[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 24, Volume 1]

[Revised as of April 1, 2006]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 24CFR92.254]



[Page 624-628]

 

                 TITLE 24--HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT

 

PART 92_HOME INVESTMENT PARTNERSHIPS PROGRAM--Table of Contents

 

                     Subpart F_Project Requirements

 

Sec.  92.254  Qualification as affordable housing: Homeownership.



    (a) Acquisition with or without rehabilitation. Housing that is for 

acquisition by a family must meet the affordability requirements of this 

paragraph (a).

    (1) The housing must be single family housing.

    (2) The housing must be modest housing as follows:

    (i) In the case of acquisition of newly constructed housing or 

standard housing, the housing has a purchase price for the type of 

single family housing that does not exceed 95 percent of the median 

purchase price for the area, as described in paragraph (a)(2)(iii) of 

this section.

    (ii) In the case of acquisition with rehabilitation, the housing has 

an estimated value after rehabilitation that does not exceed 95 percent 

of the median purchase price for the area, described in paragraph 

(a)(2)(iii) of this section.

    (iii) If a participating jurisdiction intends to use HOME funds for 

homebuyer assistance or for rehabilitation of owner-occupied single-

family properties, the participating jurisdiction may use the Single 

Family Mortgage Limits under Section 203(b) of the National Housing Act 

(12 U.S.C. 1709(b)) (which may be obtained from the HUD Field Office) or 

it may determine 95 percent of the median area purchase price for single 

family housing in the jurisdiction, as follows. The participating 

jurisdiction must set forth the price for different types of single 

family housing for the jurisdiction. The 95 percent of median area 

purchase price must be established in accordance with a market analysis 

which ensured that a sufficient number of recent housing sales are 

included in the survey. Sales must cover the requisite number of months 

based on volume: For 500 or more sales per month, a one-month reporting 

period; for 250 through 499 sales per month, a two-month reporting 

period; for less than 250 sales per month, at least a three-month 

reporting period. The data must be listed in ascending order of sales 

price. The address of the listed properties must include the location 

within the participating jurisdiction. Lot, square and subdivision data 

may be substituted for the street address. The housing sales data must 

reflect all, or nearly all, of the one-family house sales in the entire 

participating jurisdiction. To determine the median, take the middle 

sale on the list if an odd number of sales and if an even number, take 

the higher of the middle numbers and consider it the median. After 

identifying the median sales price, the amount should be multiplied by 

.95 to determine the 95 percent of the median area purchase price. This 

information must be submitted to the HUD Field Office for review.

    (3) The housing must be acquired by a homebuyer whose family 

qualifies as a low-income family and the housing must be the principal 

residence of the family throughout the period described in paragraph 

(a)(4) of this section.

    (4) Periods of affordability. The HOME-assisted housing must meet 

the affordability requirements for not less than the applicable period 

specified in the following table, beginning after project completion. 

The per unit amount of HOME funds and the affordability period that they 

trigger are described more fully in paragraphs (a)(5)(i) (resale) and 

(ii) (recapture) of this section.



[[Page 625]]







------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                                              Minimum

                                                             period of

      Homeownership assistance HOME amount per-unit        affordability

                                                              in years

------------------------------------------------------------------------

Under $15,000............................................           5

$15,000 to $40,000.......................................          10

Over $40,000.............................................          15

------------------------------------------------------------------------



    (5) Resale and recapture. To ensure affordability, the participating 

jurisdiction must impose either resale or recapture requirements, at its 

option. The participating jurisdiction must establish the resale or 

recapture requirements that comply with the standards of this section 

and set forth the requirements in its consolidated plan. HUD must 

determine that they are appropriate.

    (i) Resale. Resale requirements must ensure, if the housing does not 

continue to be the principal residence of the family for the duration of 

the period of affordability, that the housing is made available for 

subsequent purchase only to a buyer whose family qualifies as a low-

income family and will use the property as its principal residence. The 

resale requirement must also ensure that the price at resale provides 

the original HOME-assisted owner a fair return on investment (including 

the homeowner's investment and any capital improvement) and ensure that 

the housing will remain affordable to a reasonable range of low-income 

homebuyers. The period of affordability is based on the total amount of 

HOME funds invested in the housing.

    (A) Except as provided in paragraph (a)(5)(i)(B) of this section, 

deed restrictions, covenants running with the land, or other similar 

mechanisms must be used as the mechanism to impose the resale 

requirements. The affordability restrictions may terminate upon 

occurrence of any of the following termination events: foreclosure, 

transfer in lieu of foreclosure or assignment of an FHA insured mortgage 

to HUD. The participating jurisdiction may use purchase options, rights 

of first refusal or other preemptive rights to purchase the housing 

before foreclosure to preserve affordability. The affordability 

restrictions shall be revived according to the original terms if, during 

the original affordability period, the owner of record before the 

termination event, obtains an ownership interest in the housing.

    (B) Certain housing may be presumed to meet the resale restrictions 

(i.e., the housing will be available and affordable to a reasonable 

range of low-income homebuyers; a low-income homebuyer will occupy the 

housing as the family's principal residence; and the original owner will 

be afforded a fair return on investment) during the period of 

affordability without the imposition of enforcement mechanisms by the 

participating jurisdiction. The presumption must be based upon a market 

analysis of the neighborhood in which the housing is located. The market 

analysis must include an evaluation of the location and characteristics 

of the housing and residents in the neighborhood (e.g., sale prices, age 

and amenities of the housing stock, incomes of residents, percentage of 

owner-occupants) in relation to housing and incomes in the housing 

market area. An analysis of the current and projected incomes of 

neighborhood residents for an average period of affordability for 

homebuyers in the neighborhood must support the conclusion that a 

reasonable range of low-income families will continue to qualify for 

mortgage financing. For example, an analysis shows that the housing is 

modestly priced within the housing market area and that families with 

incomes of 65% to 80% of area median can afford monthly payments under 

average FHA terms without other government assistance and housing will 

remain affordable at least during the next five to seven years compared 

to other housing in the market area; the size and amenities of the 

housing are modest and substantial rehabilitation will not significantly 

increase the market value; the neighborhood has housing that is not 

currently owned by the occupants, but the participating jurisdiction is 

encouraging homeownership in the neighborhood by providing homeownership 

assistance and by making improvements to the streets, sidewalks, and 

other public facilities and services. If a participating jurisdiction in 

preparing a neighborhood revitalization strategy



[[Page 626]]



under Sec.  91.215(e)(2) of its consolidated plan or Empowerment Zone or 

Enterprise Community application under 24 CFR part 597 has incorporated 

the type of market data described above, that submission may serve as 

the required analysis under this section. If the participating 

jurisdiction continues to provide homeownership assistance for housing 

in the neighborhood, it must periodically update the market analysis to 

verify the original presumption of continued affordability.

    (ii) Recapture. Recapture provisions must ensure that the 

participating jurisdiction recoups all or a portion of the HOME 

assistance to the homebuyers, if the housing does not continue to be the 

principal residence of the family for the duration of the period of 

affordability. The participating jurisdiction may structure its 

recapture provisions based on its program design and market conditions. 

The period of affordability is based upon the total amount of HOME funds 

subject to recapture described in paragraph (a)(5)(ii)(A)(5) of this 

section.

    (A) The following options for recapture requirements are acceptable 

to HUD. The participating jurisdiction may adopt, modify or develop its 

own recapture requirements for HUD approval. In establishing its 

recapture requirements, the participating jurisdiction is subject to the 

limitation that when the recapture requirement is triggered by a sale 

(voluntary or involuntary) of the housing unit, and there are no net 

proceeds or the net proceeds are insufficient to repay the HOME 

investment due, the participating jurisdiction can only recapture the 

net proceeds, if any. The net proceeds are the sales price minus 

superior loan repayment (other than HOME funds) and any closing costs.

    (1) Recapture entire amount. The participating jurisdiction may 

recapture the entire amount of the HOME investment from the homeowner.

    (2) Reduction during affordability period. The participating 

jurisdiction may reduce the HOME investment amount to be recaptured on a 

prorata basis for the time the homeowner has owned and occupied the 

housing measured against the required affordability period.

    (3) Shared net proceeds. If the net proceeds are not sufficient to 

recapture the full HOME investment (or a reduced amount as provided for 

in paragraph (a)(5)(ii)(A)(2) of this section) plus enable the homeowner 

to recover the amount of the homeowner's downpayment and any capital 

improvement investment made by the owner since purchase, the 

participating jurisdiction may share the net proceeds. The net proceeds 

are the sales price minus loan repayment (other than HOME funds) and 

closing costs. The net proceeds may be divided proportionally as set 

forth in the following mathematical formulas:

[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TC12OC91.007



    (4) Owner investment returned first. The participating jurisdiction 

may permit the homebuyer to recover the homebuyer's entire investment 

(downpayment and capital improvements made by the owner since purchase) 

before recapturing the HOME investment.

    (5) Amount subject to recapture. The HOME investment that is subject 

to recapture is based on the amount of HOME assistance that enabled the 

homebuyer to buy the dwelling unit. This includes any HOME assistance 

that reduced the purchase price from fair market value to an affordable 

price, but excludes the amount between the cost of producing the unit 

and the market value of the property (i.e., the development subsidy). 

The recaptured funds must be used to carry out HOME-eligible activities 

in accordance with



[[Page 627]]



the requirements of this part. If the HOME assistance is only used for 

the development subsidy and therefore not subject to recapture, the 

resale option must be used.

    (6) Special considerations for single-family properties with more 

than one unit. If the HOME funds are only used to assist a low-income 

homebuyer to acquire one unit in single-family housing containing more 

than one unit and the assisted unit will be the principal residence of 

the homebuyer, the affordability requirements of this section apply only 

to the assisted unit. If HOME funds are also used to assist the low-

income homebuyer to acquire one or more of the rental units in the 

single-family housing, the affordability requirements of Sec.  92.252 

apply to assisted rental units, except that the participating 

jurisdiction may impose resale or recapture restrictions on all assisted 

units (owner-occupied and rental units) in the single family housing. If 

resale restrictions are used, the affordability requirements on all 

assisted units continue for the period of affordability. If recapture 

restrictions are used, the affordability requirements on the assisted 

rental units may be terminated, at the discretion of the participating 

jurisdiction, upon recapture of the HOME investment. (If HOME funds are 

used to assist only the rental units in such a property then the 

requirements of Sec.  92.252 would apply and the owner-occupied unit 

would not be subject to the income targeting or affordability provisions 

of Sec.  92.254.)

    (7) Lease-purchase. HOME funds may be used to assist homebuyers 

through lease-purchase programs for existing housing and for housing to 

be constructed. The housing must be purchased by a homebuyer within 36 

months of signing the lease'purchase agreement. The homebuyer must 

qualify as a low-income family at the time the lease-purchase agreement 

is signed. If HOME funds are used to acquire housing that will be resold 

to a homebuyer through a lease-purchase program, the HOME affordability 

requirements for rental housing in Sec.  92.252 shall apply if the 

housing is not transferred to a homebuyer within forty-two months after 

project completion.

    (8) Contract to purchase. If HOME funds are used to assist a 

homebuyer who has entered into a contract to purchase housing to be 

constructed, the homebuyer must qualify as a low-income family at the 

time the contract is signed.

    (9) Preserving affordability. (i) Notwithstanding Sec.  

92.214(a)(6), to preserve the affordability of housing that was 

previously assisted with HOME funds and subject to the requirements of 

Sec.  92.254(a), a participating jurisdiction may use additional HOME 

funds to acquire the housing through a purchase option, right of first 

refusal, or other preemptive right before foreclosure, or to acquire the 

housing at the foreclosure sale, to undertake any necessary 

rehabilitation, and to provide assistance to another homebuyer. The 

housing must be sold to a new eligible homebuyer in accordance with the 

requirements of Sec.  92.254(a). Additional HOME funds may not be used 

if the mortgage in default was funded with HOME funds.

    (ii) The total amount of original and additional HOME assistance may 

not exceed the maximum per-unit subsidy amount established under Sec.  

92.250. Alternatively to charging the cost to the HOME program under 

Sec.  92.206, the participating jurisdiction may charge the cost to 2 

the HOME program under Sec.  92.207, as a reasonable administrative cost 

of its HOME program, so that the additional HOME funds for the housing 

are not subject to the maximum per-unit subsidy amount.

    (b) Rehabilitation not involving acquisition. Housing that is 

currently owned by a family qualifies as affordable housing only if:

    (1) The estimated value of the property, after rehabilitation, does 

not exceed 95 percent of the median purchase price for the area, 

described in paragraph (a)(2)(iii) of this section; and

    (2) The housing is the principal residence of an owner whose family 

qualifies as a low-income family at the time HOME funds are committed to 

the housing.

    (c) Ownership interest. The ownership in the housing assisted under 

this section must meet the definition of ``homeownership'' in Sec.  

92.2.



[[Page 628]]



    (d) New construction without acquisition. Newly constructed housing 

that is built on property currently owned by a family which will occupy 

the housing upon completion, qualifies as affordable housing if it meets 

the requirements under paragraph (a) of this section.



[61 FR 48750, Sept. 16, 1996, as amended at 67 FR 61756, Oct. 1, 2002; 

68 FR 10161, Mar. 4, 2003; 69 FR 16766, Mar. 30, 2004; 69 FR 68052, Nov. 

22, 2004]