Alberta Farm Loan Program

 
   
 
Program Information
 
 
 

Agency:

AFSC

For Further Information Contact:

Web: http://www.afsc.ca/Default.aspx?cid=3-17-94
 
Eligibility
This loan is available to Canadian citizens or landed immigrants who meet Alberta residency requirements and who are primary agriculture producers.
 
 

 
Program Details
 
 
  Loan Uses
You can use the AFLP loan to purchase equipment, land, machinery, breeding livestock, production quota, and shares in a farming company. You can make permanent improvements to land, complete repairs, and renovate or construct buildings, including livestock facilities, barns, and housing. AFLP loans can also be used to assist with financial restructuring, restoring working capital or investing in a Value Added Agribusiness, but not for operating loans or feeder loans.


Maximum Loan Amounts

Contact your local AFSC office for details.

Repayment and Interest Rates
Our repayment options offer you a choice of various reasonable fixed and renewable rates and terms, for a maximum period of 20 years. The interest rate can be fixed over the entire life of the loan, ensuring long-term stability and the ability to manage cash flow risk. AFLP loans can be prepaid or paid out in full at any time without penalty.


Beginning Farmer Incentive

A unique feature of the AFLP is the Beginning Farmer Incentive (BFI). This incentive offers an interest rate reduction of 1.5% for the first five years of the loan and is available to any qualifying individual with a net worth of $500,000 or less at the time of application. The maximum lifetime loan amount that can receive an incentive is $500,000 per individual. The maximum includes all previous, existing, and concurrent AFSC borrowings. A couple, applying jointly, could receive the BFI on qualifying loans up to $1 million, provided both have an
individual net worth of $500,000 or less at the time of application.

For more information, contact your nearest AFSC Lending Office.   To find the office location closest to you, please click on this link.

 
 
 
  For more information about the content of this document, contact Ag-Info Centre.

Last Reviewed/Revised on November 1, 2007.