Welcome home? New FHA process could make condos available to more buyers

Millions of homebuyers could benefit from new guidelines issued by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development that streamline the Federal Housing Administration’s condominium project approval process. The guidelines, which went into effect yesterday, now allow single-unit approvals, extend the lifetime of approvals, simplify recertification, and more.

In a statement, HUD Secretary Ben Carson says one goal of the new process is “to open more doors to homeownership for younger, first-time American buyers as well as seniors hoping to age in place.” HUD data shows condominium unit mortgages currently account for fewer than 2% of all FHA-insured mortgages. 

One important element in the agency’s updated approval guidelines includes single-unit approvals on up to 10% of mortgages in condominiums without FHA approval provided that they are financially stable. The other changes include increasing the concentration rate so that FHA can insure up to 75% of unit mortgages in a condo project and lowering owner occupancy rates from 50% to 35% based on financial and operational stability. 

In addition, the new procedures extend FHA approvals for condominiums from two years to three, simplify recertification to only requiring updates to information instead of resubmitting all information, and ease restrictions on mixed-use condominiums with up to 45% commercial space. 

HUD estimates that between 20,000–60,000 condominium units may now be eligible for FHA-insured financing annually, and that around 7,000 new condominium projects could be built thanks to wider availability of mortgages.

The new guidelines “take some of the pressure off boards” to spend association time and money to certify a condominium project for FHA financing, says Jeffrey A. Beaumont, vice chair of CAI’s California Legislative Action Committee and an attorney with Beaumont Tashjian in Woodland Hills.  

The changes should allow greater access to FHA financing and ultimately result in a greater pool of homes for prospective purchasers to choose from, says Beaumont, a fellow in CAI’s College of Community Association Lawyers. 

CAI supports the actions and has made a balanced, data-driven approval process a public policy priority. “Following the housing crisis in 2008, the FHA condominium approval process severely impacted access to FHA-insured mortgages, which hurt homeowners and household formation,” says Dawn M. Bauman, CAE, CAI’s senior vice president of government and public affairs. “The changes mark a return for FHA as a key long-term partner for condominium associations.” 

Credit-worthy first-time homebuyers who have been prevented from achieving condominium homeownership could now benefit from the new guidelines. About 40% of the nation’s 27 million community association households call a condominium home, accounting for approximately 10% of the nation’s housing stock, according to the Foundation for Community Association Research.  

>>Read more about the updated process at www.caionline.org/FHA.  

Pamela Babcock, a writer and editor in the New York City area, contributed to this article. 

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A place to call home: Americans favor homeownership over renting

Despite a competitive housing market and current concerns about housing affordability, 70% of Americans still see owning a home as a clear sign of success in adulthood, according to Wells Fargo’s 2019 “How America Views Homeownership” survey.

Seven in 10 respondents of the survey of 1,004 adults 21 years and older say that owning a house is on par with having a career as a sign of a successful adult. Those surveyed note that they see homeownership as a clearer sign of success over getting married (32%) or having children (34%).

Close to 90% of the respondents say that the benefits of homeownership outweigh the drawbacks. If they could do it all over again, current homeowners say they would still choose to buy their home (93%) instead of continuing to rent, and nearly all (95%) note that owning a home is a better financial decision in the long run than renting.

Affording a down payment is seen as the primary hurdle to buying a home, according to 27% of those surveyed, with 38% of aspiring millennial homeowners naming it their biggest challenge to achieving homeownership. Wells Fargo notes, however, that some mortgage lenders allow qualified buyers to put as little as 3% down on a home.

Nearly 8 in 10 homeowners would be willing to move to a smaller city or town to afford their home, and 74% say that they would consider buying a smaller home with fewer amenities.

First-time homebuyers frequently look to condominiums as a lower-cost housing option. Roughly 40% of the 347,000 community associations in the U.S. are condominiums, according to the 2018-2019 National and Statistical Review for Community Association Data from the Foundation for Community Association Research. Recently updated requirements from the Federal Housing Administration should make lending easier for condominium unit buyers.

More than 73 million U.S. residents currently live in a community association—up from 62 million in 2010. Community associations are growing due to the value of collective management, privatization of public maintenance services, and the expansion of affordable housing options.

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