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Affordable Housing Credit Improvement Act of 2023
3/14/2024, 4:05 AM
Summary of Bill HR 3238
Some key provisions of the Affordable Housing Credit Improvement Act of 2023 include increasing the annual allocation of LIHTC credits, making it easier for developers to access these credits, and targeting resources to areas with the greatest need for affordable housing. The bill also aims to streamline the application process for LIHTC credits and provide additional support for the preservation of existing affordable housing units.
Overall, the Affordable Housing Credit Improvement Act of 2023 seeks to address the growing affordable housing crisis in the United States by incentivizing the development of more affordable housing units and making it easier for low-income individuals and families to find safe and stable housing. This bill has the potential to have a significant impact on the availability of affordable housing across the country and is currently being debated in Congress.
Congressional Summary of HR 3238
Affordable Housing Credit Improvement Act of 2023
This bill revises provisions of the low-income housing tax credit and renames it as the affordable housing tax credit.
The bill increases the per capita dollar amount of the credit and its minimum ceiling amount beginning in 2023 and extends the inflation adjustment for such amounts.
The bill modifies tenant income eligibility requirements and the average income formula for determining such income. It also revises rules for student occupancy of rental units and tenant voucher payments, and prohibits any refusal to rent to victims of domestic abuse.
The bill further modifies the credit to
- increase state allocations of the credit;
- repeal the qualified census tract population cap;
- prohibit consideration of local approval and local government contribution requirements for housing projects;
- increase the credit for certain projects designated to serve extremely low-income households;
- increase the credit for certain bond-financed projects designated by state agencies;
- eliminate the basis reduction for properties that receive certain energy-related tax benefits; and
- increase the population cap for difficult development areas (i.e., areas with high construction, land, and utility costs relative to area median gross income).
The bill also includes Indian and rural areas as difficult development areas and modifies other requirements relating to casualty losses, tax-exempt bond financing, and foreclosures.





