General Contractor Requirements for HUD 221(d)(4) Loans
HUD 221(d)(4) Requirements for General Contractors Everything general contractors need to know about HUD 221(d)(4) loans.
HUD 221(d)(4) General Contractor Requirements
For general contractors interested in the FHA 221(D)(4) loan program, the requirements for applying for FHA multifamily construction loans or FHA multifamily financing for substantial multifamily property rehabilitation include:
Property Information
The name of the project
The property address or location
A loan request
Brief narrative describing the project
Details of commercial spaces (if any)
An estimate construction timeline through stabilization
The purchase price of the existing property and the settlement date (if property has not yet been purchased)
Photos
Any completed third party reports such as market studies, HUD appraisals, environmental assessments, etc.
The value of the site (if different from the purchase price)
Offering memorandum (for purchases only, if available)
Breakdown of types of units
As-is value (for rehabilitations only)
Financial Information
A pro forma through a year (12 months) of stabilization
Both hard and soft construction costs
A Section 8 contract (if applicable)
Planned repairs for the next year (12 months)
Sponsorship
Borrower’s name/ entity name
Management company name and relevant experience
The names and experience of major principals
Schedule of real estate owned (major principals)
There are also additional HUD requirements and other items for consideration:
An initial operating deficit account to cover operating shortfalls prior to stabilization.Typically, equal to
the greater of underwriter's estimate or an appraiser's, OR
4 months of debt service (garden apartments), OR
6 months of debt service (elevator buildings).
HUD requires a 4% working capital deposit on all new construction projects (4% of the loan amount). For substantial rehabilitation, HUD requires 2% of the loan amount. This amount could be either cash or a letter of credit.
After either 12 months from final endorsement or six months of break-even occupancy (whichever is later), unused working capital and initial operating deficit escrows are released.
Projected stabilization must be achieved within 18 months of receiving the property’s certificate of occupancy.
A qualified ‘arms-length’ supervisory architect must be retained by the borrower during construction.
Upon construction completion, a cost certification for both the general contractor and owner are required.
The general contractor must:
execute a GMP contract
provide a 100% performance and payment bond (either cash escrow or a letter of credit is acceptable)
have a liquidity position equal to a minimum of 5% of the project’s construction contract as well as all unfinished construction work.
Loans greater than $40 million could be subject to more conservative DSRC and leverage requirements.
A maximum 93% underwritten occupancy for market rate properties and 95% for 90% rental assistance properties.