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Issue #150, Summer 2007 |
Taxation of Shared-Equity HomesBy John Emmeus Davis |
In 2004, the National Housing Institute launched
an ongoing research project on shared-equity homeownership, focusing
on three models of resale-restricted, owner-occupied housing: limited-equity
cooperatives; community land trusts; and deed-restricted houses and
condominiums with affordability covenants lasting at least 30 years.
During the initial phase of this project, NHI assessed what is presently
known - and not known - about the structure, prevalence, design, policies,
and performance of these alternative models of homeownership. This assessment
revealed many areas where essential information is incomplete, contradictory,
or nonexistent. The findings of this phase of the project appear in
"Shared Equity
Homeownership: The Changing Landscape of Resale-Restricted, Owner-Occupied
Housing." The unanswered questions identified during the
first phase of the research have helped to shape the agenda for the
second phase. The research will be conducted by a team to be assembled
by NHI and led by NHI's recently appointed research director Carla J.
Robinson. This phase of the project will lead to a better understanding
of the prevalence, dynamics, and effectiveness of shared-equity homeownership.
With financial support from the Lincoln
Institute of Land Policy, NHI has launched the second phase of this
research with a study of the taxation of shared-equity homes. The owners
of these homes, like the owners of market-rate homes, pay property taxes
to the municipalities in which they reside. Although these owners are
willing to pay their fair share of local property taxes, they are too
often required to pay much more. Many municipal assessors, in assigning
values and levying taxes, take little or no account of the fact that
shared-equity housing is heavily encumbered with durable restrictions
on occupancy, use, subletting, and resale-restrictions that significantly
constrain a property's marketability and profitability. Consequently,
the owners of shared-equity homes frequently pay taxes not only on value
that is theirs, but on value they can never claim for themselves. At
a certain point, no matter how affordable the cost of purchasing these
homes may be, taxes that are pegged to a property's market value will
render the homes unaffordable for persons of modest means. A more equitable approach to taxing resale-restricted
property is necessary if the affordability of shared-equity housing
is to be protected, rather than eroded. Fortunately, policies and procedures
for the more equitable taxation of community land trusts, limited-equity
cooperatives, and other forms of resale-restricted, owner-occupied housing
do exist in some states. Such policies and procedures compel local assessors
to take account of the durable restrictions that encumber shared-equity
homes. The more equitable taxation of resale-restricted,
owner-occupied homes has sometimes resulted from judicial action by
a state's highest court. For example, in 1989, the Appellate Division
of the New Jersey Superior Court in Prowitz v. Ridgefield Park Village
endorsed the lower taxation of residential real estate encumbered with
an affordability covenant, pointing out that resale restrictions impose
a "patent burden on the value of the property." Sometimes legislative action has been necessary,
requiring local assessors to take account of resale controls. For example,
the Vermont Law on Property Tax Appraisals of Covenant-Restricted Homes,
enacted in 2005, says that procedures for estimating the fair-market
value of a property must take into consideration any "decrease
in value in non-rental residential property due to a housing subsidy
covenant
." In other states, favorable taxation of shared-equity
homes has resulted from administrative action by a state board. Since
1981, for example, the California State Board of Equalization has issued
a series of letters to county assessors instructing them to enter resale-restricted
homes onto local tax rolls at their actual sales prices and to use other
resale-restricted property as comparables in adjusting the valuation
of these homes over time. Even in states where a court, legislature, or board
of equalization has ordered resale-restricted housing to be taxed more
equitably, however, it may be still left to local assessors to decide
exactly how the encumbered value of a shared-equity home is to be calculated.
In states where no statewide guidance exists for valuing and taxing
resale-restricted housing, local assessors are almost completely free
to acknowledge these restrictions - or not. To date, little research has been done to document the various ways in which shared-equity housing is taxed in the United States or to analyze what the most equitable and sustainable method of taxation might be. NHI's research on this topic is designed to close this gap. The research consists of two components. First, we will catalogue and classify the laws, policies, and procedures under which resale-restricted, owner-occupied housing is taxed in all 50 states. This will allow us to address the following questions:
Second, we will analyze the pros and cons of various
methods for valuing and taxing resale-restricted, owner-occupied housing,
drawing on the state-by-state information gathered for the first component.
We will be guided by a panel of experts assembled by NHI for this purpose.
This analysis will focus on those states that have made special provision
for valuing and taxing shared-equity homes. It will examine the legal
application and economic effects of these policies on the continuing
affordability of the portfolio managed by community land trusts, limited-equity
cooperatives, and the sponsors of deed-restricted housing. It will also
identify the long-term effects of the policies on municipal tax revenues
and will establish criteria for recommending a set of best practices
for taxing the property, balancing what is best for the owners of shared-equity
homes with what is best for a municipality. We expect the findings from our study to provide
developers, managers, and supporters of resale-restricted, owner-occupied
housing with information they can use to advocate for more equitable
tax treatment of these properties. By valuing and taxing shared-equity
homes in ways that reflect the durable restrictions placed on them,
state and local authorities can help to ensure their continued affordability
for years to come. Copyright 2007 |
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