Terrace sits where the Skeena River cuts through northwestern British Columbia, creating something most small cities can’t claim: genuine four-season recreation that keeps people planted. While other resource towns watch their young people flee south, Terrace has figured out the retention game with Shames Mountain ski hill just 20 minutes away and the Skeena River offering world-class salmon and steelhead fishing right in town.
The numbers tell a story of stability that mortgage professionals should notice. With a median household income of $90,000 and 60% of homes being single-detached houses, Terrace has built the kind of middle-class foundation that weathers economic storms. The healthcare sector employs nearly one in five residents, providing the steady employment base that makes mortgage payments predictable.
Here’s what makes Terrace different from other northern communities: it’s become a legitimate retirement destination. The climate has warmed enough that Zone 7a gardening is now possible, and retirees from Alberta and southern BC are discovering they can afford waterfront properties here that would cost triple in Kelowna. The Terrace Aquatic Centre and extensive trail system don’t hurt the sales pitch either.
The forestry dependence that once defined this region has evolved into something more diversified. Yes, there’s still one major sawmill, but retail, construction, and education sectors have grown to create multiple income streams. When your biggest employers include the hospital, school district, and Canadian Tire, you’ve got the kind of economic mix that keeps mortgage defaults low.
For brokers working with clients who need equity-based solutions, Terrace offers the sweet spot of affordable real estate with genuine lifestyle appeal. Our 65% maximum LTV reflects confidence in a market where properties move reasonably well and values hold steady, even when commodity prices fluctuate.
The Skeena River doesn’t just provide recreation—it’s the reason Terrace exists and continues to thrive as northwestern BC’s service hub.
Mortgage Product Name | Max LTV | Key Notes for Terrace |
---|---|---|
Construction Mortgages | 65.0% | Standard product terms |
Credit Repair and Debt Consolidation | 65.0% | Standard product terms |
Variable Income | 65.0% | Standard product terms |
Bare Land and Unique Properties | 65.0% | Standard product terms |
Bridge Financing/Fully Open Term | 65.0% | Standard product terms |
Commercial | 60.0% | Standard product terms |
Development/Subdivisions | 50.0% | Standard product terms |
Equity Lending | 65.0% | Standard product terms |
Purchases | 65.0% | Standard product terms |
Maximum Loan-to-Value (LTV) for Construction Mortgages in Terrace:
65.0 %
“Wait, you’re a MIC that actually does construction?”
Here’s something that makes brokers do a double-take. Yes, we do construction mortgages. No, that’s not a typo.
But before you start sending us your client with the 580 credit score who wants to build their dream home, let’s be clear: these aren’t your typical MIC deals. We only do construction for bankable clients. People the banks would ...
Maximum Loan-to-Value (LTV) for Credit Repair and Debt Consolidation in Terrace:
65.0 %
“Their credit report reads like a horror novel, but the house was just renovated and is worth a lot…”
Here’s what happens when life takes a wrong turn. A bad business venture. Workplace Injury. That divorce that dragged on for two years. Suddenly your credit score looks like a batting average and the banks won’t even return your calls.
But here’s the thing – none of that changes what your ho...
Maximum Loan-to-Value (LTV) for Variable Income in Terrace:
65.0 %
“Their income is all over the map, but there’s definitely income…”
Here’s a funny thing about lending based on Line 15000 of your Notice of Assessment: It’s a neat little box to underwrite against. Works great if you’re a salaried employee. Not so great if you’re running a fishing charter in Campbell River where thres fishing season, and the rest of the year.
We get it. Income isn’t always ti...
Maximum Loan-to-Value (LTV) for Bare Land and Unique Properties in Terrace:
65.0 %
“The appraisal came back as ‘property type: other’…”
Here’s a truth about real estate that nobody wants to admit: not everything fits in a box. Banks have boxes. Nice, tidy boxes labeled “single family home” and “condo” and “townhouse.” Their computer systems literally don’t have a dropdown menu option for “converted church with commercial kitchen” or “geodesic dome on 40 acres.”
We’ve funded...
Maximum Loan-to-Value (LTV) for Bridge Financing/Fully Open Term in Terrace:
65.0 %
“Subjects came off their current home last week but their new place closes Friday…”
Here’s a funny thing about bridge financing: everyone thinks it’s complicated. It’s not. Someone needs to close on their new house before their old house sells. Or their sale fell through after they removed subjects on their dream home. Or they found the perfect downsizer condo but haven’t listed the family hom...
Maximum Loan-to-Value (LTV) for Commercial in Terrace:
60.0 %
“We need a commercial mortgage, but we’re in Fort St. James…”
Here’s the thing about being a MIC that lends in tiny towns: sometimes commercial comes with the territory. The general store that’s been there since 1952. The six-plex that passes for high-density housing in Vanderhoof. The campground that’s also someone’s retirement plan.
We’re not going to pretend we love commercial lending. We ...
Maximum Loan-to-Value (LTV) for Development/Subdivisions in Terrace:
50.0 %
“Got a client with subdivision dreams? Unfortunately we’ll probably say no…”
Look, we know you’ve got that client. The one with 5 acres in Kamloops who’s convinced they’re sitting on a goldmine once it’s subdivided. They’ve got the sketches. They’ve done the math. They just need a lender who “gets it.”
We get it. We just don’t do it anymore.
After 20 years of funding subdivisions across rura...
Maximum Loan-to-Value (LTV) for Equity Lending in Terrace:
65.0 %
“They have tons of equity but don’t qualify under B20…”
Here’s the thing about equity lending: it exists because banks literally can’t do it. B20 guidelines require income verification. Full stop. No wiggle room. No common sense exceptions.
We’re provincially regulated. The funds we lend on come from individual investors, not the Bank of Canada. So when your client has 50% equity but their in...
Maximum Loan-to-Value (LTV) for Purchases in Terrace:
65.0 %
Moving is supposed to be exciting. New town, new job, new chapter. So why do banks act like you’re asking for their firstborn when you need a mortgage?
“You haven’t been at your new job for thre months”
“Your self-employment income doesn’t count in a new market.”
“We need to see established a year if you are part time contract - even if you’re working 40 hours under your new role”
Meanwhile...