NAHB Urges Congress to Support Affordable Housing, LIHTC in Next Package

Advocacy
Published

NAHB, as part of the A Call To Invest in Our Neighborhoods (ACTION) Coalition, sent to congressional leaders a letter urging them to stabilize the affordable housing system by including provisions to support the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC) and mitigate the damage to affordable housing production that is already occurring as a result of the COVID-19 crisis.

There is a severe shortage of affordable rental housing in the United States, and the COVID-19 pandemic has only exacerbated this growing crisis. The need to keep affordable housing production moving forward is even greater with more than 30 million individuals and counting who have lost their jobs, while one in four renters were already struggling paying more than 50% of their income in rent prior to the pandemic.

The coalition requests the following for the next relief package:

  • Enact a minimum 4% housing credit rate.
  • Lower the "50% test" bond financing threshold for 4% Housing Credit developments

Fiscal policies pursued by the government to stabilize the economy have driven the 4% credit rate down to all-time lows. For April, the rate was 3.12% for May, the rate is now 3.08%, breaking the record low set in April. This is an unprecedented drop and direct consequence of COVID-19. And this record-low rate is unlikely to change in the short term, which is why relief is needed.

Going forward, the coalition has also requested the Congress explore increasing the annual housing credit allocation by 50%, and providing additional basis boosts for vulnerable properties impacted by COVID-19, including housing bond-financed properties that have felt the financing crisis most acutely.

The full coalition letter is available on nahb.org.

For more information, contact J.P. Delmore.

Subscribe to NAHBNow

Log in or create account to subscribe to notifications of new posts.

Log in to subscribe

Latest from NAHBNow

Sponsored Content

Dec 23, 2025

The 5 Types of Builders — and the One Built to Prosper

Most builders want the same things: predictable profits, less stress, and a business that doesn’t grind them down year after year.

Construction Costs | Material Costs

Dec 23, 2025

Lumber Capacity Has Peaked for 2025

An annual revision to the Federal Reserve G.17 Industrial Production report shows current sawmill production levels above 2017 by 7.5%, but just 0.3% above 2023 levels.

View all

Latest Economic News

Economics

Dec 22, 2025

State-Level Employment Situation: September 2025

In September 2025, nonfarm payroll employment was largely unchanged across states on a monthly basis, with a limited number of states seeing statistically significant increases or decreases. This reflects generally stable job counts across states despite broader labor market fluctuations. The data were impacted by collection delays due to the federal government shutdown.

Economics

Dec 19, 2025

Existing Home Sales Edge Higher in November

Existing home sales rose for the third consecutive month in November as lower mortgage rates continued to boost home sales, according to the National Association of Realtors (NAR). However, the increase remained modest as mortgage rates still stayed above 6% while down from recent highs. The weakening job market also weighed on buyer activity.

Economics

Dec 18, 2025

Lumber Capacity Lower Midway Through 2025

Sawmill production has remained essentially flat over the past two years, according to the Federal Reserve G.17 Industrial Production report. This most recent data release contained an annual revision, which resulted in higher estimates for both production and capacity in U.S. sawmills.