Title 12 › Chapter 13— NATIONAL HOUSING › Subchapter I— HOUSING RENOVATION AND MODERNIZATION › § 1706c
Lets the federal housing agency insure small home loans in suburban and outlying areas to help low- and moderate-income families where regular urban rules don’t work. The Secretary may agree to insure eligible mortgages when a lender applies and can promise insurance before the loan is made. Total loans insured at one time can’t be more than $100,000,000, but the President can add up to $150,000,000 more if he finds it helps the economy. No loan can be insured under this rule after August 2, 1954, unless a promise to insure was made on or before that date. To qualify, the lender must be approved by the Secretary. Loans must be for a single-family home and meet limits: principal up to $5,700 and no more than 95% of appraised value (builders have a lower limit of $5,100 or 85%); the buyer must live in the home and put at least 5% down, except the builder case. After certain major disasters the Secretary may raise limits to $7,000 and 100% of value. Loans can run up to 30 years, must amortize with payments the borrower can reasonably make, and carry interest no higher than 5% a year. The Secretary sets an insurance fee between 0.5% and 1% per year of the outstanding principal, payable by the lender in cash or special debentures, and can require upfront payments or adjusted refunds if the loan is paid off early. The Secretary can also release borrowers from liability or remove parts of property from lien, and an insurance contract is final and can’t be challenged except for lender fraud.
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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 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60