Site icon Connectnigeria Articles

How To Obtain A National Housing Fund (NHF) Loan

This Day Live

  The National Housing Fund (NHF) was set up in 1992 to create a funding pool for Nigerians who want to build residential houses at an affordable cost. If you’re a Nigerian and you need funding to build your own living space, you can obtain a loan for this from the NHF.
Read more about How To

How The National Housing Fund Works

This funding pool is the accumulation of contributions from employees, self-employed persons, commercial and merchant banks, insurance companies, and the government. It’s held by the Federal Government through the NHF. Each of these parties gives a fixed percentage of their funds to the program. For example, employers deduct 2.5% of each employee’s monthly salary as contributions to the NHF. These monies are remitted to the Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria (FMBN). Employers and employees alike can register for this program by filling and submitting the NHF 1 form (for employers) or NHF 2 form (employees). The NHF loans are derived from this pool of contributions.

Things You Can Use The Loan For 

You can apply for an NHF loan if you want to construct, renovate, or purchase a residential building. This loan is not granted for purposes besides these.

Eligibility

You may apply for this loan if you:
Sign up to the Connect Nigeria daily newsletter

Things You Will Need

You should have these things ready before you apply for an NHF loan:

Equity Contribution

You will be expected to contribute a percentage of the total sum (your personal stake). For a loan of ₦5 million, your equity contribution will be 10% For ₦10 million, it will be 20% For ₦15 million (the maximum loan amount), your expected equity contribution is 30%

How To Apply for an NHF Loan

Take these steps to apply for an NHF loan: If your application is deemed suitable, you will be granted the loan, subject to the bank’s terms and conditions.

Interest Rate and Tenure

The interest rate on the NHF loan does not exceed 6% per annum. The loan has a maximum repayment period of 30 years. Featured Image Source: This Day Live
Got a suggestion? Contact us: editor@connectnigeria.com
Exit mobile version