Foreign National Mortgage Programs

Dual-Licensed Cross-Border Specialist

David Nataf, Mortgage Loan Originator (NMLS #2613311). Offices in Boca Raton, FL and Montreal, QC. Cross-border mortgage financing for Canadians buying property in the U.S. Foreign national and investor financing options, including DSCR. Direct lender access.

Montreal Office — Canadian Licensing (AMF)
Boca Raton Office — U.S. Licensing (NMLS #2613311)

Bank financing for international buyers purchasing U.S. real estate.
No U.S. visa. No U.S. credit history. No hard money.

25%Minimum Down
30-yrFixed Rate Available
$150K+Loan Amounts
30 DaysTypical Close
David Nataf | Mortgage Loan Originator (NMLS #2613311) | Boca Raton, FL · Montreal, QC
Cross-border mortgage financing for Canadians buying property in the U.S.
888-640-6592 | david.nataf@orbismortgage.com
Last updated: February 2026

If you are a Canadian citizen, European investor, Latin American buyer, or any non-U.S. person looking to purchase property in the United States, you do not need a green card or U.S. work visa to get a mortgage. Institutional bank lenders offer mortgage programs specifically designed for foreign nationals — and the terms are far better than the hard money loans that many buyers settle for because they did not know these programs existed.

As a mortgage broker licensed in both Florida (NMLS #2613311) and Canada (Quebec), I specialize in connecting international buyers with the right institutional lender for their situation. The difference between a foreign national bank program and a hard money loan can be $500 to $1,500 per month on the same property — and I have seen too many buyers locked into expensive hard money financing simply because they worked with a local agent who did not know these programs were available.

Who Qualifies as a Foreign National?

For mortgage purposes, a foreign national is anyone who does not hold U.S. citizenship, permanent residency (green card), or a qualifying work visa (such as TN, H-1B, L-1, or E-2). If you are visiting the U.S. on a tourist visa (B-1/B-2), have no U.S. visa at all, or reside entirely outside the United States, you fall into the foreign national category.

Common misconception: Many buyers assume they cannot get a U.S. mortgage without a Social Security number. This is false. Foreign national programs use your passport and ITIN (Individual Taxpayer Identification Number) instead. If you do not have an ITIN, we can help you apply for one — it is a straightforward IRS process that takes 4 to 8 weeks, and it can be done concurrently with your loan application.

Foreign National vs. Hard Money: Why It Matters

FeatureForeign National Bank ProgramHard Money Loan
Lender typeInstitutional bank / credit unionPrivate individual or fund
Interest rate range*7.0% – 9.0% (30-yr fixed available)10% – 14% (often interest-only)
Loan term15 or 30 years, fully amortizing1 – 3 years, balloon payment
Down payment25 – 30%30 – 40%
Prepayment penaltyTypically 3-year step-downVaries, often harsh
DocumentationPassport, income, bank statementsMinimal (asset-based)
Closing timeline30 – 45 days7 – 21 days
Refinance pathStandard refinance after 6-12 monthsMust refinance before balloon

* Rate ranges are illustrative based on current market conditions (Feb 2026). Your actual rate depends on down payment, property type, loan amount, reserves, and borrower profile. Rates subject to change without notice.

On a $400,000 property with 30% down ($280,000 loan), the monthly payment difference between a 7.5% bank program and a 12% hard money loan is approximately $870 per month — over $10,000 per year. Over the life of a 30-year loan versus a 3-year hard money term with forced refinancing, the total cost difference is staggering.

Eligible Property Types

Residential

  • Single-family homes
  • Condos (warrantable and non-warrantable)
  • Townhouses
  • 2-4 unit properties

Investment

  • Short-term rentals (Airbnb/VRBO)
  • Long-term rental properties
  • Vacation homes
  • Mixed-use (case by case)

Required Documentation

Foreign national programs require documentation from your home country. While exact requirements vary by lender, here is what you should have ready:

Canadian buyers: I read Canadian documents natively — T4s, Notices of Assessment, RRSP statements, Canadian credit reports. You do not need to hire a translator or notary to convert your Canadian documentation. This is one of the key advantages of working with a broker who understands both systems.

The Process: From Application to Keys

Step 1: Pre-Qualification (Day 1-3)

We review your financial profile, identify the best-fit lender program, and provide a pre-qualification letter you can use when making offers. This step involves a phone or video consultation and a review of your basic financial documents.

Step 2: Property Search and Offer (Timeline varies)

With your pre-qualification letter in hand, you work with a real estate agent to find and make an offer on a property. We can recommend agents experienced with foreign national transactions in your target market.

Step 3: Formal Application (Day 1 of contract)

Once your offer is accepted, we submit the formal loan application with your complete documentation package. The lender orders an appraisal and begins underwriting.

Step 4: Underwriting and Approval (Days 7-25)

The lender reviews your documentation, verifies your income and assets, and issues a conditional approval with any remaining items needed. We manage the back-and-forth with the lender to ensure a smooth process.

Step 5: Closing (Days 25-35)

You sign the closing documents at a title company. Remote online notarization (RON) is available in most states, meaning you can close from your home country without traveling to the United States. Wire your closing funds 3 to 5 business days before the closing date.

Countries We Work With Most Frequently

While foreign national programs are available to buyers from virtually any country, we work most frequently with buyers from Canada, the United Kingdom, France, Mexico, Brazil, Colombia, Argentina, Israel, and the UAE. Each country has specific documentation nuances — for example, French tax documents follow a different format than Canadian T4s, and Mexican income verification may require notarized translations. We handle these variations routinely.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I buy U.S. property through an LLC?

Yes, and many foreign nationals prefer this structure for liability protection and estate planning. Foreign national lenders will lend to a U.S. LLC owned by a foreign national. The LLC must be formed in the state where the property is located (or in a state like Delaware or Wyoming). Consult a cross-border tax accountant regarding the U.S. estate tax implications — properties held personally by non-resident aliens are subject to U.S. estate tax with only a $60,000 exemption, whereas an LLC structure may provide planning opportunities.

Do I need to visit the United States to close?

No. Most states allow remote online notarization, which means you can sign your closing documents via video call with a notary from anywhere in the world. You do need to wire your closing funds from a U.S. bank account, so that account must be set up before closing.

What if I already have a hard money loan?

If you purchased U.S. property with a hard money loan and want to refinance into better terms, foreign national bank programs are available for refinancing. Most lenders require a 6 to 12 month seasoning period (time since you acquired the property) before refinancing. We can evaluate your current loan terms and timeline to determine the optimal refinance strategy.

Lost in Translation: A Cross-Border Mortgage Glossary

Canadians and Americans technically speak the same language — just with different accents, different spellings, and apparently, completely different mortgage vocabularies. After 25 years working across both systems, I have compiled the phrases most likely to cause confusion at a closing table. Consider this your Rosetta Stone for cross-border real estate.

What a Canadian SaysWhat an American SaysWhat It Actually Means
Non-residentForeign nationalSomeone buying property in a country where they do not reside. Same person, different label — and yes, it matters which form you use with which lender.
Equity take-outCash-out refinanceBorrowing against the equity in your property. Canadians take out equity like they take out the trash. Americans refinance cash out like they are at an ATM.
Mortgage term (5 years)Mortgage term (30 years)In Canada, a "term" is 5 years and then you renegotiate. In the U.S., you lock in for 30 years. When a Canadian hears "30-year term" for the first time, their eyes widen noticeably.
Variable rateAdjustable rate (ARM)A rate that changes with market conditions. Canadians call it variable, Americans call it adjustable. Both mean your payment can go up when you least want it to.
Porting a mortgage... blank stare ...In Canada, you can transfer your mortgage to a new property. In the U.S., this concept essentially does not exist. Americans simply get a new mortgage every time.
CMHC insurancePMI (Private Mortgage Insurance)Insurance that protects the lender if you default. Canadians pay CMHC, Americans pay PMI. Neither borrower enjoys paying it.
Closing costs: ~1.5%Closing costs: ~3-5%The fees to finalize your purchase. Canadian buyers consistently underestimate U.S. closing costs because they are comparing to the Canadian experience.
Solicitor / NotaryTitle company / Closing attorneyThe professional who handles the legal transfer. If you ask for a "solicitor" in Florida, they will hand you a business card for a door-to-door salesman.
GDS / TDS ratiosDTI (Debt-to-Income)How lenders measure whether you can afford the mortgage. Two countries, three acronyms, same math.
Discharge / payoutPayoff / satisfactionPaying off your mortgage in full. Canadians "discharge" a mortgage. Americans get a "satisfaction" letter. One sounds like a firing, the other sounds like a spa treatment. Both mean you are free.
Pre-approval (14 days)Pre-approval (same day)In Canada, a pre-approval can take weeks and involves a credit bureau pull. In the U.S., some lenders issue pre-approval letters in hours — though "pre-approval" and "pre-qualification" mean different things depending on who you ask.
Strata feesHOA duesMonthly fees for shared condo amenities. Canadians pay strata, Americans pay HOA. Both are shocked when they see how much it costs for a pool they never use.
Cheque / bank draftCashier's check / wire transferHow you send your down payment. If you spell it "cheque" on a U.S. form, the processor will assume it is a typo. It is not.
Maturity date... not a thing ...In Canada, your mortgage "matures" every 5 years and you renew. In the U.S., the only maturity date is 30 years away. Americans do not know what renewal stress feels like.
Subject-free offerClean offer / no contingenciesMaking an offer without conditions. Canadians remove "subjects," Americans waive "contingencies." Same gamble, different poker face.
Postal code (A1A 1A1)ZIP code (33139)Where your property is. Canadian ones have letters and numbers. American ones are all numbers. If you enter your Canadian postal code into a U.S. lender's website, it will break.
SIN (Social Insurance Number)SSN / ITINYour tax ID. Canadians have a SIN. Americans have a SSN. Foreign nationals without either need an ITIN — which you can sometimes get at closing. Alphabet soup, but essential.
Land transfer taxTransfer tax / documentary stampsThe tax you pay when you buy property. In Canada it is called land transfer tax. In Florida it is documentary stamps. In both countries, you are surprised it exists.
"Zed""Zee"The last letter of the alphabet. Not mortgage-related, but it will come up when you are spelling your postal code over the phone to an American lender. Trust me.

Why this matters: We technically speak the same language — just with different accents, different spellings, and apparently, completely different mortgage vocabularies. These are not just vocabulary differences — they reflect fundamentally different mortgage systems. A Canadian buyer who assumes U.S. mortgages work like Canadian ones will be surprised by the 30-year fixed rate (pleasantly), the closing costs (less pleasantly), and the lack of portability (confusion). Working with a broker who is fluent in both systems means nothing gets lost in translation.

Ready to Explore U.S. Property Financing?

Whether you are buying your first U.S. investment property or refinancing out of a hard money loan, I will find the right institutional program for your situation.
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David Nataf | Mortgage Loan Originator (NMLS #2613311) | Boca Raton, FL · Montreal, QC
Cross-border mortgage financing for Canadians buying property in the U.S.
888-640-6592 | david.nataf@orbismortgage.com

Disclaimer: This content is educational only and does not constitute legal, tax, or mortgage underwriting advice. Mortgage program terms, rates, and requirements vary by lender and can change without notice. Rate ranges quoted are illustrative and based on current market conditions; your actual rate depends on your individual borrower profile, property type, and lender selection. Consult a licensed mortgage originator, cross-border tax accountant, and/or attorney before making financial decisions.

Verify licenses: U.S. — NMLS Consumer Access (NMLS #2613311). Canada — AMF Public Register.