LIHTC properties operate under a long compliance tail — typically 15 years of strict compliance followed by an extended-use period that often runs another 15. Investors, syndicators and state housing finance agencies all have the right to audit, and they do, especially in years 3, 7, and the compliance-period exits. Insurance compliance is one of the items they check, and it’s one of the most commonly miswritten line items in the operator’s books.
Here’s what compliance reviewers actually look at — and what they find wrong most often.
What the LIHTC LURA prescribes
The Land Use Restriction Agreement (LURA) on every LIHTC property includes insurance requirements. The exact language varies by state and by syndicator but the structural requirements are consistent:
- Property cover at replacement cost, with limits adequate to fully rebuild — not a depreciated cash-value basis
- General liability typically at $1M / $2M minimums, often $2M / $4M on newer agreements
- Investor / syndicator / lender named as additional insured with specific wording per the LURA
- Mortgagee clause for the lender, separate from the AI for the equity stack
- Workers’ comp statutory, where employees are on payroll at the property
- Boiler & machinery / equipment breakdown on properties with substantial mechanical systems
- Flood in any flood-zone-designated area
These are the line items. The audit is about whether what you’ve actually bound matches what the LURA prescribed.
What auditors find wrong
In the audits we sit alongside, the same three issues come up repeatedly.
1. Additional insured wording doesn’t match the LURA
The LURA names a specific investor entity (“[Fund Name] LP and its affiliates”) and the certificate names something close but not identical (“[Manager Name] Inc.”). Compliance reviewers read this strictly. A near-miss is a finding.
The fix is annual: pull the LURA wording, hand it to your broker, and have them confirm the AI endorsement reads back exactly. Verbal confirmation from the carrier isn’t enough — get it in writing on the endorsement.
2. Replacement-cost basis isn’t documented
The LURA requires insurance “adequate to replace” the property. Auditors increasingly want to see the appraisal or insurable-value calculation that supports the limit on the schedule, not just the number itself.
If you can’t produce a current insurable-value calculation, you have a documentation finding even if the underlying limit is adequate. Most operators do this once at acquisition and never again. By year 5 or 7, the documentation is stale and the limit is probably under-stated.
3. Loss-payee structure for the financing stack
LIHTC properties have layered financing — first-position lender, tax-credit equity investor, possibly soft second loans. Each party often expects to be named in a specific capacity. The certificate has to thread this correctly, and the policy endorsements have to back it up.
When the certificate just lists “lenders and investors as their interests may appear,” auditors won’t accept it. They want specific entities, specific roles, and matching endorsement language.
What a clean LIHTC insurance compliance file looks like
The operators who never trip an insurance finding share a few practices:
- Annual broker compliance letter — a one-page memo from the broker confirming the year’s renewal meets the LURA requirements line by line. Auditors love this.
- Current insurable-value documentation — appraisal or a documented calculation, updated annually or every other year
- AI endorsements on file — actual endorsement documents, not just certificates, kept with the property file
- Mortgagee and loss-payee structure cross-referenced to the financing schedule
- A renewal checklist that maps LURA insurance requirements to the certificate and endorsement set every year
None of this is hard. It’s just discipline. Operators who treat insurance compliance as a year-round file (not a renewal-time scramble) close audits without findings, every cycle.
Why this matters at exit
Most LIHTC investors plan an equity exit somewhere in years 11–15. The buyer’s due diligence will pull every insurance file the investor relies on for the past several years. Any unresolved compliance findings from audits along the way show up here, get repriced into the deal, and frequently cost more than the original fix would have.
The insurance compliance file is one of the cheapest things on a LIHTC property to get right. It’s also one of the most expensive to ignore.