A Mortgage Insurance Product, Not a Loan
Prefab Plus is mortgage loan insurance, not a mortgage. CMHC underwrites the insurance, but the actual loan still comes from a participating lender. That distinction matters because product availability — and willingness to sign off on staged draws for a prefab build — varies by lender. Pre-approval at one bank does not guarantee Prefab Plus participation at another, or even at the same one.
The basic terms map cleanly onto familiar high-ratio mortgage mechanics. For owner-occupied properties with one or two units, the product supports up to 95% loan-to-value, with minimum borrower equity of 5% on the first $500,000 of lending value and 10% above that. The maximum purchase price or as-improved property value is capped at $1.5 million, and the standard amortization is 25 years, as detailed on CMHC's Prefab Plus product page. For three- and four-unit owner-occupied properties, the LTV ceiling drops to 90% with 10% minimum equity. Eligible borrowers are Canadian citizens, permanent residents, and non-permanent residents legally authorized to work in Canada, subject to standard underwriting on credit, debt-service ratios, and income.
The property must be in Canada, suitable for full-time, year-round occupancy, and have year-round vehicular access — including a bridge or ferry connection if it sits on an island. Permanently affixed homes are secured under a traditional mortgage; movable factory-built units are eligible under CMHC's chattel financing. For a wider primer on how Canadian codes treat prefab and manufactured construction beyond the financing layer, our hub on modular, prefab, and manufactured homes in Canada walks through the regulatory and performance context.
Where the New Product Differs From What Existed Before
The closest prior comparable was a self-build construction draw mortgage. Those products have existed for years, but they were designed around stick-built timelines, not factory ones. A prefab build inverts the cash-flow profile. A large factory invoice often arrives weeks before the unit is set on its foundation, while site prep, foundation, and utility connections happen in parallel rather than sequence. Owners frequently had to cover that factory payment from cash or a HELOC, then refinance once the build was complete.
Prefab Plus is built around that reality. The advance structure mirrors the actual prefab workflow: land and site preparation come first, then the prefabricated unit cost on delivery, then post-installation and finishing draws. Up to four consecutive advances are available, validated either by CMHC under what the program calls Full Service or by the lender under Basic Service.