NHT July 2026 policy changes reserve housing for young adults and cut rates for first responders
The National Housing Trust will roll out a package of policy enhancements on 1 July 2026 aimed at making home ownership more accessible and affordable for Jamaicans. The measures were outlined by Dwayne Berbick, Assistant General Manager for Corporate Communications and Public Affairs, and Shara Cooper, Manager of the Admin Support Unit, as the trust marks its 50th year.
Berbick said the trust reviewed its products to stay relevant to contributors, mortgage holders, young adults, first responders, and existing homeowners who want to protect the value of properties they already own.
At least 20% of NHT housing solutions going to market will be set aside for contributors aged 20 to 35 who have not yet reached 36. Cooper said young adults in that bracket will compete only within their age group rather than against older contributors who rank higher under the Priority Index Entitlement System, which awards 20 points for each 52 weeks of contribution.
Young contributors buying on the open market may also draw up to $2 million from their overall entitlement toward a deposit. Teachers, nurses, members of the security forces, and firefighters may receive interest-rate concessions tied to years of service: a 1% reduction for up to 10 years of service and 2% for 10 years or more, applied to income-based rates ranging from 0% to 5%.
The waiting period to qualify for a home improvement loan after a first NHT mortgage falls from 15 years to five. That loan carries a ceiling of $5 million at rates between 0% and 5%, depending on income. The hurricane relief loan programme, introduced after Hurricane Melissa, runs until March 2027 and now includes a resilience component for storm-proofing work even where no hurricane damage occurred. Berbick said about 213 applications worth roughly $700 million had been processed, with another 115 in progress, mostly for roof upgrades.
The home improvement facility may also support open-market purchases, construction, refinancing of external mortgages, and a one-parent-to-one-child co-application for a biological or legally adopted child. Cooper urged contributors to use the available facilities.
Syndicated from Jamaica Information Service (Video) · originally published .
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