Title 42The Public Health and WelfareRelease 119-73

§12895 Other program requirements

Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 130— - NATIONAL AFFORDABLE HOUSING › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER IV— - HOPE FOR HOMEOWNERSHIP OF MULTIFAMILY AND SINGLE FAMILY HOMES › Part Part B— - HOPE for Homeownership of Single Family Homes › § 12895

Last updated Apr 6, 2026|Official source

Summary

The federal housing official can set cost limits on activities paid for under this program. An organization that sells ownership shares to eligible families can use money from the first sale to pay program costs, such as running the program, fixing up the project, creating business chances for low-income families, offering supportive services, making more homeownership opportunities, and other approved uses. A homeowner may sell their unit, but the program can limit how resale works. If a resident management group, resident council, or cooperative controls the unit, that group has the first right to buy it at the price in a firm contract. If they don’t buy and the buyer is not low-income, the public housing agency or grant recipient can buy it at that same price. The homeowner must sign a written promise to pay the difference between market value and the sale price to the public housing agency or other designated entity, and give a mortgage as security. If the home is sold within 6 years, the family can only get back what they paid in equity, the agreed value of family-paid improvements, and a limited increase based on an agreed inflation formula. If sold after 6 years but before 20 years, the program or the Secretary can recapture the remaining balance on that payment note. Half of any net proceeds the homeowner may not keep go to the transferring entity for program uses; the other half goes back to the federal program, subject to funding rules. The program’s quality, resale, and transfer rules can be enforced in court, and winners may receive reasonable attorney fees. No tenant living in a unit when the grant application is approved may be evicted because of the homeownership program. Recipients must keep full records of proceeds and costs, and the Secretary and the Comptroller General may audit those records.

Full Legal Text

Title 42, §12895

The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC

(a)The Secretary may establish cost limitations on eligible activities under this part, subject to the provisions of this part.
(b)Any entity that transfers ownership interests in, or shares representing, units to eligible families, or another entity specified in the approved application, may use the proceeds, if any, from the initial sale for costs of the homeownership program, including operating expenses, improvements to the project, business opportunities for low-income families, supportive services related to the homeownership program, additional homeownership opportunities, and other activities approved by the Secretary.
(c)(1)(A)A homeowner under a homeownership program may transfer the homeowner’s ownership interest in, or shares representing, the unit, except that a homeownership program may establish restrictions on the resale of units under the program.
(B)Where a resident management corporation, resident council, or cooperative has jurisdiction over the unit, the corporation, council, or cooperative shall have the right to purchase the ownership interest in, or shares representing, the unit from the homeowner for the amount specified in a firm contract between the homeowner and a prospective buyer. If such an entity does not have jurisdiction over the unit or elects not to purchase and if the prospective buyer is not a low-income family, the public housing agency or the implementation grant recipient shall have the right to purchase the ownership interest in, or shares representing, the unit for the same amount.
(C)The homeowner shall execute a promissory note equal to the difference between the market value and the purchase price, payable to the public housing agency or other entity designated in the homeownership plan, together with a mortgage securing the obligation of the note.
(2)In the case of a transfer within 6 years of the acquisition under the program, the homeownership program shall provide for appropriate restrictions to assure that an eligible family may not receive any undue profit. The plan shall provide for limiting the family’s consideration for its interest in the property to the total of—
(A)the contribution to equity paid by the family;
(B)the value, as determined by such means as the Secretary shall determine through regulation, of any improvements installed at the expense of the family during the family’s tenure as owner; and
(C)the appreciated value determined by an inflation allowance at a rate which may be based on a cost-of-living index, an income index, or market index as determined by the Secretary through regulation and agreed to by the purchaser and the entity that transfers ownership interests in, or shares representing, units to eligible families (or another entity specified in the approved application), at the time of initial sale, and applied against the contribution to equity.
(3)In the case of a transfer during the period beginning 6 years after the acquisition and ending 20 years after the acquisition, the homeownership program shall provide for the recapture by the Secretary or the program of an amount equal to the amount of the declining balance on the note described in paragraph (1)(C).
(4)Fifty percent of any portion of the net sales proceeds that may not be retained by the homeowner under the plan approved pursuant to this subsection shall be paid to the entity that transferred ownership interests in, or shares representing, units to eligible families, or another entity specified in the approved application, for use for improvements to the project, business opportunities for low-income families, supportive services related to the homeownership program, additional homeownership opportunities, and other activities approved by the Secretary. The remaining 50 percent shall be returned to the Secretary for use under this part, subject to limitations contained in appropriations Acts. Such entity shall keep and make available to the Secretary all records necessary to calculate accurately payments due the Secretary under this subsection.
(d)The requirements under this part regarding quality standards, resale, or transfer of the ownership interest of a homeowner shall be judicially enforceable against the grant recipient with respect to actions involving rehabilitation, and against purchasers of property under this subsection or their successors in interest with respect to other actions by affected low-income families, resident management corporations, resident councils, public housing agencies, and any agency, corporation, or authority of the United States Government. The parties specified in the preceding sentence shall be entitled to reasonable attorney fees upon prevailing in any such judicial action.
(e)No tenant residing in a dwelling unit in a property on the date the Secretary approves an application for an implementation grant may be evicted by reason of a homeownership program approved under this part.
(h)(1)Each recipient shall keep such records as may be reasonably necessary to fully disclose the amount and the disposition by such recipient of the proceeds of assistance received under this part (and any proceeds from financing obtained or sales under subsections (b) and (c)), the total cost of the homeownership program in connection with which such assistance is given or used, and the amount and nature of that portion of the program supplied by other sources, and such other sources as will facilitate an effective audit.
(2)The Secretary shall have access for the purpose of audit and examination to any books, documents, papers, and records of the recipient that are pertinent to assistance received under this part.
(3)The Comptroller General of the United States, or any of the duly authorized representatives of the Comptroller General, shall also have access for the purpose of audit and examination to any books, documents, papers, and records of the recipient that are pertinent to assistance received under this part.

Reference

Citations & Metadata

Citation

42 U.S.C. § 12895

Title 42The Public Health and Welfare

Last Updated

Apr 6, 2026

Release point: 119-73