
Financial requirements
What is it?
The Mortgage Commitment and/or CMHC Certificate of Insurance (COI) states that the lender may request financial updates from the Borrower annually or when necessary. The First National Mortgage Commitment Letter mandates annual Financial reporting within 120 days of the corporate fiscal year end. If the Borrower is an individual, reporting is mandated each calendar year.
The specific required documents include:
- Financial Statements from the Borrower and the Guarantor(s):
- Balance Sheet and supporting schedules
- Detailed statement of Income and Expenditures
- Statement of Change in Cash Flow
- Net Worth Statements in the case of an individual Borrower or Guarantor
- Operating Statements relating to the property, including:
- Detailed statement of Income
- Expenditures and supporting schedules
- Current Rent Roll for the property
In addition to the statements above:
- Confirmation that there has been no change of control, amalgamation, merger, reorganization or change of name
- Confirmation that no further encumbrances have been registered against the property
Why is it important?
The financial requirements help to ensure that:
- Guarantors have filed taxes and are up to date on filing
- The lender has visibility into properties that the borrower may have with other lenders that are approaching renewal
- Nursing Homes/LTC facilities have been inspected and have up to date licenses
View our other mortgage servicing areas
Undertaking
Insurance requirements
Property tax
Payments, pre-payments and banking changes
Mortgage information

Your commitment letter
The commitment is a contract between First National and the Borrower. First National uses this commitment as the source for all decision making throughout the duration of the mortgage amortization period. The commitment covers everything from payment type (fixed, floating, amortizing, interest only), pre-payment parameters, insurance requirements, type of annual review documents to be collected, undertaking requirements, etc.
Why is it important?
It is important to note that the commitment is attached to the mortgage (rather than the borrower) for the entire amortization period.
- If the loan is assumed the current Borrower is replaced by the Purchaser of the property.
- If the loan is renewed the terms and conditions of the commitment are extended for a new term in accordance with the renewal agreement.
- If the loan is refinanced the terms of the existing commitment is discharged and new terms are registered with the mortgage.