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LOW
INCOME HOUSING TAX CREDIT (LIHTC)
The following was summarized
from the Connecticut Housing Finance Authority
website (www.chfa.org/Rental%20Housing/for%20Developers%20and%20Sponsors/Funding%20Initiatives/Tax%20Credit%20Programs/LIHTC%20Program.aspx)
WHAT IS THE LOW INCOME
HOUSING TAX CREDIT?
The Low Income Housing Tax Credit
Program (LIHTC) was created by the Tax Reform
Act of 1986 to help meet the need for low-income
rental housing, and to replace the Section 8 New
Construction/Sub Rehab program terminated in the
early 1980s. To be eligible for low-income
housing tax credits, a housing developer must
set aside a minimum percentage of units for
low-income residents. This percentage must be
maintained throughout the extended use period,
usually at least 30 years. The minimum set-aside
is either of the following:
-
20% of the units rented to tenants
earning 50% or less of the area median
income (adjusted for family size)
established by HUD
-
40% of the units rented to tenants
earning 60% or less of the area median
income (adjusted for family size)
established by HUD
If the standards are met and
approval is granted in advance of the project,
investors receive a ten-year stream of federal
tax credits. The value of these credits is
usually converted into equity in the project,
thereby resulting in reduced debt and more
affordable rents. However, the rents may not be
as low as the rents at public housing
developments and private rental developments
receiving a direct subsidy, like Section 8. Tax
credits are allocated to developers and must be
approved by the state housing development or
finance agency. States must reserve a minimum of
10 percent of the credits for nonprofit
developers. The program is administered at the
Federal level by the Internal Revenue Service
within the U.S Treasury Department. In
Connecticut, the tax credits are administered by
the Connecticut Housing Finance Authority
(CHFA). An average of 1,300 LIHTC projects and
56,000 units are placed in service nationally
each year. In Connecticut, these rental units
are managed by private housing developers.
ELIGIBILITY
Household income of 50-60%, or
less, of area median income (see HUD website: www.huduser.org/portal/datasets/50per.html)
COST
Rents are below the average for
the local rental market, and are determined by
average area market rent. The rents are fixed,
and not based upon income. Thus, these rents are
sometimes still quite high for low to moderate
income households.
TO FIND PROVIDERS IN
CONNECTICUT'S COMMUNITY RESOURCES DATABASE:
Search by service names:
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SOURCES:Connecticut Housing
Finace Authority; 2-1-1 Database
PREPARED BY: 211/pt
CONTENT LAST REVIEWED: November2012
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