Title 12 › Chapter CHAPTER 42— - LOW-INCOME HOUSING PRESERVATION AND RESIDENT HOMEOWNERSHIP › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - PREPAYMENT OF MORTGAGES INSURED UNDER NATIONAL HOUSING ACT › § 4116
Tenants who want to buy their low-income housing must form a resident council and work with an approved nonprofit or public agency to make a homeownership plan the Secretary accepts. The plan must say the sale price, why that price was chosen, how it compares to an appraisal, the loan rules the buyers will meet, the financing the tenants will use, and a sale schedule based on tenant incomes. The Secretary will approve how the buildings become owner-occupied (for example, co-ops or condos) and will not require the mortgage to be paid off first. The plan must also make sure the mix of initial owners meets income rules, that owner charges cover operating costs and debt, that initial owners live in their units, and that any rental units remain subject to low-income rules. If there are sale proceeds, 50 percent may be used for the program and 50 percent must go back to the Secretary for use under section 4110. The council must keep records and allow audits. Homeowners may sell but the program can set resale limits. Resident management groups or cooperatives may have the right to buy a unit at a set price. A homeowner who sells may need to sign a promissory note to the Secretary for the difference between market value and purchase price, secured by a mortgage. If a unit is sold within 6 years, the buyer’s gain is limited to the owner’s equity, improvements paid by the family, and an agreed inflation allowance. From year 6 to year 20, the Secretary or program may recapture the declining balance on the note. Any net proceeds the homeowner can’t keep must go to the local or State HOME Investment Trust Fund and be made available for affordable housing. No tenant living in a unit when a plan is approved may be evicted because of the program. The council must have at least 3 years’ management experience or hire a qualified manager, use Secretary-approved tenant selection rules while units remain rentals, notify rejected applicants in writing, and allow federal audits. Any entity that takes over the mortgage must follow low-income affordability rules for the housing’s remaining useful life under section 4112(c).
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Banks and Banking — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
12 U.S.C. § 4116
Title 12 — Banks and Banking
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73