Financing 100% Affordable ED1 Projects in Los Angeles

CLS CRE is actively financing well over 1,000 affordable units, approaching 2,000, in some form of development across its Los Angeles pipeline, a large share of it in the ED1 space. That is not a marketing line, it is what a specialized affordable-finance broker sees when two of the city's most powerful programs land on the same deal. Executive Directive 1 takes a 100% affordable project off the discretionary entitlement track, and the California welfare exemption takes the property-tax line off the stabilized operating statement. Neither program is new. What almost nobody underwrites is what happens to the capital stack when you run them together on a ground-up deal. This guide covers exactly that: how ED1 removes entitlement risk, how the welfare exemption removes tax drag, and how the two combined let a for-profit developer build 100% affordable with materially less equity.

The Numbers That Matter

ED1 approval pathway
Ministerial, by-right (no discretionary hearing)
CEQA exposure under ED1
Exempted for qualifying projects
ED1 affordability target
100% affordable, typically 60% AMI or below
Welfare exemption authority
California Revenue and Taxation Code section 214
Property tax removed
100% per qualifying unit; ~80% of units qualify on many ED1 deals
Annual tax savings
Roughly $110K to $125K per $10M of assessed value

Two Programs, Two Different Problems, One Deal

Ground-up 100% affordable development in Los Angeles has historically carried two expensive problems that have nothing to do with construction itself: getting the project approved, and carrying it once it is built. Executive Directive 1 attacks the first. It takes qualifying 100% affordable projects off the discretionary approval track and processes them ministerially, by-right, with no discretionary hearing and CEQA exemption for qualifying projects. For a construction lender, that removes the single hardest variable to underwrite in ground-up lending, whether the project will be approved at all, which is legal and political risk a contractor cannot price into a budget.

The California welfare exemption attacks the second problem. Under Revenue and Taxation Code section 214, qualifying affordable housing units owned with a qualifying nonprofit in the ownership structure are exempt from property tax, a full 100% on each qualifying unit. On many ED1 deals about 80% of the units qualify, so the blended reduction across the project lands near 80%, reaching 100% where every unit qualifies. In a state where property tax runs roughly 1.1% to 1.25% of assessed value, that is real money: on the order of $110,000 to $125,000 a year for every $10 million of assessed value, permanently off the operating statement.

The two programs line up almost perfectly on a 100% affordable ground-up deal. ED1's affordability target, typically 60% AMI or below, sits comfortably under the welfare exemption's income ceiling of 80% AMI and below, so the units that qualify a project for ministerial ED1 approval are the same units that qualify it for the property-tax exemption. Run separately, each is a well-covered topic. CLS CRE treats the construction financing mechanics of ED1 in its dedicated ED1 affordable construction financing guide, and the welfare exemption financing play in its flagship welfare exemption guide. The point of this page is what happens when you underwrite both on the same construction-to-perm deal, which is where the capital stack actually changes.

Qualifying for the Exemption Without Giving Up the Deal

The welfare exemption is not automatic and it is not a developer subsidy in the usual sense. It runs to the property, but only when a qualifying 501(c)(3) nonprofit sits in the ownership structure and the project meets the exemption's other elements: income limits at 80% AMI and below, enforceable rent restrictions, and the organizational test that governs how the owning entity is formed and operated. The exemption is claimed by filing form BOE-267 with the county assessor, and the nonprofit's assets carry an irrevocable-dedication requirement, meaning they are permanently dedicated to exempt purposes. These are precise legal elements, not general guidelines.

For a for-profit developer, the practical question is how to bring a qualifying nonprofit into the entity to unlock the exemption while keeping the deal's economics. In practice this is handled through the ownership structure itself, with the nonprofit taking a general-partner or managing-member role in the entity that owns the property, and the for-profit developer structuring its position to retain the development economics it is building the project for. The specific roles and percentages are deal-by-deal, and they are exactly what a lender's counsel and the assessor will scrutinize, so they should be designed with both the exemption and the financing in mind from the start, not bolted on after the capital stack is set.

This is where the combined play gets legally precise, and it is worth stating plainly: this guide is informational, not tax or legal advice, and the specifics of any structure should be confirmed with qualified counsel and the county assessor. Done correctly, the welfare exemption also sits alongside the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit, both the 9% competitive and the 4% bond-paired credits, rather than competing with it, so the exemption becomes one more layer of value on a capital stack that most 100% affordable ED1 projects are already building around LIHTC equity.

What the Combined Play Does to the Capital Stack

Stack the two programs on a ground-up 100% affordable deal and the capital stack changes at both ends. At the construction stage, ED1 does the work. With discretionary approval and CEQA appeal risk removed, the construction lender's diligence shifts off the question of whether the project will be approved and onto plan check, permitting mechanics, the general contractor, the construction budget, and the strength of the rest of the capital stack. That is a more financeable conversation, and it is the same one covered in depth in the ED1 affordable construction financing guide.

At the permanent stage, the welfare exemption does the work, and this is the part almost no one underwrites correctly. The tax savings do not just improve the developer's return, they flow directly into Net Operating Income, because the exempt property-tax line is a permanent reduction in operating expense. Higher NOI means higher debt-service coverage, and a permanent lender that actually underwrites the exempt tax line, rather than plugging in a full market tax bill out of habit, sizes the loan to that higher NOI. Higher NOI supports higher proceeds, and higher proceeds mean the developer writes a materially smaller equity check.

The arithmetic is straightforward. Take a stabilized 100% affordable project assessed at $20 million. At roughly 1.1% to 1.25%, the full property-tax bill would run about $220,000 to $250,000 a year. The welfare exemption removes 100% of the tax on each qualifying unit. On many ED1 deals about 80% of the units qualify, so applying that 80% share, roughly $176,000 to $200,000 of annual property tax simply comes off the operating statement and drops into NOI; on a project where every unit qualifies, nearly the whole bill comes off. A permanent lender sizing to a 1.25 times debt-service-coverage ratio, to use a round illustrative figure, turns an extra $200,000 of NOI into $160,000 of additional annual debt service the property can support, since $200,000 divided by 1.25 is $160,000. That added debt-service capacity is what converts into higher loan proceeds and less required equity. The exact loan dollars depend on prevailing terms, which is precisely the conversation to run deal by deal.

The sequencing matters because the two benefits land at different stages. ED1 de-risks the construction loan up front; the welfare exemption pays off at the permanent, stabilized stage where NOI is what sizes the takeout. The mistake is treating the construction loan and the takeout as separate problems. The construction loan should be structured with a takeout already negotiated with a permanent lender who credits the exempt tax line, because not every capital source underwrites the exemption the same way. Some size to it fully, some haircut it, and some ignore it entirely and quote off a full market tax bill, which quietly costs the developer proceeds. Matching a specific deal to the lenders who underwrite the exemption properly is where a specialized affordable-finance broker earns the fee, and on ground-up deals from $20 million to $100 million and beyond, the proceeds difference is not a rounding error.

The Order of Operations on a Combined Deal

The practical sequence on a combined ED1 and welfare-exemption deal starts with site control, then runs several tracks in parallel rather than in series. The entity structure, including how the qualifying nonprofit is brought in as general partner or managing member, has to be designed early, because it affects both the exemption and how a lender's counsel views the borrower. The LIHTC application or bond allocation, the construction lender commitment, and a permanent takeout that credits the exempt tax line all get worked at the same time as plan check and permitting run their course. The BOE-267 exemption filing with the county assessor is timed to the project's qualifying status. Developers who wait until permits are in hand to start assembling this stack give back much of the timeline advantage ED1 is designed to create.

These are large ground-up transactions, generally $10 million to $100 million and beyond in total development cost, built by for-profit developers who want the returns of market-rate development with the entitlement speed and tax treatment that 100% affordable unlocks in Los Angeles. The combined play only works if the entity structure, the entitlement path, and the financing are designed together, which is why the financing conversation should start at site control, not after approval. A broker who does these deals across the Los Angeles affordable pipeline, and who knows which lenders actually underwrite the welfare exemption into proceeds, is what turns two well-known programs into a capital stack a for-profit developer can build 100% affordable on with less equity than the market assumes is possible.

Financing 100% Affordable ED1 Projects in Los Angeles: FAQ

ED1 removes entitlement risk by taking a qualifying 100% affordable project off the discretionary track and approving it ministerially, by-right, with CEQA exemption. The California welfare exemption removes the property-tax drag on the stabilized asset. The same 100% affordable, income-restricted units drive both, since ED1's typical 60% AMI target sits under the exemption's 80% AMI ceiling. Run together on one construction-to-perm deal, they de-risk the construction loan and lift the permanent loan, which reshapes the whole capital stack.
The exempt property-tax line is a permanent reduction in operating expense, so it flows straight into Net Operating Income. Higher NOI raises debt-service coverage, and a permanent lender that underwrites the exempt tax line, rather than a full market tax bill, sizes the loan to that higher NOI. That means higher proceeds and a smaller developer equity check. Not every lender credits the exemption the same way, so matching the deal to lenders who underwrite it properly is where the proceeds difference is won or lost.
The core elements are a qualifying 501(c)(3) nonprofit in the ownership structure, often as general partner or managing member, income limits at 80% AMI and below, enforceable rent restrictions, and the organizational test, with the exemption claimed by filing form BOE-267 with the county assessor. The nonprofit's assets also carry an irrevocable-dedication requirement. The specific roles and percentages are deal-by-deal and should be confirmed with qualified counsel and the county assessor, since this guide is informational, not tax or legal advice.


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