NHT incentive targets essential workers
PM announces lower mortgage rates for teachers, nurses, firefighters, police and soldiers
The island’s teachers, nurses, firefighters, and members of the security and defence forces are set to benefit from a special reduced mortgage interest rate from the National Housing Trust (NHT) based on their length of service.
This is part of efforts by the Government to make housing more accessible and affordable for more Jamaicans.
Prime Minister Dr Andrew Holness made the announcement on Thursday during his contribution to the 2026/27 Budget Debate.
“While we work to increase housing supply, we are also working to ensure the homes we build are accessible to the Jamaicans who need them most,” he said.
The head of Government explained that for those with five to 10 years’ service, the applicable interest rate will be reduced by one per cent and for those with service of 10 years and over, the rate will be reduced by two per cent.
Additionally, for young Jamaicans under 35, the NHT will reserve a minimum of 20 per cent of scheme units which, Holness noted, is double the previous allocation of 10 per cent. NHT will also provide an advance of up to $2 million to assist with deposit requirements for open market purchases.
“Also effective July 1, the Home Improvement Loan waiting period will be reduced from seven to five years, giving existing homeowners faster access to funds for maintenance, security, green energy upgrades, and expansion,” Holness announced.
He noted that the NHT already offers zero per cent interest loans for the lowest income bands. “But demand for mortgages is still limited because of the availability of homes in the price segment that the contributors would be able to afford”.
The prime minister cautioned that further subsidising demand only ends up increasing prices.
“We have seen this clearly every time we have increased NHT loan limits — prices rise to absorb the additional lending capacity because supply does not keep pace,” he said.
The prime minister also sought to assure that “NHT remains a solid, well capitalised public body that is not a fiscal risk to the Government”. He was responding to criticism from the Opposition about the continued annual withdrawal of $11.4 billion from the trust for budgetary support.
“The transfer has not in any way impaired the ability of the NHT to fully satisfy demand for mortgage loans, even at zero per cent interest rate,” Holness stated. He pointed out that to further improve the cash flow, under the External Financing Mortgage Programme, NHT contributors can access their NHT mortgage through approved partner institutions instead of going only through the NHT itself.
“The NHT portion of the loan attracts its usual NHT interest rate, even though the loan is processed externally,” he said.
The prime minister also asserted that Jamaica’s housing problem is not rooted in financing. “It is a supply crisis, and no amount of money sitting on the NHT’s balance sheet will build a single home without the land, the infrastructure, the approvals, and the construction capacity to put it to work,” he argued.
“What we need — urgently and at scale — is a ramping up of housing supply. And when we speak of supply at the scale Jamaica requires, we must think boldly,” Holness added.
He also announced that in commemoration of its 50th anniversary, the NHT will break ground on new state parks in Manchester and in the Kingston and St Andrew Metropolitan Area, specifically on King’s House lands. That park will primarily cater to senior citizens, providing a space where they can walk and exercise safely.
The prime minister said the decision to create public parks is to ensure Jamaicans can access “public spaces that promote health, wellness, recreation, and civic pride in the tradition of our beloved Emancipation Park”.