Michigan · State Subsidy Center

Michigan affordable housing finance.

MSHDA, established 1966, is Michigan's primary state housing finance agency.

State HFA
MSHDA
Michigan State Housing Development Authority (est. 1966)
Tax credit programs
Federal LIHTC
Federal LIHTC via MSHDA; no broad state LIHTC. ~$16.3M+ allocated in recent 9% rounds across 14+ projects.
State housing trust funds
MSHF · Housing Accelerator
Michigan State Housing Trust Fund; Michigan Housing Accelerator Fund (new 2025) for mixed-income
State rental assistance
KCFD · Limited statewide
Limited state rental assistance; primarily federal Section 8 admin via MSHDA and local PHAs
2026 PAB cap
~$1.36B
Per-capita $135 × 10.04M population
FHLB district
FHLBI
FHLB of Indianapolis

The Michigan housing-finance ecosystem

Michigan'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.

State Housing Finance Agency

Michigan State Housing Development Authority (MSHDA)

MSHDA, established 1966, is Michigan's primary state housing finance agency. MSHDA allocates federal LIHTC, issues multifamily and single-family revenue bonds, and operates Michigan's gap-financing programs. Michigan's 2022 Statewide Housing Plan set targets through 2030 including 115,000 new or rehabilitated housing units; as of October 2025 MSHDA has tracked 83,777 toward that goal.

Federal 9% LIHTC

Competitive · Rental

MSHDA allocates Michigan's federal 9% LIHTC ceiling — approximately $34.3 million in 2026 following OBBBA's 12% increase. Recent rounds have allocated $16.3M+ across 14 projects creating/preserving 700+ units. Annual competitive QAP process.

IRC § 42 · MSHDA Deep-dive coming soon

4% LIHTC + Multifamily Bonds

Non-competitive · Bonds

Non-competitive 4% LIHTC paired with MSHDA-issued multifamily revenue bonds. Significant 4% LIHTC pipeline statewide.

IRC § 42(h)(4) · MSHDA Deep-dive coming soon

Direct Lending — Permanent Loans

First mortgage · Multifamily

MSHDA's direct first-mortgage products financing the new construction, acquisition, rehabilitation, and preservation of affordable multifamily rental housing. Used across deal types from supportive housing to mixed-income.

Gap Financing Programs

Gap loan · Soft second

MSHDA's portfolio of subordinate gap-financing products including soft second loans and bridge financing for affordable multifamily developments. Pairs with LIHTC and federal HOME funds.

Equity Bridge Loan Program

Bridge financing · Tax credit equity

MSHDA's bridge-loan product that advances against future LIHTC equity contributions, accelerating construction-period draws on capital that would otherwise wait for syndication closings.

Michigan Housing Accelerator Fund (HAF)

Mixed-income · Gap financing

Launched 2025, the Housing Accelerator Fund provides financing for mixed-income housing developments through a combination of MSHDA funding sources with below-market cost of capital. Designed to expand the universe of feasible affordable + market-rate deals beyond traditional LIHTC.

Michigan State Housing Trust Fund

State capital subsidy

Michigan's state-funded housing trust fund supporting affordable housing development and preservation. Administered by MSHDA through annual appropriations.

HOME Investment Partnerships

Federal pass-through

MSHDA administers Michigan's HOME allocation for non-participating jurisdictions, primarily deployed for multifamily rental development.

42 U.S.C. § 12701 · MSHDA Deep-dive coming soon

National Housing Trust Fund (NHTF)

Federal pass-through · ELI

MSHDA administers Michigan's NHTF allocation for housing serving extremely-low-income households (≤30% AMI).

12 U.S.C. § 4568 · MSHDA Deep-dive coming soon

Project-Based Voucher Program

Operating subsidy · MSHDA-admin

MSHDA administers Section 8 PBV in Michigan jurisdictions not served by a local PHA. Vouchers attach to specific affordable rental units to ensure deep affordability.

24 CFR Part 983 · MSHDA Deep-dive coming soon

Section 811 Project Rental Assistance

Operating subsidy · Disability

MSHDA administers Michigan's HUD Section 811 PRA allocation, providing project-based rental assistance for extremely-low-income persons with disabilities.

42 U.S.C. § 8013 · MSHDA Deep-dive coming soon

Supportive Housing Programs

Supportive housing · Coordinated

MSHDA capital subsidy for permanent supportive housing combined with operating subsidies from Michigan Department of Health and Human Services for chronically homeless and special-needs populations.

MSHDA · MDHHS Deep-dive coming soon

CDBG (state-administered)

Federal pass-through · Non-entitlement

MSHDA administers federal CDBG for non-entitlement Michigan communities, funding housing rehabilitation, public facilities, and infrastructure.

42 U.S.C. § 5306 · MSHDA Deep-dive coming soon

MI Home Loan

Homeownership · Below-market mortgage

MSHDA's flagship first-mortgage product offering below-market interest rates through participating lenders. Combinable with MSHDA DPA products.

MSHDA Down Payment Assistance

Homeownership · DPA

MSHDA's down-payment assistance programs providing up to $10,000 in zero-interest, deferred-payment DPA loans combinable with MI Home Loan.

MSHDA Mortgage Credit Certificate

Homeownership · Federal tax credit

Federal income-tax credit for eligible first-time buyers equal to a percentage of mortgage interest paid annually.

IRC § 25 · MSHDA Deep-dive coming soon

Property Improvement Program (PIP)

Homeownership · Rehab

MSHDA's home improvement loan program providing below-market financing for owner-occupied rehabilitation, energy efficiency improvements, and accessibility modifications.

Local Housing Programs

Detroit, Grand Rapids, and major Michigan city programs

Detroit and other major Michigan cities operate substantial local affordable housing programs in parallel with MSHDA, including local trust funds, land banks, and city bond authorities.

City of Detroit Affordable Housing

Local bonds · Land bank

Detroit's affordable housing programs include the Affordable Housing Trust Fund, partnerships with the Detroit Land Bank Authority for distressed property acquisition, and local bond issuances supporting multifamily affordable development. Major source of supplemental funding alongside MSHDA LIHTC awards.

City of Detroit Deep-dive coming soon

City of Grand Rapids Affordable Housing

Local subsidy · Trust fund

Grand Rapids operates affordable housing programs through the Community Development Department supporting multifamily and homeownership development.

City of Grand Rapids Deep-dive coming soon

City of Ann Arbor Affordable Housing

Local bonds · Trust fund

Ann Arbor voters approved a 20-year affordable housing millage in 2020 providing dedicated local funding for affordable housing. Recent MSHDA-funded developments combine state and local resources.

City of Ann Arbor Deep-dive coming soon

How Michigan 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 + MSHDA Gap Financing + state HTF + HOME.
  • 4% LIHTC + bonds: 4% LIHTC + MSHDA bonds + Gap Financing + Equity Bridge Loan.
  • Mixed-income via Housing Accelerator Fund: Michigan HAF + 4% LIHTC + bonds + local trust fund.
  • Permanent supportive housing: MSHDA Supportive Housing + Section 811 PRA + MDHHS operating subsidy + 9% LIHTC.
  • Detroit-area distressed property redevelopment: Detroit Land Bank acquisition + 9% LIHTC + MSHDA gap + local affordable housing trust.
  • First-time homebuyer: MI Home Loan + MSHDA DPA + MCC + Property Improvement Program.

Post-OBBBA implications

  • Permanent 12% LIHTC increase: Michigan'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.