FHA To Lower Condominium Owner-Occupancy Requirement

The Federal Housing Administration announced it will lower its required owner-occupancy standard for approved condominium developments under certain circumstances, effective immediately. 

FHA currently requires that approved condominium developments be at least 50 percent owner-occupied. But the agency determined that this requirement can drop to 35 percent for existing condo developments provided the project meets certain conditions.

The Housing Opportunity through Modernization Act of 2016 directed the FHA to issue guidance regarding the percentage of units within an approved condominium development that must be owner-occupied. 

FHA said having too few owner-occupants can detract from a condo project’s viability. “It is FHA’s position that owner-occupants serve to stabilize the financial viability of the projects and are less likely to default on their obligations to homeowner associations than non-owner occupants,” the agency said. “But requiring too many can harm its marketability.”   

For some condominium projects, the existing owner-occupancy requirement is necessary to maintain FHA Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund stability. But the agency believes that in certain instances it can protect the fund while allowing a lower percentage of owner-occupants.

“HUD’s experience shows that higher reserves, a low percentage of association dues in arrears and evidence of long-term financial stability allow for a lower owner-occupancy percentage without undue risk to the MMIF,” FHA said.  

For existing condominium developments greater than 12 months old, FHA will lower the owner-occupancy requirement to as low as 35 percent under the following conditions: 

–Applications must be submitted for processing and review under the HUD Review and Approval Process option;

–Financial documents must provide for funding of replacement reserves for capital expenditures and deferred maintenance in an account representing at least 20 percent of the condo development’s budget; 

–No more than 10 percent of the total units can be in arrears (more than 60 days past due) on their condominium association fee payments; and

–Three years of acceptable financial documents must be provided.