The Colorado housing-finance ecosystem
Colorado's housing pipeline draws on a mix of state agencies, federal pass-through programs, and local frameworks. Programs span the full spectrum: low-income rental, supportive housing for special-needs populations, workforce / missing-middle housing, homelessness prevention, first-time homebuyer assistance, mixed-use redevelopment, and disaster recovery. Below is a directory of every currently-active state-level and major-local program, organized by administering agency.
Colorado Housing and Finance Authority (CHFA)
CHFA is Colorado's quasi-public state housing finance authority, allocating federal and state LIHTC, issuing multifamily and single-family bonds, and operating Colorado's primary first-mortgage homebuyer products. Self-supporting through bond issuance rather than tax appropriations.
Federal 9% LIHTC
Competitive · RentalCHFA allocates Colorado's federal 9% LIHTC ceiling — approximately $20.0 million in 2026 following OBBBA's 12% increase. Annual competitive QAP process with set-asides for rural, supportive, and preservation projects.
4% LIHTC + Multifamily Bonds
Non-competitive · BondsNon-competitive 4% LIHTC paired with CHFA-issued multifamily revenue bonds.
Colorado Affordable Housing Tax Credit
State tax credit · Since 2014Colorado's state LIHTC, enacted in 2014. Pairs with federal LIHTC to deepen affordability. Awarded together with federal LIHTC through CHFA's QAP process.
CHFA Multifamily Direct Loan
First mortgage · MultifamilyCHFA's direct first-mortgage products financing affordable multifamily rental developments — construction, permanent, and bridge financing.
Inclusionary Affordable & Energy-Efficient Housing Loan
Mid-market · GreenCHFA's flexible loan product for mid-market affordable rental developments with energy efficiency components.
Supportive Housing Programs
Supportive housing · Capital subsidyCHFA financing for permanent supportive housing combined with operating subsidies from Colorado Department of Human Services and Department of Local Affairs.
CHFA SmartStep & FirstStep
Homeownership · Below-market mortgageCHFA's flagship single-family first-mortgage products — SmartStep for first-time and repeat buyers, FirstStep for first-time buyers. Below-market rates through participating lenders.
CHFA Down Payment Assistance
Homeownership · DPACHFA's down-payment assistance products providing forgivable second-mortgage grants and silent-second loans combinable with CHFA first mortgages.
CHFA Mortgage Credit Certificate
Homeownership · Federal tax creditFederal income-tax credit for eligible first-time buyers equal to a percentage of mortgage interest paid annually.
Colorado Department of Local Affairs (DOLA) — Division of Housing
DOLA's Division of Housing administers federal HOME, NHTF, CDBG pass-throughs plus state-funded affordable housing programs. Colorado has significantly increased state-funded affordable housing investment in recent years following Proposition 123 (2022) and related dedicated revenue sources.
Proposition 123 Affordable Housing Fund
State capital subsidy · Voter-approvedColorado's voter-approved (2022) dedicated revenue source for affordable housing investment. Provides substantial state-funded capital for affordable rental development and homeownership programs through DOLA and CHFA.
Housing Development Grant (HDG)
State capital subsidyDOLA's primary state-funded capital subsidy for affordable multifamily rental development. Pairs with LIHTC and federal HOME funds for new construction and preservation deals.
HOME Investment Partnerships
Federal pass-throughDOLA administers Colorado's HOME allocation for non-participating jurisdictions.
National Housing Trust Fund (NHTF)
Federal pass-through · ELIDOLA administers Colorado's NHTF allocation for housing serving extremely-low-income households.
CDBG (state-administered)
Federal pass-through · Non-entitlementDOLA administers federal CDBG for non-entitlement Colorado communities.
Emergency Housing Assistance Program (EHAP)
Emergency rental assistanceState-funded emergency rental assistance program providing tenant-based assistance for households facing housing instability.
State Supportive Housing Programs
Supportive housing · Operating subsidyDOLA-administered state-funded operating subsidies for permanent supportive housing serving chronically homeless and special-needs populations.
Denver, Boulder, and major Colorado local programs
Denver, Boulder, and other Front Range jurisdictions operate substantial local affordable housing programs including dedicated funding sources and inclusionary housing requirements.
Denver Affordable Housing Fund
Local subsidy · Dedicated fundingDenver's affordable housing fund supports multifamily and homeownership development. Funded through dedicated sources including property tax and marijuana sales tax.
Boulder Inclusionary Housing
Inclusionary zoningBoulder's mandatory inclusionary housing ordinance requires affordable units or fee-in-lieu in new development. Long-running program generating significant fee revenue.
Denver Inclusionary Housing
Inclusionary zoningDenver's inclusionary housing requirements for new development above certain thresholds, with affordable unit set-asides or fee-in-lieu payments.
How Colorado programs typically combine
Programs combine differently depending on what you're building. A short reference of representative stacks across the program-type spectrum:
- Statewide 9% LIHTC: 9% LIHTC + Colorado state LIHTC + Prop 123 funding + DOLA HDG.
- 4% LIHTC + bonds: 4% LIHTC + CHFA bonds + state LIHTC + Prop 123.
- Permanent supportive housing: CHFA financing + DOLA supportive housing operating + 9% LIHTC + state LIHTC.
- Denver / Boulder affordable rental: Local affordable housing fund + 9% LIHTC + state LIHTC + Prop 123.
- Mixed-income workforce: CHFA IAEHL + 4% LIHTC + bonds + Prop 123.
- First-time homebuyer: CHFA SmartStep + DPA + MCC.
Post-OBBBA implications
- Permanent 12% LIHTC increase: Colorado's annual 9% LIHTC ceiling is permanently larger starting 2026.
- 25% PAB financed-by test: for bonds issued after December 31, 2025, materially expanding the pipeline of 4% LIHTC deals that can be supported per dollar of bond volume cap.
- Permanent OZ designations: Qualified Opportunity Zone designations gain permanence; Rural OZ provisions may apply in qualifying portions of the state.
- Section 45L / 179D termination (June 30, 2026): Developers pursuing energy-efficient construction should accelerate placed-in-service dates.
This is educational reference material for affordable-housing practitioners, not legal, tax, financial, or investment advice. State program details, funding levels, and rules change frequently — consult the relevant state agencies and qualified counsel before structuring any transaction. See Disclaimer.