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HomeHealth and Safety CodeDiv. 31Pt. 2Ch. 6.5§ 50666 Low-Income Housing Rehabilitation Loans

§ 50666 Low-Income Housing Rehabilitation Loans

Health and Safety Code·California
AI Summary·Official Text·Key Terms·Related Statutes·References
AI SummaryVerified

§ 50666 Low-Income Housing Rehabilitation Loans

Key Takeaways

  • •If you own a small home (1-4 units) in a special fix-up area and don't make much money, you can get a loan to help pay for repairs you can't afford.
  • •If you own a rental home, you can get a loan to fix it up without raising rent too much, so poor tenants aren’t forced to move out.
  • •Landlords must promise not to raise rent unless the government says it’s okay.
  • •Landlords can also get a loan if they agree to take government help to keep rents low for poor people.

Example

A family owns a small house in a neighborhood that needs repairs. They don’t have enough money to fix it, and the bank won’t lend them more because they can’t afford higher monthly payments.

The government can give them an extra loan to cover the repair costs they can’t afford, and they don’t have to pay it back right away.

AI-generated — May contain errors. Not legal advice. Always verify source.

Official Source
View on CA.gov

§ 50666 Low-Income Housing Rehabilitation Loans

In concentrated rehabilitation areas designated pursuant to Section 51302, a person or family of low or moderate income who is the owner of an owner-occupied residential structure of one to four units may receive a deferred-payment rehabilitation loan for the excess of the cost of meeting rehabilitation standards over the amount of the neighborhood improvement loan the administering agency, local public entity, or qualified mortgage lender is able to provide without exceeding the owner’s ability to afford the monthly payments required. Owners of rental housing may receive deferred-payment rehabilitation loans if necessary to avoid increases in monthly debt service which would result in rent increases causing permanent displacement of persons of low income residing in the residential structure prior to rehabilitation and if the owner contracts during the term of the loan not to raise residential rentals except as permitted by regulations of the agency pursuant to subdivision (g) of Section 51307. Owners of rental housing may also receive deferred-payment rehabilitation loans in the amount, if any, necessary to avoid such increases in monthly debt service as would make it economically infeasible to accept subsidies available to provide affordable rents to persons of low income, if the owner agrees to accept such subsidies. (Added by Stats. 1978, Ch. 884.)

Last verified: January 24, 2026

Key Terms

rehabilitationcontracttenantmortgagelandlordregulationin certainimprovement

Related Statutes

  • § 50667 Low-Income Housing Rehabilitation Loans
  • § 50667.5 Low-Income Housing Rehabilitation Loans
  • § 50663 Housing Rehabilitation Loan Contracts
  • § 50665 Low-Income Home Repair Loans
  • § 17980.3 Receiver Powers And Duties

References

  • Official text at leginfo.legislature.ca.gov
  • California Legislature. Health and Safety Code. Section 50666.
View Official Source