60 likes | 71 Views
Permanently Affordable Homeownership & Community Land Trusts. August 12, 2019 AMIHAC. Community Land Trust Model. Best practice for maintaining permanent affordability Preserves affordability for the long-term
E N D
Permanently Affordable Homeownership & Community Land Trusts August 12, 2019 AMIHAC
Community Land Trust Model • Best practice for maintaining permanent affordability • Preserves affordability for the long-term • Uses one-time subsidy to help successive generations of low and middle-income homebuyers purchase a home • Creates wealth for families 1
Community Land Trusts – Dual Ownership • Homeowner owns the house & CLT owns the land • Ground lease ties house and land together (99 years, inheritable) • Dual ownership does not automatically = affordable price. • Subsidy needed to offset difference between what a low or middle-income household can afford and the cost of the home 2
Community Land Trusts – Resale Restriction • Initial sales price is affordable (subsidy needed) • Resale price is restricted by formula • Resale formula balances opportunity for seller to build wealth with ongoing affordability for future homebuyers • In CLT projects in Seattle, resale price formula generally allows annual increase of between 1-3% per year 3
Community Land Trusts- Program Types Buyer-Driven: A buyer can purchase a home of their choice on the open market. The buyer qualifies for a certain amount of subsidy to fill the gap between what they can afford (maximum mortgage amount) and the home they want to purchase. New construction: New homes are developed and sold to income-qualified households. Subsidy is provided to the developer to fill the gap between what the household can afford (maximum mortgage amount) and what it costs to build.
Community Land Trust – Example • A family of 3 at 100% AMI wants to participate in a buyer-driven program. • They find a 2-bedroom home that costs $523,000. The maximum mortgage they can obtain is $423,000.* • They qualify for subsidy of $100,000 to fill the gap. Their purchase price is $423,000. • Ten years later the family wants to sell. The resale price is $423,000 x 1.5% per year, compounded annually. Resale price = $483,654. • Because Area Median Income is generally going up each year, at resale home should be affordable to a household around 100% AMI, possibly even lower. * 35% DTI, 6% Interest and 20% down no PMI 4