- Step 1. What this program offers
- Step 2. Who is eligible
- Step 3. How to apply
- Step 4. After you apply
- Administrators
- Contact information
Step 1. What this program offers
Intake period: Open
The application intake period for the program is open.
Change to the interest-free limit for 2024
On March 25, 2024, the Minister of Agriculture and Agri-Food announced that the Advance Payments Program (APP) interest-free limit is set at $250,000 for the 2024 program year. This is the portion of advances on which the Government of Canada pays the interest on behalf of producers. The change will give producers access to additional cash flow and interest savings to help cover costs until they sell their products.
For more information, contact your APP Administrator.
The Advance Payments Program is a federal loan guarantee program which provides agricultural producers with easy access to low-cost cash advances.
Under the program, you can access up to $1,000,000 in total advances based on the value of the eligible agricultural products you will produce or that you have in storage. The Government of Canada pays the interest on the first $100,000 of your advance (the first $250,000 for 2024). You make repayments to the advance as you sell the agricultural products, with up to 18 months to fully repay the advance for most commodities (up to 24 months for cattle and bison).
APP advances can provide you with cash flow to meet your financial needs until you are able to sell your agricultural products. The program can provide marketing flexibility by allowing you to sell your agricultural products based on market conditions rather than the need for cash.
APP advances are available through 27 participating producer organizations, that is, APP Administrators, across Canada.
How much you can receive
Under the APP, you may be eligible to receive up to $1,000,000 per program year, with:
- the federal government paying the interest on the first $100,000 per program year (the first $250,000 for 2024)
- preferential interest rates on the remainder
Your cash advance is calculated based on up to 50% of the anticipated market value of the eligible agricultural products that you will produce or that you have in storage.
While you can have more than one advance outstanding, including more than one interest-free advance, you cannot have more than $1,000,000 outstanding at any one time.
What you need as security for an advance
Your APP advance must be secured. The security required will depend on the type and state of the agricultural product at the time you apply.
- The agricultural product on which the advance is based is always required as security.
- For advances on agricultural products that are in production or are non-storable and for advances on animals or animal products, additional security is required. This includes the potential proceeds from an eligible business risk management program (for example, AgriInsurance, AgriStability or Farm Income Stabilization Insurance [ASRA] in Quebec) and/or another acceptable form of security.
In most cases, the advance amount you are eligible to receive will be limited by the value of the security you provide.
If you are declared in default, the security, including assigned program payments, may be used to pay off your advance.
For more information on acceptable forms of security, you should contact your APP Administrator.
Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada's role in the APP
In addition to providing a financial guarantee on advances issued and paying the interest on the first $100,000 advanced to each producer per program year ($250,000 for 2022 and 2023), Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada (AAFC)'s Financial Guarantee Programs Division (FGPD) is responsible for providing federal oversight by working together with APP Administrators to ensure that the program is administered in a manner that:
- reduces costs to producers and use of government funds
- is focused on providing benefit to Canadian producers
- respects the annual Advance Guarantee Agreements, Program Guidelines, the Agricultural Marketing Programs Act and its Regulations