The Florida housing-finance ecosystem
Florida'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.
Florida Housing Finance Corporation (FHFC)
FHFC is the state's affordable housing finance corporation operating under the Department of Economic Opportunity. FHFC allocates federal LIHTC, issues multifamily revenue bonds, and administers the largest state housing trust funds in the country (the William E. Sadowski Affordable Housing Act trust funds) — though Sadowski revenues have historically been subject to legislative sweeps. SAIL is FHFC's flagship gap-loan program.
Federal 9% LIHTC
Competitive · RentalFHFC allocates Florida's federal 9% LIHTC ceiling — approximately $75.2 million in 2026 following OBBBA's 12% increase. Awards made through competitive RFA cycles with set-asides for elderly, family, special needs, geographic balance, and preservation.
4% LIHTC + MMRB
Non-competitive · BondsNon-competitive 4% LIHTC paired with FHFC-issued multifamily mortgage revenue bonds (MMRB). FHFC is the state's primary multifamily PAB issuer.
State Apartment Incentive Loan (SAIL)
Gap loan · MultifamilyFHFC's flagship state-funded gap loan program for affordable multifamily rental housing. Low-interest second mortgage loans (typically 1-3%), most commonly paired with 4% LIHTC + MMRB for new construction and substantial rehabilitation. Funded through Sadowski trust fund revenues.
Elderly Housing Community Loan Program (EHCL)
Senior housing · LoanLow-interest loans supporting development and preservation of elderly affordable rental housing. Often paired with FHFC LIHTC and SAIL on senior-only developments.
Predevelopment Loan Program (PLP)
Predevelopment · Soft loanLow-interest predevelopment loans for nonprofit developers covering early-stage soft costs — site control, environmental, market study, architectural fees. Bridges the gap between project conception and primary financing.
HOME Investment Partnerships
Federal pass-throughFHFC administers Florida's HOME allocation, deployed primarily for rental housing development in non-participating jurisdictions. Frequently combined with SAIL and 4% LIHTC.
National Housing Trust Fund (NHTF)
Federal pass-through · ELI householdsFHFC administers Florida's NHTF allocation, supporting housing for extremely-low-income households (≤30% AMI). Combined with SAIL and LIHTC to deepen affordability on FHFC-funded developments.
State Housing Initiatives Partnership (SHIP)
Formula grant · Local jurisdictionsFormula grants from FHFC to all Florida counties and entitlement cities supporting locally-designed housing programs. Funded through Sadowski Local Government Housing Trust Fund. Eligible uses include homeownership assistance, rental rehabilitation, supportive services, and special needs accommodations.
Community Workforce Housing Innovation Pilot (CWHIP)
Workforce housing · Public-private partnershipPublic-private partnership program supporting affordable workforce housing in areas with high cost burden. Targets essential workforce populations (teachers, healthcare, public safety) at 60-140% AMI.
Special Needs Housing Assistance
Supportive housing · Operating subsidyFHFC operating-subsidy programs for housing serving persons with developmental disabilities, mental illness, and homeless veterans. Deployed in coordination with state health and human services partners.
Hardest-Hit Fund — Housing Counseling & Demolition
Legacy program · Foreclosure recoveryFederally-funded program administered by FHFC providing housing counseling, mortgage assistance, and blight-removal demolition in areas hardest-hit by foreclosure crisis. Originally Treasury-funded; current operations focus on closeout and reporting.
Rental Recovery Loan Program (RRLP)
Disaster recovery · 4% LIHTC pairingFHFC-administered CDBG-DR-funded program providing gap financing for affordable rental developments in counties impacted by hurricanes. Pairs with 4% LIHTC + MMRB for post-disaster rebuilding.
Emergency Mortgage Assistance Program (EMAP)
Foreclosure preventionFHFC's mortgage assistance program for homeowners facing financial hardship — provides up to 12 months of mortgage assistance combined with default counseling. Originally Hardest-Hit Fund-funded; continues with state-level resources.
Florida Hometown Heroes
Homeownership · Frontline workersFHFC homeownership program specifically for frontline workers (teachers, healthcare, law enforcement, firefighters, military). Provides up to $35,000 in down-payment and closing-cost assistance.
Florida Assist Loan
Homeownership · DPAFHFC's down-payment assistance loan program providing up to $10,000 in DPA at 0% interest, deferred. Combinable with FHFC first-mortgage products.
Florida HFA Preferred
Homeownership · Conventional mortgageFHFC's flagship first-mortgage product for first-time and other eligible homebuyers — competitive conventional, FHA, VA, and USDA mortgage products.
FHFC Mortgage Credit Certificate
Homeownership · Federal tax creditFederal income-tax credit for eligible first-time buyers equal to a percentage of mortgage interest paid annually.
Elderly Set Aside Rental Assistance
Senior · Operating subsidyFHFC operating subsidy specifically for elderly rental housing developments, ensuring units remain deeply affordable for senior residents.
Florida Department of Commerce — Division of Community Development
The Florida Department of Commerce (successor to the Department of Economic Opportunity) administers federal CDBG and CDBG-DR funds passing through to local governments and nonprofits. Florida has had major CDBG-DR activity for hurricane recovery (Irma, Michael, Ian, Idalia) and operates several disaster-recovery housing programs through state contractors.
CDBG (state-administered)
Federal pass-through · Non-entitlementFlorida Commerce administers federal CDBG for non-entitlement areas (smaller cities and counties without direct HUD allocations). Funds housing rehabilitation, infrastructure, and public facilities.
CDBG Disaster Recovery (CDBG-DR)
Federal disaster recoveryFlorida has substantial active CDBG-DR programs for hurricane recovery — Hurricane Irma (~$1.3B), Hurricane Michael (~$753M), Hurricane Ian (~$1.1B), and Hurricane Idalia (~$215M). Programs include homeowner rebuilding (Rebuild Florida), rental housing, and infrastructure.
CDBG Mitigation (CDBG-MIT)
Federal disaster mitigationCDBG-MIT funds for mitigation projects reducing future disaster risk. Funded with congressional appropriations following major disasters; deployed by Florida Commerce on infrastructure hardening and resilient housing.
Rebuild Florida
Disaster recovery · Homeowner & rentalFlorida's CDBG-DR-funded suite of disaster recovery programs operating under the Rebuild Florida brand. Includes homeowner reconstruction, voluntary buyout, rental housing repair, and workforce affordable housing programs.
Florida property tax exemptions for affordable housing
Florida has unusually robust property tax exemption frameworks for affordable housing — both fully-exempt (charitable use exemption for affordable housing owned by qualifying nonprofits) and partial exemptions through the Live Local Act. These exemptions materially affect deal economics.
Florida Charitable Use Property Tax Exemption
Property tax · Nonprofit-ownedFlorida exempts from property tax real property owned by exempt charitable organizations and used predominantly for affordable housing. For LIHTC properties with general partner nonprofits and qualifying ownership structures, this can provide substantial NOI improvement.
Live Local Act
Property tax exemption · Workforce housing2023 Florida law providing property tax exemptions for portions of multifamily developments reserved for households at 80-120% AMI. Created a 75% tax abatement for units serving up to 120% AMI in certain qualifying projects, with full exemption for units at lower income levels.
Miami-Dade Affordable Housing
Local · Document stamp tax · SURTAXMiami-Dade County's affordable housing programs through the Public Housing & Community Development Department, funded in part by the Documentary Stamp Surtax (a Miami-Dade-specific document stamp tax). One of the largest local affordable housing programs in Florida.
City of Tampa Affordable Housing
Local subsidy · Trust fundTampa's affordable housing programs through the Department of Neighborhood Enhancement supporting multifamily and homeownership development citywide.
City of Orlando / Orange County Affordable Housing
Local subsidy · Trust fundsOrange County and City of Orlando operate affordable housing programs supporting multifamily and homeownership development across the Orlando metro area. Combined with FHFC programs for major regional developments.
How Florida programs typically combine
Programs combine differently depending on what you're building. A short reference of representative stacks across the program-type spectrum:
- Multifamily new construction (most common pattern): 4% LIHTC + FHFC MMRB + SAIL + Sadowski/state HTF.
- 9% LIHTC new construction: 9% LIHTC + SAIL + NHTF + property tax exemption (charitable use or Live Local Act).
- Hurricane recovery rental: CDBG-DR (Rebuild Florida) + 4% LIHTC + MMRB + SAIL.
- Senior housing: 4% LIHTC + MMRB + Elderly Housing Community Loan (EHCL) + SAIL.
- Workforce housing under Live Local Act: 4% LIHTC + MMRB + CWHIP + Live Local Act partial property tax exemption.
- Local SHIP-funded homeownership and rehab: SHIP formula grants (state pass-through to all FL counties) deployed by local governments for homeownership assistance, rental rehab, and supportive services.
Post-OBBBA implications
- Permanent 12% LIHTC increase: Florida'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.