
Nivo announces full rollout of AI assistant
March 10, 2026 by Brendan O'Neill
Mortgage Advisors
Nivo has announced it is making its AI assistant available to mortgage advisors and lenders on a widespread basis, after the pilot proved to be a success.
This assistant is called Nivo AI and it has been designed for the specialist mortgage market. Nivo claims that it will enable advisors to submit higher quality and more accurate applications while also making for smoother advisor-lender workflows. Nivo AI is available to use all day every day via email and offers a range of functions that can make life easier for advisors.
The assistant will help them go through each mortgage application, assisting with the structuring of them and picking up on any areas where key data is missing. This will ensure that when applications are submitted to lenders, they contain fewer errors. That should reduce delays during the process.
It was this issue that drove Nivo to create the assistant. Submissions with the sorts of flaws mentioned above lead to numerous requests from lenders for clarification and bog down the mortgage application procedure.
Nivo has revealed that advisors will be able to access Nivo AI on a trial basis for two weeks. This will let them try it out when submitting applications without committing to it full-time.
Matthew Elliott co-founded Nivo. Talking with Financial Reporter, he said:
“Nivo AI isn’t a generic chatbot bolted onto a workflow. It’s purpose-built for specialist lending – understanding packaging requirements, document standards and lender criteria. One prompt. The whole deal.”
All mortgage advisors with the CeMAP qualification should find this useful, given the growth in specialist lending.
Written by
Brendan O'Neill
You may also interested in:

Sales of 100% LTV mortgages highest in five years
The number of 100% loan-to-value (LTV) products that were sold last year was the highest in five years, which reflects
Mortgage advisors urge borrowers not to second-guess future rates
Mortgage advisors are issuing a warning to borrowers not to second-guess future rates, in the wake of news that