Summary:
This program insures the loan for a person who purchases a unit in a condominium
building. Purpose:
One of the many purposes of FHA’s mortgage insurance programs is to encourage
lenders to make affordable mortgage credit available for non-conventional forms
of ownership. Condominium ownership, in which the separate owners of the individual
units jointly own the development’s common areas and facilities, is one particularly
popular alternative. Insurance for condominiums, such as is provided through Section
234(c), can be important for low- and moderate-income renters who wish to avoid
being displaced by the conversion of their apartment building into a condominium.
Type
of Assistance:
The program insures a loan for as many as
30 years to purchase a unit in a condominium building--which must contain at least
four dwelling units and can be detached or semidetached, a rowhouse, a walk-up,
or an elevator structure. The loan is made by a lending institution, such as a
mortgage company, bank, or savings and loan association, and is insured by HUD’s
Federal Housing Administration (FHA). Most of the features of Section 234(c) mortgage
insurance are the same as those governing HUD’s basic FHA mortgage insurance program,
Mortgage Insurance for One- to Four-Family
Homes (Section 203(b)). For example, downpayment requirements can be low--3
percent or less--because FHA insurance allows homebuyers to finance about 97 percent
of the home’s cost through their mortgage. In addition, some closing costs can
be financed, reducing up-front costs. And FHA limits some fees that lenders charge—for
example, the loan origination charge. Finally, FHA sets limits
on the size of the mortgage loan that vary with location and the number of
units being purchased. However,
Section 234(c) does have some additional, unique restrictions. If the apartment
is in a building that was converted from rental housing, no insurance may be provided
under Section 234(c) unless: (1) the conversion occurred more than one year before
the application for insurance; (2) the potential buyer or co-buyer was a tenant
of that rental housing; or (3) the conversion of the property is sponsored by
a tenant's organization that represents a majority of the households in the project.
Eighty percent of FHA-insured mortgages in the project must be made to owner-occupants.
Developers
may obtain FHA-insured mortgages to
finance the construction or rehabilitation of housing projects that they intend
to sell as individual condominium units under HUD’s Section 234(d) program.
Eligible
Customers: Any creditworthy potential
owner-occupant who meets FHA underwriting criteria and will make the condominium
unit their principal residence is eligible for a mortgage insured under this program.
Application:
Applications must be submitted to the local HUD Field Office through a FHA-approved
lending institution. HUD’s Website offers an interactive directory
of approved lenders.
Technical
Guidance:
This program is authorized
under Section 234(c) of the National Housing Act (12 U.S.C. 1715y[c]).
Program regulations are at 24 CFR 234, Subpart A. These regulations,
as well as handbooks, notices, and letters relevant to this program,
are available through HUDCLIPS.
Section 234(c) is administered by the Single-Family Development
Division in HUD’s Office of Housing-Federal Housing Administration.
For
More Information:
See HUD’s website to learn more about this
program, or ask the Director of Single-Family
Programs in your local HUD Field Office. A booklet, Questions about Condominiums,
document 365-H(7), is available by mail from HUD or through the toll-free FHA
Mortgage Hotline, 1-800-CALLFHA. Homebuyers can also learn more by contacting
a HUD-approved lender for a searchable listing of approved lenders nationwide
or a HUD-approved housing counseling
agency. Eligible
Grantees:
Most FHA-approved lending institutions can
make Section 234(c) loans through Direct
Endorsement, which authorizes them to consider mortgage insurance applications
without submitting paperwork to HUD. |