HHFDC & HCDA Compliance: Navigating Hawaii’s State Housing Layers
In Hawaii, affordable housing often involves complex layers of state financing that go beyond federal rules. Whether you are utilizing HHFDC Gap Financing or building HCDA Reserved Housing in Kakaako, specific state-level compliance is required to avoid default.
At Hawaii Affordable Properties, Inc. (HAPI), we are the local experts in Hawaii’s unique “Alphabet Soup” of housing agencies. We manage the specific reporting, eligibility, and asset monitoring requirements for the Hawaii Housing Finance & Development Corporation (HHFDC) and the Hawaii Community Development Authority (HCDA).
The HAPI Advantage: Local Regulatory Expertise
Mainland management companies often fail to grasp the nuances of Hawaii’s specific statutes (Chapter 201H and Kakaako Reserved Housing rules). We live and breathe them.
Gap Financing Guardians:
We protect your low-interest state loans by ensuring strict adherence to Rental Housing Revolving Fund (RHRF) covenants.
Workforce Housing Specialists
We are experts in qualifying the “Gap Group” (80%–140% AMI)—the workforce demographic that HCDA programs target.
Buyback Monitoring
For for-sale projects, we manage the complex “Buyback” and “Shared Equity” tracking required by the state.
Core State Program Services
We handle the administrative burden of state-level audits,ensuring your project remains
in good standing with Hawaii’s unique housing agencies.
HHFDC Program Compliance (RHRF, HMMF & 201H)
Projects funded by state loans or tax-exempt bonds require rigorous annual reporting distinct from federal tax credits.
Hula Mae Multi-Family (HMMF) Bond Administration
We actively monitor the “50% Test” (ensuring tax-exempt bonds finance at least 50% of the aggregate basis) to protect your 4% LIHTC eligibility. We also handle the quarterly “Good Costs” accounting to ensure bond proceeds are spent strictly on qualified capital costs.
RHRF "Residual Receipts" Calculation
The Rental Housing Revolving Fund (RHRF) loan repayment is often contingent on “Surplus Cash.” We prepare the annual Residual Receipts Analysis, working with your CPA to correctly calculate “Distributable Cash” vs. “Retained Cash” to prevent default notices from the state.
Chapter 201H Exemption Monitoring
For projects granted zoning exemptions under HRS Chapter 201H, we police the long-term Regulatory Agreement (often 60+ years). We ensure that despite rising market values, rents remain strictly pegged to the HHFDC Affordable Rent Schedule for the life of the covenant.
HCDA Reserved Housing (Kakaako & Transit Zones)
The HCDA governs the “Reserved Housing” rules in Kakaako and Kalaeloa. These rules are entirely unique to Hawaii and require specialized staff training.
Strict Asset & Eligibility Screening
HCDA rules disqualify applicants who own any majority interest in real estate worldwide. We perform deep asset verifications (checking 3 years of tax returns) to ensure applicants meet the 135% Asset Limit Rule (assets cannot exceed 135% of the applicable income limit).
"Gap Group" Recertification
We manage the annual recertification for workforce housing tenants (80% – 140% AMI). If a tenant’s income rises above the 140% limit, we manage the HCDA-prescribed lease termination or market-rate transition process so your project stays compliant.
Shared Appreciation Equity (SAE) Tracking
For for-sale units, the state retains a “Shared Equity” interest. We monitor the Unilateral Declaration for each unit, calculating the equity share due to HCDA upon resale or refinancing (typically based on the Original Fair Market Value vs. Original Sales Price formula).
The Comparison Table:HHFDC vs. HCDA
Understanding which agency requires what is the first step to compliance.
| Feature | HHFDC (Statewide) | HCDA (Kakaako/Kalaeloa) |
|---|---|---|
| Primary Focus | Affordable Rentals (Low Income) | Workforce Housing (Gap Group) |
| Typical AMI Target | 30% – 60% AMI | 80% – 140% AMI |
| Key Compliance Risk | RHRF Loan Default | Buyback/Equity Violation |
| Asset Limit Rule | Generally None (Income focused) | Strict (Asset limits apply) |
| Restriction Period | 15 – 60+ Years | Typically 10 – 30 Years |
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between Section 8 and HCDA Reserved Housing?
Section 8 is a federal subsidy for low-income households (usually <50% AMI). HCDA Reserved Housing is a state zoning program requiring developers to set aside units for “Workforce” households (teachers, nurses, etc.) earning between 80-140% AMI. They have completely different application forms and rules.
Do you handle the HHFDC Annual Report?
Yes. HHFDC requires a comprehensive Annual Report detailing occupancy, demographics, and project financials. We compile this data and submit it via the HHFDC online portal to keep your project in good standing.
What happens if an RHRF loan payment is calculated incorrectly?
Underpaying your RHRF “Residual Receipts” payment can trigger a default and penalties. HAPI’s accounting team works with your CPA to calculate “Surplus Cash” strictly according to the loan documents to ensure the correct payment is made.
Can HCDA tenants own other real estate?
Generally, no. HCDA rules prohibit Reserved Housing applicants from owning a majority interest in a principal residence anywhere in the world. We perform title searches and asset checks to verify this eligibility criterion.
How do you manage "201H" properties?
Properties built under 201H often have strict affordability terms in exchange for zoning variances. We monitor the Regulatory Agreement to ensure that rents remain restricted for the full term, even if market rents in the neighborhood skyrocket.
Navigate State Regulations with Confidence
Don’t let Hawaii’s unique housing laws slow down your development.
Partner with the local experts.