The District of Columbia housing-finance ecosystem
District of Columbia'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.
District of Columbia Housing Finance Agency (DCHFA)
DCHFA is the District of Columbia's housing finance agency, allocating federal LIHTC, issuing multifamily and single-family bonds, and operating DC's primary multifamily debt and gap-subsidy programs. DCHFA works in partnership with the DC Department of Housing & Community Development on most affordable housing deals.
Federal 9% LIHTC
Competitive · RentalDCHFA allocates DC's federal 9% LIHTC ceiling — approximately $2.3 million in 2026 following OBBBA's 12% increase (with small-area floor protection). Annual competitive QAP process coordinated with DHCD.
4% LIHTC + Multifamily Bonds
Non-competitive · BondsNon-competitive 4% LIHTC paired with DCHFA-issued multifamily revenue bonds. Robust 4% LIHTC pipeline given DC's high construction costs.
Multifamily Construction & Permanent Financing
First mortgage · MultifamilyDCHFA's direct first-mortgage products financing affordable multifamily rental developments — construction, permanent, and bridge financing.
Multifamily Insured Mortgage Program (MIP)
Credit enhancement · FHA Risk-ShareDCHFA's FHA Risk-Share insurance program providing credit enhancement for affordable multifamily financing, accessing favorable mortgage terms.
Permanent Supportive Housing Financing
Supportive housing · Capital + operatingDCHFA financing for permanent supportive housing combined with operating subsidies from DC Department of Human Services.
DC HomeSaver / DC Home Purchase Assistance
Homeownership · DPADCHFA's homeownership programs including DC Home Purchase Assistance Program (HPAP) administered with DHCD providing up to $80,000 in down payment and closing cost assistance for DC residents.
DC Open Doors
Homeownership · Below-market mortgageDCHFA's flagship single-family first-mortgage product offering below-market rates and DPA options for DC homebuyers.
DCHFA Mortgage Credit Certificate
Homeownership · Federal tax creditFederal income-tax credit for eligible first-time buyers equal to a percentage of mortgage interest paid annually.
DC Department of Housing & Community Development (DHCD)
DHCD is the District's housing agency, administering federal HOME, CDBG, NHTF, Section 8 pass-throughs plus DC's flagship state-funded programs including the Housing Production Trust Fund and Local Rent Supplement Program. DHCD's Housing Production Trust Fund (HPTF) is the largest local affordable housing trust fund in the country relative to population.
Housing Production Trust Fund (HPTF)
State capital subsidy · MajorDC's flagship state-funded gap subsidy program for affordable rental development. Funded primarily through DC's deed recordation and transfer taxes. Annual appropriations have exceeded $300 million in recent years — one of the largest local affordable housing trust funds in the country relative to population.
Local Rent Supplement Program (LRSP)
State rental assistance · MajorDC's flagship state-funded rental assistance program — both project-based and sponsor-based variants. Provides deep operating subsidy for extremely-low-income households, comparable in scale to federal Section 8 in DC.
Emergency Rental Assistance Program (ERAP)
Emergency rental assistanceDC's emergency rental assistance program providing tenant-based assistance for households facing housing instability or eviction.
HOME Investment Partnerships
Federal pass-throughDHCD administers DC's HOME allocation, primarily for multifamily rental development paired with LIHTC and HPTF.
National Housing Trust Fund (NHTF)
Federal pass-through · ELIDHCD administers DC's NHTF allocation for housing serving extremely-low-income households.
CDBG (DC-administered)
Federal · EntitlementDC receives federal CDBG as an entitlement jurisdiction (rather than state pass-through). DHCD deploys CDBG for housing rehabilitation, public facilities, and economic development.
Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher
Federal vouchers · DCHA adminSection 8 HCV in DC is primarily administered by the DC Housing Authority (DCHA), with DHCD coordination on portfolio-level affordable housing strategy.
Home Purchase Assistance Program (HPAP)
Homeownership · DPADHCD-administered DPA program providing up to $80,000 in down payment and closing cost assistance for DC residents purchasing in DC. Among the most generous DPA programs in the country.
DC Workforce Housing Production Trust Fund
Workforce housingDC's workforce housing-specific trust fund supplementing HPTF for moderate-income workforce housing development.
Inclusionary Zoning (IZ) Program
Inclusionary zoning · DC-wideDC's mandatory inclusionary zoning program requires affordable units in market-rate residential developments of 10+ units. One of the longest-running mandatory IZ programs in the country.
DC Affordable Housing Tax Abatement
Property tax abatementDC property tax abatement programs for affordable housing developments, including the Affordable Housing Real Property Tax Abatement and abatements tied to specific affordable housing programs.
DC Housing Authority (DCHA) and other DC housing entities
DCHA administers DC's federal public housing and Section 8 HCV. The DC Office of Tenant Advocate, Tenant Opportunity to Purchase Act (TOPA), and other DC-specific tenant protections create distinctive features of DC's housing market.
DCHA Section 8 HCV
Federal vouchers · DCHADC Housing Authority is DC's primary Section 8 HCV administrator (in contrast to most jurisdictions where the state HFA administers). DCHA manages tenant-based and project-based vouchers throughout the District.
Tenant Opportunity to Purchase Act (TOPA)
Tenant protection · Right of first refusalDC's Tenant Opportunity to Purchase Act provides tenants with a right of first refusal when their building is offered for sale. Has been used to preserve affordable housing through tenant-led conversions to cooperative ownership.
DC Historic Preservation Tax Credit
State tax credit · Historic rehabDC tax credit for rehabilitation of certified historic structures. Pairs with federal HTC and 4% LIHTC for adaptive-reuse housing developments.
ANC-Coordinated Affordable Housing
Local coordinationAdvisory Neighborhood Commissions (ANCs) coordinate community input on affordable housing development at the neighborhood level across DC's 40 ANCs.
How District of Columbia programs typically combine
Programs combine differently depending on what you're building. A short reference of representative stacks across the program-type spectrum:
- Standard DC affordable rental (most common): DCHFA 9% LIHTC + HPTF + DHCD HOME + LRSP project-based subsidy.
- 4% LIHTC + bonds: 4% LIHTC + DCHFA bonds + HPTF + LRSP.
- Permanent supportive housing: HPTF + LRSP project-based + DCHFA financing + Section 811 PRA + DHS operating.
- Inclusionary zoning + LIHTC: IZ obligation + 4% LIHTC + DCHFA bonds + HPTF + tax abatement.
- TOPA-enabled tenant conversion: TOPA right + cooperative conversion financing + HPTF + DCHFA financing.
- First-time homebuyer (DC residents): DC Open Doors + HPAP (up to $80K DPA) + MCC.
Post-OBBBA implications
- Permanent 12% LIHTC increase: District of Columbia'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.