First Financial Drops $104M on Northeast Ohio, Locals Want Receipts

First Financial Bank is bringing a nine-figure promise to Northeast Ohio, pledging roughly $104 million for community development as it plants deeper roots around Cleveland. The money is supposed to flow into affordable housing, small-business lending and neighborhood revitalization in and around the city. Local leaders say the commitment could finally unstick some long-stalled projects, but they are already asking for timelines, benchmarks and a way to track whether the cash actually lands where it is supposed to.

According to Crain’s Cleveland Business, the bank laid out the pledge in materials tied to its regional expansion and framed the $104 million as a mix of loans, tax-credit investments and philanthropic grants. Crain’s also reported that this regional commitment sits apart from First Financial’s broader national promises that are connected to earlier agreements.

Tax-credit money already lined up

Some of the funding fuel is already sitting on the balance sheet. In its 2025 annual report filed with the SEC, First Financial reported roughly $103 million in unfunded commitments linked to tax-credit investments at the end of 2025. These tax-credit vehicles are a common way to finance affordable-housing construction and community-revitalization projects, which means existing commitments could be pointed directly at Northeast Ohio initiatives if the bank chooses.

Deal spree brings new reach and new expectations

The pledge is arriving just as First Financial finishes snapping up banks that expand its regional footprint. That includes the 2025 purchase of Westfield Bancorp and the January 1, 2026 merger of BankFinancial into First Financial Bank. In a closing announcement carried by PR Newswire, the company said the deals add branches, deposits and commercial relationships across Northeast Ohio.

Bank executives have also told investors that system conversions and local hiring are already underway as part of the integration work, a point they discussed in detail during a recent earnings call covered by Benzinga.

Why community groups are keeping score

Advocates and nonprofit housing groups in the region have been clear: big dollar figures are nice, but they want capital paired with technical assistance, concrete timelines and public accountability. A recent report from the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland underscores how community development financial institutions and targeted investments are often critical to turning early-stage ideas into projects that traditional lenders will actually finance…

Story continues

TRENDING NOW

LATEST LOCAL NEWS