Title 12 › Chapter CHAPTER 42— - LOW-INCOME HOUSING PRESERVATION AND RESIDENT HOMEOWNERSHIP › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - PREPAYMENT OF MORTGAGES INSURED UNDER NATIONAL HOUSING ACT › § 4110
When an owner files a second notice saying they want to sell eligible low-income housing, the owner must first offer the property to qualified buyers. The federal housing official must make rules about how those buyers are told the housing is for sale and must consider federal cost limits when giving incentives. For 12 months after that second notice, the owner can only talk about selling with priority buyers. The sale price cannot be higher than the preservation value of the housing. Priority buyers can send a written notice of interest, and within 30 days the federal official must tell them what federal help might be available and the owner must share basic property information. If no acceptable offer is made and taken in that 12-month period, the owner then has a 3-month window to sell only to qualified buyers under the same price limit. If Congress provides the money, the federal official can approve plans that help qualified buyers buy and keep the housing. Help can cover buying the project up to preservation equity, paying mortgage or rehab loan debt service, meeting operating costs and reserves, and giving an 8 percent annual return on any real cash put in. Priority buyers can get reimbursed for reasonable transaction costs. Resident councils must have an approved homeownership plan to get help, and those plans can also get funds for training, counseling, outside fees, and relocation costs. The official can use one or more authorized incentives, including an acquisition loan, and may give per-unit grants for priority buyers up to the present value of 10 years of published fair-market rents.
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Banks and Banking — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
12 U.S.C. § 4110
Title 12 — Banks and Banking
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73