Virginia Home Builders Log Big Wins During 2020 Legislative Session
- Affordable Dwelling Unit Ordinances: HBAV drafted HB 1101 (Betsy Carr–D) and SB 834 (Jennifer McClellan–D) to create a new "affordable dwelling unit ordinance" enabling statute in Virginia. Both bills allow localities to enact ordinances to reduce economic barriers to entry for affordable housing projects by offering density bonuses and waivers/reductions of local development standards such as parking requirements, height restrictions, setbacks, buffers, and other local regulations. The bills do not require localities to make all new development include affordable housing units, but simply allow localities to offer voluntary incentives to incorporate them.
- Virginia Housing Opportunity Tax Credit: HBAV led the effort to advance HB 810 (Jeff Bourne – D) to direct the Virginia Department of Housing and Community Development (DHCD) and the Virginia Housing Development Authority (VHDA) to convene a stakeholder advisory group (“SAG”) for the purpose of developing a Virginia Housing Opportunity Tax Credit, often referred to as a "State Low-Income Housing Tax Credit." The bill was supported by a broad coalition of private-sector and non-profit housing advocates. Like the Federal Low-Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC), the Virginia credit provides incentives for the utilization of private equity in the development and construction of affordable housing in Virginia.
- Constitutional Amendment – New Construction Tax Abatements: HBAV worked with Delegate Jeff Bourne (D–Richmond) to introduce House Joint Resolution 2, which would amend Virginia's Constitution to allow the General Assembly to authorize local governments to enact full or partial real estate tax abatement programs for new construction affordable housing developments. Currently, localities are only permitted to enact these programs for the rehabilitation of existing structures.
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Latest Economic News
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Feb 03, 2026
Homeownership Rate Inches Up to 65.7%The latest homeownership rate rose to 65.7% in the last quarter of 2025, according to the Census’s Housing Vacancy Survey (HVS). While this was a modest quarterly increase, the broader picture continues to reflect significant affordability challenges. With mortgage interest rates remaining elevated, and housing supply still tight, housing affordability is at a multidecade low.