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If you have part-time or full-time students living at your tax credit site, it’s important to know how to calculate their income properly. However, be mindful that all student eligibility requirements are met for your LIHTC site before you consider student income in a household. In other words, once you ensure that a low-income prospective household doesn’t violate the student rule, you can focus on income eligibility.
With the rise of gig economy companies such as Uber, Lyft, and Instacart, you may have noticed more applicants earning money from these companies as independent freelancing contractors. When you’re calculating household income, a “freelancer” presents special challenges. Freelancers are self-employed, and their income often can be sporadic.
When recertifying households, you, as the site tax credit manager, probably know that households that go over-income don’t cease to qualify as tax credit units. To continue receiving tax credits on a unit whose household goes over-income, you must follow the available unit rule. The rule requires you to rent the next available unit of comparable or smaller size in the building to a new, qualified low-income household.
A household can consist of one or more persons. A household may report to you that one of its members will be absent from the unit. For instance, an applicant may report that she has a daughter who’s away at school. Or an applicant may report that his wife recently had a stroke and will be confined to a nursing home. When certifying these households, you need to know whether to count these absent household members for purposes of determining unit size and househol...
During the certification or recertification process, residents are required to report all income from all sources to the owner or manager during certification or recertification. One component of annual income is any income the household’s assets generate. And sometimes, households may dispose of assets for less than fair market value (FMV). These can include cash gifts or property. As an owner or manager, you must get correct information from residents about asse...
On March 6, HUD released the 2015 income limits, available at huduser.org. According to Revenue Ruling 94-57, you have 45 days to begin using them to certify and recertify low-income households at your tax credit site. This means this year’s income limits must be implemented no later than April 19, 2015. Here are some site management issues affected by changes in income limits.
The IRS recently issued the 2015 optional standard mileage rates. Starting Jan. 1, 2015, when calculating the deductible costs of operating an automobile, the new rates will be 57.5 cents per mile for business miles driven, 23 cents per mile driven for medical or moving purposes, and 14 cents per mile driven in service of charitable organizations.
On Oct. 31, 2014, HUD issued Housing Notice 2014-15, “Passbook Savings Rate Effective February 1, 2015 and Establishing Future Passbook Savings Rates.” The HUD passbook rate is used to impute asset income on households who have $5,000 or more in assets. Currently, the HUD passbook rate is 2 percent. Effective Feb. 1, 2015, the HUD passbook rate will be reduced to 0.06 percent. Since the LIHTC program is required to follow Section 8 rules regarding household ...
When certifying or recertifying households at your tax credit site, it’s not uncommon to discover that a household member is the creator or beneficiary of a trust. If so, you’ll need to account for the trust when calculating the household’s income. If you don’t know how to treat trusts, you’ll make mistakes when trying to determine a household’s eligibility to occupy a low-income unit.
On Dec. 4, HUD released income limits for 2013, but revised the limits after discovering a calculation error. The revised numbers were issued Dec. 11. Under the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008 (HERA), income limits are used to determine qualification levels as well as set maximum rental rates for projects funded with low-income housing tax credits and projects financed with tax-exempt housing bonds. These projects are referred to by HUD as Multifamily Tax Subs...