Title 12 › Chapter CHAPTER 13— - NATIONAL HOUSING › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - HOUSING RENOVATION AND MODERNIZATION › § 1706c
Allows the Secretary to insure home loans to help low- and moderate-income families, especially in suburbs and outlying areas, when those loans cannot meet the rules used for city housing. The total amount of such insured loans outstanding at any time cannot be more than $100,000,000, but the President may add up to $150,000,000 more after deciding it is in the public interest. No loan can be insured after August 2, 1954, unless the Secretary made a commitment to insure it on or before that date. To qualify, the lender must be approved by the Secretary and the loan must meet rules set by the Secretary. Key limits: principal cannot exceed $5,700 and cannot be more than 95% of the appraised value for a single-family home approved before construction. The buyer must live in the house and have paid at least 5% of the purchase cost, or if the builder is the borrower the loan limit is lower (not more than 85% of value or $5,100). After a presidentially declared major disaster, the Secretary can raise the cap to $7,000 and the percent to 100% in qualifying cases. Loans must mature in 30 years or less, have a repayment plan the borrower can afford, and carry interest no higher than 5% per year. The Secretary sets other needed rules about repairs, taxes, defaults, and similar matters. The Secretary sets an insurance premium between 0.5% and 1% per year of the outstanding principal. The lender pays the premium in cash or in government debentures at par plus accrued interest, and the Secretary may require one or more upfront charges at a discount rate not above the loan’s interest rate. If a loan is paid off early, the Secretary may charge an adjusted premium up to what would have been paid if the loan lasted to maturity, and may refund any unearned premium. The Secretary can release a borrower or parts of a property from the loan under conditions he sets. An insurance contract signed by the Secretary is final proof the loan was eligible and cannot be challenged by an approved lender except for lender fraud. If the lender forecloses and takes the property under the Secretary’s rules, the lender gets the same insurance benefits described for similar insured loans. Certain parts of section 1710 apply to these mortgages, with references to the Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund treated as the General Insurance Fund and references to section 1709 treated as referring to this section; debentures issued here have the same tax exemption as those under section 1709.
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Banks and Banking — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
12 U.S.C. § 1706c
Title 12 — Banks and Banking
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73