The Kentucky housing-finance ecosystem
Kentucky'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.
Kentucky Housing Corporation (KHC)
KHC is Kentucky's state housing finance corporation, allocating federal LIHTC, issuing multifamily and single-family bonds, administering the Kentucky Affordable Housing Trust Fund, and operating federal pass-through programs (HOME, NHTF, ESG, HOPWA). KHC operates Kentucky's primary first-mortgage and DPA homebuyer products.
Federal 9% LIHTC
Competitive · RentalKHC allocates Kentucky's federal 9% LIHTC ceiling — approximately $15.4 million in 2026 following OBBBA's 12% increase. Annual competitive QAP process.
4% LIHTC + Multifamily Bonds
Non-competitive · BondsNon-competitive 4% LIHTC paired with KHC-issued multifamily revenue bonds.
Kentucky Affordable Housing Trust Fund (AHTF)
State capital subsidyKentucky's state-funded housing trust fund administered by KHC. Supports affordable rental and homeownership development, supportive housing, and homelessness prevention.
HOME Investment Partnerships
Federal pass-throughKHC administers Kentucky's HOME allocation, primarily for multifamily rental development paired with LIHTC.
HOME-ARP
Federal · Homelessness responseKHC administers Kentucky's HOME-ARP allocation for rental development, supportive services, and non-congregate shelter for households experiencing or at risk of homelessness.
National Housing Trust Fund (NHTF)
Federal pass-through · ELIKHC administers Kentucky's NHTF allocation for housing serving extremely-low-income households.
Emergency Solutions Grant (ESG)
Federal · HomelessnessKHC administers Kentucky's federal ESG allocation for emergency shelter, rapid rehousing, and homelessness prevention.
HOPWA Administration
HIV/AIDS housingKHC administers Kentucky's portion of HOPWA funds for housing and supportive services for households living with HIV/AIDS.
Section 811 Project Rental Assistance
Operating subsidy · DisabilityKHC administers Kentucky's HUD Section 811 PRA allocation for extremely-low-income persons with disabilities.
Recovery Kentucky
Recovery housing · Substance useKHC partnership program supporting development of housing serving individuals in recovery from substance use disorders.
Permanent Supportive Housing
Supportive housing · CoordinatedKHC capital subsidy for permanent supportive housing combined with operating subsidies from Kentucky Cabinet for Health and Family Services.
KHC Mortgages
Homeownership · Below-market mortgageKHC's flagship single-family first-mortgage products with below-market rates plus DPA options for first-time and other eligible homebuyers.
KHC Down Payment Assistance
Homeownership · DPAKHC's DPA programs providing forgivable second-mortgage assistance combinable with KHC first mortgages.
KHC Mortgage Credit Certificate
Homeownership · Federal tax creditFederal income-tax credit for eligible first-time buyers equal to a percentage of mortgage interest paid annually.
KY Department for Local Government (DLG) & other state agencies
DLG administers federal CDBG for non-entitlement Kentucky communities. Kentucky has had significant CDBG-DR activity for Eastern Kentucky flooding recovery in 2022.
CDBG (state-administered)
Federal pass-through · Non-entitlementDLG administers federal CDBG for non-entitlement Kentucky communities.
CDBG Disaster Recovery — Eastern Kentucky
Federal disaster recoveryKentucky CDBG-DR allocations including significant Eastern Kentucky flooding recovery (2022) — homeowner rebuilding, rental housing, and infrastructure.
Kentucky Historic Preservation Tax Credit
State tax credit · Historic rehabKentucky state historic tax credit for rehabilitation of certified historic structures. Pairs with federal HTC and 4% LIHTC for adaptive-reuse housing developments.
Louisville, Lexington, and major Kentucky local programs
Louisville and Lexington operate substantial local affordable housing programs through municipal housing departments and partnerships with local CDFIs.
Louisville Affordable Housing Trust Fund
Local trust fundLouisville Metro's affordable housing trust fund supports gap subsidies for affordable rental and homeownership development. Combined with KHC LIHTC awards.
Lexington Affordable Housing Trust
Local trust fundLexington-Fayette Urban County's affordable housing trust supports affordable rental and homeownership development.
How Kentucky 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 + Kentucky AHTF + HOME + NHTF.
- 4% LIHTC + bonds: 4% LIHTC + KHC bonds + AHTF.
- Permanent supportive housing: 9% LIHTC + KHC Permanent Supportive Housing + Section 811 PRA + Recovery Kentucky (where applicable).
- Disaster recovery rental (Eastern KY): CDBG-DR + 4% LIHTC + AHTF.
- Historic adaptive reuse: Federal HTC + Kentucky Historic TC + 4% LIHTC + KHC bonds.
- First-time homebuyer: KHC mortgage + DPA + MCC.
Post-OBBBA implications
- Permanent 12% LIHTC increase: Kentucky'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.