How Lenders Underwrite the Welfare Exemption on LA Affordable Deals
On an LA affordable deal, the single line that moves your loan proceeds the most is the one most lenders quietly get wrong: the property-tax line. When a project qualifies for California's welfare exemption, property tax on the affordable units drops toward zero, that savings flows straight to net operating income, and a lender that underwrites the exempt line instead of a full market tax bill sizes you to a materially larger permanent loan. The whole game is getting the deal in front of the capital sources that credit it correctly.
The Numbers That Matter
How a Lender Treats the Exempt Tax Line in NOI
Net operating income is revenue minus operating expenses, and on an LA affordable project the property-tax line is one of the largest fixed items in that stack. A generic underwrite pencils a full market tax bill, roughly 1.1% to 1.25% of assessed value, and deducts it before it ever gets to NOI. A welfare-exemption-aware underwrite replaces most of that line with the exempt figure, and because loan sizing keys off NOI, that single accounting choice can swing your proceeds by seven figures.
The exemption itself comes from California's welfare exemption under Revenue and Taxation Code section 214. It removes 100% of the property tax on each qualifying affordable unit. On many ED1 deals only about 80% of the units qualify, so the blended reduction across the project lands near 80%, and where every unit qualifies it reaches 100%. This applies when a qualifying 501(c)(3) nonprofit sits in the ownership structure and the income limits (80% AMI and below), rent restrictions, and organizational test are met. It is claimed on form BOE-267 filed with the county assessor, and it carries the standard irrevocable-dedication requirement on the nonprofit's assets.
Before a careful lender will underwrite the reduced line, it wants to see that the nonprofit is genuinely in the entity, that the affordability restrictions are recorded, and that the BOE-267 filing is granted or credibly in process. Some lenders will credit the full exemption from day one. More conservative desks underwrite a partial or full market tax line until the exemption is granted, then re-size the loan. That underwriting posture, not the tax statute, is what sets the number on your term sheet.
The Proceeds and Equity Difference: A Worked Example
Take a stabilized 100% affordable project with an assessed value of $30,000,000. At a 1.2% property-tax rate, a full market tax bill runs $30,000,000 times 1.2%, which is $360,000 per year. Assume about 80% of the units qualify, a common share on ED1 deals, with each qualifying unit fully exempt, so the exempt savings are $360,000 times 0.80, which is $288,000, leaving a residual tax line of $72,000 on the units that do not qualify.
Now underwrite the same building two ways. The market-tax underwrite carries the full $360,000 and produces a stabilized NOI of $1,800,000. The welfare-exempt underwrite adds the $288,000 of savings back into the bottom line, lifting NOI to $2,088,000. That is the entire difference, and it is real cash flow the property throws off every year.
Size each on a 1.25x debt-service-coverage floor. The market-tax NOI supports $1,800,000 divided by 1.25, or $1,440,000 of annual debt service. The exempt NOI supports $2,088,000 divided by 1.25, or $1,670,400, which is $230,400 more debt-service capacity. Because permanent proceeds scale directly with supportable debt service at a fixed loan constant, proceeds rise by the same ratio NOI rises, $2,088,000 divided by $1,800,000, which is exactly 1.16, a 16% lift.
Run that through the loan. If the market-tax underwrite sizes the permanent loan to $22,000,000, the exemption-aware underwrite sizes it to about $25,520,000, roughly $3,520,000 more proceeds. That $3.5M is equity the developer does not have to write a check for, on one deal, from correctly underwriting one line. We used an 80% unit-qualification share, common on ED1 deals; on a project where every unit qualifies the exemption reaches 100% and the gap is wider still.
Which Capital Sources Credit the Exemption Well, and Which Do Not
Not every lender is built to underwrite this. Mission-driven and affordable-focused lenders, tax-exempt bond executions, and agency affordable programs live in this space, understand the welfare exemption, routinely pair it with 4% or 9% LIHTC, and will size to the higher exempt NOI without a fight. Those are the desks where the $3.5M in the worked example actually shows up in your proceeds.
Many generic balance-sheet and conventional lenders do the opposite. Their credit box was never built for a property that pays almost no property tax, so they either haircut the exemption, cap how much of it they will credit, or default to a full market tax line to be safe. The statute is on your side, but their underwriting quietly gives the proceeds back. On a large ground-up affordable deal that dispersion between desks is worth millions in equity, and it is invisible until you compare two term sheets side by side.
This is exactly where a broker who does these deals earns its keep. Commercial Lending Solutions is actively financing well over 1,000 affordable units, approaching 2,000, in some form of development across its Los Angeles pipeline, much of it in the ED1 space, so we know which capital sources credit the exempt line correctly and which will shave your leverage. Matching the deal to the right lender is not a formality on these transactions, it is where the money is.
Construction-to-Perm Sequencing and Why Lender Selection Is the Whole Game
Timing matters, because the exemption does not attach evenly across the deal's life. During construction and lease-up the county assessor may still bill closer to market until the affordability restrictions are in place and the BOE-267 exemption is granted, so the tax benefit lands most cleanly at the permanent, stabilized stage. That means the higher-leverage number from the worked example is really a takeout number, and it has to be engineered into the deal from the start.
A well-structured affordable deal lines up a construction lender that understands the exit and a permanent lender that will size the takeout to the exempt NOI. When both are aligned, the higher-leverage perm pays off the construction loan and returns developer equity at stabilization. When they are not, the seams show: if the construction lender underwrites the exit to a market tax line while the real perm credits the exemption, you either leave proceeds stranded or scramble to re-size at takeout under pressure.
That is why lender selection is not a step in these deals, it is the deal. Two capable lenders can look at the identical building, identical rents, identical restrictions, and hand you loans millions apart purely on how they treat the tax line and how they sequence construction into perm. CLS CRE runs the exemption math on the front end, sizes the takeout to the NOI a proper welfare-exemption underwrite produces, and takes the deal to the desks that credit it at both the construction and permanent stages, so the equity the exemption is supposed to save actually comes back to the developer.
How Lenders Underwrite the Welfare Exemption on LA Affordable Deals: FAQ
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