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OLG INFO Announcement 2024-19- ONAP Seeks Feedback on Draft Sections of the Section 184 Indian Housing Loan Guarantee Program Policy Handbook
On September 24, 2024, the Office of Native American Programs (ONAP) posted draft sections of the Section 184 Indian Housing Loan Guarantee Program Policy Handbook (Handbook) to the Office of Loan Guarantee Drafting Table web page. The draft sections discuss the Section 184 loan origination through final Direct Guarantee Underwriter approval process and requirements.
What is the Section 184 Loan Guarantee Program?
The Section 184 Loan Guarantee Program was created by the Housing and Community Development Act of 1992 to address the lack of mortgage lending in Indian Country. The 184 program offers a 100% loan guarantee.
Why is there a lack of mortgage lending in Indian country?
Much of the land in Indian Country is held in trust by the United States government for the benefit of a particular tribe or individual Native American. Land held in trust for a tribe cannot be mortgaged, and land held in trust for an individual must receive approval from the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA), before a lien is placed on the property. Without the ability to mortgage and foreclose on a home or place a lien on individual trust property, lenders were not able to make home loans to individual Native Americans.
How does the Section 184 program address the lack of mortgage capital?
For a home loan on tribal trust land, the eligible individual borrower leases the land from the tribe for 50 years. It is the home and the leasehold interest that are mortgaged. The land remains in trust for the tribe. The Section 184 mortgage is designed to be secured with this Leasehold interest.
How Does Section 184 Work?
The Office of Loan Guarantee within HUD’s Office of Native American Programs guarantees the loan made to eligible borrowers. The loan guarantee assures the lender that its investment will be repaid in the event of a foreclosure. The borrower pays a 1% loan guarantee fee at closing which may be financed in the loan.
Effective July 1, 2023, there is no Annual Loan Guarantee Fee.
The borrower applies for the loan with an approved lender. If leasing tribal land they work with the tribe and the Bureau of Indian Affairs to obtain an approved 50 year lease.
Where can Section 184 loans be used?
Section 184 can be used in 38 states. In fact, as the eligible area continues to expand across the nation, a majority of participating states are eligible in their entirety. The land located in an eligible Indian area or Alaska Native area (as determined by the participating Tribes) may entail Tribal Trust, Allotted Trust or Fee Simple.
Who Can Use a Section 184 Loan?
Section 184 Loans can be made to the following:
- American Indians or Alaska Natives who are enrolled members of a federally recognized Tribe, Alaska Village or Regional Corporation
- An Indian tribe or Alaska Village or Regional Corporation
- Tribally Designated Housing Entity (TDHE)
Participating Tribes
How Can Lenders Become Approved to Participate?
Loans are originated and serviced by lenders that have completed Section 184 training and have met program requirements. To become a Section 184 lender, submit the Lender Application form to HUD for approval. If you have questions on the requirements or procedures of the approval process send an email to 184lenderapproval@hud.gov.
How are Homes on Native American Lands Appraised?
Home values can be based on Cost or Market basis. On reservation properties, land values are not added into total appraisal values. The HUD FHA 4150.2 handbook (issued May 20, 1999), provides guidance for appraisers on how to appraise existing, proposed and new construction of one to four family homes on tribal trust, allotted and fee simple lands under HUD's Office of Native American Program (HUD/ONAP) Section 184 Loan Guarantee Program.
Are Guaranteed Loans Marketable?
Yes! A Section 184 guaranteed loan, including the security given for the loan, may be sold or assigned by the lender to any financial institution. A strong secondary market exists for Section 184 loans. A growing network of national Lenders as well as Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Ginnie Mae, some state housing financing agencies, and some federal home loan banks purchase Section 184 loans.
Lender Training
- Section 184 Skilled Workers Demonstration Program (March 30, 2023)
- Lender Overview Powerpoint
- Recording
- DLL 2020-06 Training-Cares Act Implementation (June 3, 2020)
- Lender Overview PowerPoint or PDF Version
- Recording of Lender Overview
- Section 184 Training Agenda- April 21, 2020
- Section 184 Training Agenda- April 22, 2020
ONAP Catalyst
ONAP Catalyst is a new cloud-based platform that will build trust and efficiency through reliable and accurate data, facilitating a modern system for participating Section 184/184A direct guarantee lenders and servicers. Access the ONAP Catalyst page now.
Lender Forms
- Model ONAP Loss Mitigation Advance Submission List (February 24, 2021)
- Catalyst User Form (MS-Excel) (June 23, 2020)
- Lender Submission Cover Sheet
- COVID-19 Loss Mitigation Advance Subordinate Mortgage (Model Document May12, 2020)
- COVID-19 Loss Mitigation Advance Promissory Note (Model Document May12,2020)
- Servicing Report (Supercedes June 2020 Model Document)
- Letter to Section 184 Lenders informing of changes (Effective July 1, 2016)
- HUD Form 50111- Section 184 Addendum to Uniform Residential Loan Application
- HUD Form 50114- Land Status and Jurisdiction (February 2013)
- HUD Form 50116- Residential Lease of Tribal Land (February 2013)
- HUD Form 50117- Model Tribal Mortgage Lending Code (February 2013)
- HUD Form 50120- Rider for Section 184 Individual Allotted Trust Land (February 2013)
- HUD Form 50121- Rider for Section 184 Mortgage Fee Simple Property Only (February 2013)
- HUD Form 50122- Rider for Section 184 Mortgage (Non-Borrower Pledge of Leasehold Interest) (February 2013)
- HUD Form 50123- Section 184 Indian Loan Guarantee Program Endorsement Submission (February 2013)
- HUD Form 50129- Loan Guarantee Refund Request (February 2013)
- HUD Form 50131- Case Number Request Form
- HUD Form 50132- Mortgage Credit Analysis Worksheet - MCAW, (MCAW Instructions)
- HUD Form 50148- Checklist for Proposed Transactions Less than One Year Old (July 2018)
- HUD Form 50149- Rider for Section 184 Tribal Trust (July 2018)
Loan Processing Guidelines
- Dear Lender Letters
- ONAP Loan Origination System Notice
- FHA Mortgagee Letter 2016-08 – calculating student loan payments
- November 15, 2016 memo – Loan processing updates (Effective December 1, 2016)
- Section 184 Processing Guidelines (October 2014)
Loan Guarantee Fee Information
- Reduction in Upfront and Annual Loan Guarantee Fees (dated 6/6/2023)
- Annual Fee Federal Register Notice (dated 11/1/2016)
- Fee Increase FAQs (dated 11/2/2016)
- Annual Fee Mortgagee Letter (dated 10/15/2014)
- Annual Fee Submission Tutorial Annual Fee Submission Tutorial (PAY.GOV)
- To request a Case Number email Section184@hud.gov
- To request a Case Number email Section184@hud.gov
- OLG Drafting Table
- Subscribe to OLG INFO Announcements
- Native Advantage Homepage
- Dear Lender Letters
- Updated Lender Application (October 28, 2019)
- Underwriting Compliance Reminder
- Cherokee Nation Indian Lands Expanded for Section 184
- Lender Submission Cover Sheet
- Section 184 - Maximum loan limits by county
- Section 184 Staff Directory
- Toll-free at 1-800-561-5913
- Email Section184@hud.gov
- Section 184 Homepage