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Life Lease Housing

A housing option that involves neither a rental nor a purchase but a hybrid arrangement under which residents pay for the right to occupy a unit, usually a townhouse or a suite, and access to all common areas and facilities. Residents own the leasehold interest in the unit, but not the unit itself. Life lease units are generally priced lower than comparable market rate housing options and owners pay a monthly fee to cover expenses such as maintenance and management. A life lease can be for the life of the tenant or for a specific term (e.g. 50 years), and some have no specified termination date. The majority of life lease communities are developed and owned by nonprofit organizations, charitable groups, service clubs or religious institutions. When a resident leaves or passes away, the lease can usually be sold to someone on the sponsor's waiting list or on the open market, or transferred back to the development's sponsoring organization. Some life lease agreements permit the interest to be passed to the resident's family through their will. Conditions of this right of transfer are determined by the organization that establishes the life lease project. Most sponsors, in consultation with the residents, restrict who can live in the building (e.g., a minimum age of 55) to ensure that the integrity of the community is maintained. Some properties, particularly those that target people with moderate and low incomes, have maximum income level limits and/or limits on total assets.

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Cooperative Housing for Purchase

Apartment or condominium complexes or other housing facilities that are owned and administered collectively by the people who live there. A nonprofit corporation is set up to own and manage a building and the land on which it is located. Cooperative members do not own a particular part of the building and/or land, but own a share of stock in the project and the right to occupy a unit there. New residents are screened and selected by current residents and all pay equal shares of the cost of housing. Some housing cooperatives set aside a certain number of units for low-income people. Lower turnover rates, lower real estate tax assessments (in some local areas), controlled maintenance costs, and resident participation and control are some of the benefits of choosing cooperative homeownership.

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The above terms and definitions are part of the Taxonomy of Human Services, used here by permission of INFO LINE of Los Angeles.


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