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Affordable Housing

Montgomery County has a collection of tools and policies that help produce and preserve affordable housing in Montgomery County. This page explores the various terms, policies, and programs that involve building and preserving affordable housing in Montgomery County.

Key terms

  • Area Median Income (AMI): Each year, HUD calculates the area median income (AMI) for every geographic region in the country by using data from the US Census based American Community Survey. The area median income is the midpoint of a region’s income distribution, meaning that half of households in a region earn more than the median and half earn less than the median. You can find the Area Median Income using this query tool from HUD.
  • Income-Restricted Affordable Housing: Generally refers to housing that is available at reduced or subsidized rents or sales prices. These housing units have income caps that determine eligibility, helping low-and-moderate income families find affordable housing. 

Key local housing policies, programs and funding mechanisms

  • HOC Production Fund: Using appropriated funds over a period of 20 years, Montgomery County is able to create a permanent, revolving production fund that helps accelerate Montgomery County’s public housing authority, the Housing Opportunities Commission’s (HOC), mixed-income housing development pipeline.
  • Housing Choice Voucher Program: The main vehicle in providing rental assistance in the county is the Housing Choice Voucher (HCV) program. The HCV program provides a rent subsidy to customers, based on a payment standard set by HOC and customers’ household information, so that customers pay no more than 40% of total household income on housing at the start of the initial lease term.
  • Housing Initiative Fund: The Housing Initiative Fund (HIF) is a locally funded affordable housing tool that provides flexible loans and grants to help create and preserve affordable housing in Montgomery County. Administered by the County’s Department of Housing and Community Affairs, the HIF is used in a number of strategic and significant ways to advance virtually all of the County’s affordable housing priorities.
  • Moderately Priced Dwelling Unit Ordinance: Montgomery County’s moderately priced dwelling unit (MPDU) program is one of the nation’s first mandatory, inclusionary zoning laws. It was implemented in 1973 to help meet the goal of providing a full range of housing choices in the county for all incomes, ages, and household sizes.
    • An MPDU is a county government-regulated unit that is required to be affordable to households earning 65% of area median income (AMI) for garden-style apartments and 70% for high-rise apartments.
    • The program requires 12.5%-15% of units to be set aside in new developments over twenty units as affordable to moderate-income households.
  • Nonprofit Preservation Fund (NPF): The NPF is a newly established funding program that provides low-interest interim loans to experienced nonprofit developers and local public housing authorities to acquire and preserve affordable housing throughout the County.
  • Payment in Lieu of Taxes (PILOT): A PILOT lowers, or in some circumstances completely abates, for a period of time, the County’s real property taxes on rental housing projects in return for a property owner’s commitment to provide affordable housing. Montgomery County has three types of PILOTs, Standard PILOT, By-Right PILOT, and the WMATA PILOT, the terms of which are all outlined on the county’s PILOT website.
  • Rent Stabilization: In 2024, rent stabilization went into effect in Montgomery County. The annual rent increase allowance is the lesser of the Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers for the Washington-Arlington-Alexandria (CPI-U) plus 3% or a hard cap of 6%. View DHCA’s rent stabilization webpage for more details about the regulations, including exemptions.
  • Right of First Refusal: Montgomery County enacted its Right of First Refusal (RoFR) law help to preserve affordable housing and to prevent tenant displacement. The county, HOC, or any certified tenant organization must be offered the opportunity to buy any multifamily rental housing development of 4 or more units before the owner sells to another party.
  • Workforce Housing Program: The Workforce Housing (WFH) Program makes affordable housing available for rent and purchase to households who live and work in Montgomery County, who have incomes too high to participate in the county’s MPDU program. Households with incomes between 70-120% of the AMI can participate in the WFH program.

Frequently Asked Questions

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