Episode 94: CHFA Awards $11.5M in 9% Credits Across Connecticut
The Connecticut Housing Finance Authority (CHFA) has approved $11.5 million in 9% Low-Income Housing Tax Credit allocations supporting six developments across five Connecticut municipalities — Cromwell, Farmington, Hartford, Naugatuck, and New Britain. The awards will produce 319 total rental units, including 282 affordable apartments, spanning both new construction and preservation deals. For LIHTC investors, syndicators, and lenders active in the Northeast, this round offers concrete signals about CHFA's current QAP priorities and the state of the Connecticut affordable housing pipeline.
Key Takeaways:
* CHFA allocated $11.5 million in 9% LIHTCs across six developments in a single board-approved round.
* The 319-unit portfolio includes 282 affordable apartments — approximately 88% affordability across the slate.
* Five municipalities received awards: Cromwell, Farmington, Hartford, Naugatuck, and New Britain — signaling a geographic distribution preference in the current QAP cycle.
* The round covers both new development and preservation, creating distinct underwriting profiles for lenders and syndicators on construction financing and exit assumptions.
* Annual credit per affordable unit runs roughly $36,000 — a benchmark for syndicators pricing Connecticut 9% deals against current construction cost environments.
* Suburban and small-city markets (Naugatuck, Cromwell) clearing the same credit threshold as Hartford suggests CHFA is actively rewarding non-urban supply solutions.
* Developers with projects in the Connecticut pipeline should analyze this round for active QAP preference signals before the next application cycle.
Connecticut's affordable housing shortfall remains measured in the tens of thousands of units, so 282 affordable apartments won't close the gap on its own. But this allocation confirms that CHFA's 9% pipeline is active and competitive heading into the second half of 2026. Investors and lenders tracking Northeast market health should watch for corresponding state bond or Housing Trust Fund activity to fill financing gaps — particularly on new construction deals in the smaller markets represented in this round.
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