the true essence of the Temporary Resident program is simply the exception granted to the newcomer when it comes to creditworthiness guidelines...the newcomer gets a bit of a break here in that other sources are looked upon to demonstrate credit worthiness rather than the typical credit cards, lines of credits and car loan type of verification documents. But as far as the rest of the mortgage qualifying criteria goes (debt servicing ratios, minimum down payment requirements, income confirmation and so on), the Temporary Resident is pretty much on the same playing field as a Canadian citizen is when it comes to qualifying for a mortgage. But, it is definitely in the newcomers best interest to acquire Canadian credit products as soon as possible because if the 5 year eligibility period passes (for the Temporary Resident mortgage program), lenders will be far more demanding and less likely to grant the applicant an exception as they would then deem the applicant on par with a standard Canadian citizen applicant, therefore, they would expect the minimum credit requirement standard that all Canadian citizen applicants are bound by (2 credit facilities with $2,000 limits for a minimum of 2 years)
**For more information, Click Here to be redirected to the Government of Canada's Immigration and Citizenship guidelines and procedures.
604-800-9593 direct Vancouver
403-606-3751 direct Calgary
markogelo.com
@markogelo (Twitter)
MarkoMusic (SoundCloud Account)...all podcast music tracks are performed and produced by Marko
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By Mortgagenomics Canada5
11 ratings
With over 300,000 new residents arriving to Canada (and about 400,000 expected on an annual basis for the next 2-4 years), Canada's banks have been continuously altering and modifying their lending guidelines to accommodate for immigrant-friendly mortgage qualification programs. Today, I want to talk about mortgage qualification for temporary residents, particularly for work permit holders.
What is a Temporary Resident?
Directly from the Government of Canada's website:
"A temporary resident is a foreign national who is legally authorized to enter Canada for temporary purposes. A foreign national has temporary resident status when they have been found to meet the requirements of the legislation to enter and/or remain in Canada as a visitor, student, worker or temporary resident permit holder. Only foreign nationals physically in Canada hold temporary resident status."
So basically, a Temporary Resident is the first step to becoming a Canadian Citizen...but also, it could simply just be a temporary stay in Canada with special privileges to either work, study or live for an extended and/or temporary amount of time. If you eventually intend to become a Canadian citizen, the next step is to apply for your Permanent Residence card, and then finally, after fulfilling a few game-show-like criteria you eventually become an official Canadian citizen! In a best case scenario it could take you 1,095 days (3 years) to become a Canadian citizen as they graduate from Temporary Resident to Permanent Resident, and finally Canadian citizenship.
However, when it comes to purchasing a property, Temporary Residence status is all you need...that means as long as you have a work permit, and have been employed for at least 3 months, you are eligible to qualify for a mortgage to purchase a home.
Here are the key requirements for the Temporary Resident Mortgage program:
And that's it, the true essence of the Temporary Resident program is simply the exception granted to the newcomer when it comes to creditworthiness guidelines...the newcomer gets a bit of a break here in that other sources are looked upon to demonstrate credit worthiness rather than the typical credit cards, lines of credits and car loan type of verification documents. But as far as the rest of the mortgage qualifying criteria goes (debt servicing ratios, minimum down payment requirements, income confirmation and so on), the Temporary Resident is pretty much on the same playing field as a Canadian citizen is when it comes to qualifying for a mortgage. But, it is definitely in the newcomers best interest to acquire Canadian credit products as soon as possible because if the 5 year eligibility period passes (for the Temporary Resident mortgage program), lenders will be far more demanding and less likely to grant the applicant an exception as they would then deem the applicant on par with a standard Canadian citizen applicant, therefore, they would expect the minimum credit requirement standard that all Canadian citizen applicants are bound by (2 credit facilities with $2,000 limits for a minimum of 2 years)
**For more information, Click Here to be redirected to the Government of Canada's Immigration and Citizenship guidelines and procedures.
604-800-9593 direct Vancouver
403-606-3751 direct Calgary
markogelo.com
@markogelo (Twitter)
MarkoMusic (SoundCloud Account)...all podcast music tracks are performed and produced by Marko
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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