(GEORGIA) — Georgia lawmakers revived and advanced House Resolution 1392 on Wednesday as part of a push to shield Low Income Housing Tax Credit properties from rising property tax bills by creating a distinct property classification for affordable housing.
House Resolution 1392 proposes a constitutional amendment that classifies LIHTC developments as a separate property type eligible for lower tax rates, a treatment the measure frames as similar to classifications already applied to mobile homes, trailers, and RVs.
The renewed property-tax effort is unfolding as the same Republican-controlled legislature weighs Senate Bill 476, a Republican income tax cut measure that targets state tax credits and, in practice, would reduce support tied to Georgia’s state LIHTC.
Together, the measures set up a two-track debate over affordable rental housing that runs through state and local tax policy. HR 1392 focuses on operating costs that can make or break a project’s finances, while SB 476 focuses on limiting state tax expenditures as lawmakers pursue other fiscal priorities.
Property taxes matter to LIHTC deals because the credit program supports rents that are restricted by income and affordability rules. When assessments rise and tax bills climb, the additional cost can squeeze operating budgets that are designed to remain stable over long periods.
Supporters of HR 1392 have argued that treating LIHTC housing as a distinct property type would reduce that pressure by lowering tax rates for qualifying developments. The proposal aims to make affordable housing developments more financially viable by curbing a cost that owners cannot fully offset with higher rents.
SB 476, by contrast, would restructure the state side of LIHTC support that developers and investors factor into financing. The bill would cap Georgia’s state LIHTC at 50% of the federal LIHTC amount starting in 2027 and would sunset the program entirely at the end of 2031 unless the Legislature votes to renew it.
That design can ripple through how affordable housing deals are assembled, because LIHTC transactions typically rely on layered funding sources that must add up to cover development costs. When one source becomes smaller or less predictable, projects can face gaps that require other subsidies, different terms, or changes to timing.
Timing is central to the debate because affordable rental developments often move from application to allocation to construction and then lease-up over multiple years. A cap beginning in 2027 and a program sunset at the end of 2031 can shape how participants view near-term pipeline certainty and longer-term planning.
Lawmakers have already moved SB 476 further along the legislative track than HR 1392. The Senate passed SB 476 on February 12, and the bill is now before the House Ways & Means Committee.
House Ways & Means has also become a chokepoint for HR 1392, which has not advanced out of the committee. With both measures in the same committee’s orbit, the next steps are likely to revolve around committee consideration that can determine whether proposals advance, change shape, or stall.
Committee posture matters because it is often where legislators debate policy tradeoffs, consider amendments, and decide whether to move bills forward for broader votes. For a constitutional amendment proposal like HR 1392, that early-stage decision-making can determine whether voters ever get a chance to weigh in.
The competing rationales reflect different pressures inside the legislature. SB 476 aims to offset income tax revenue losses by reducing state tax credits, while HR 1392 seeks to lower the ongoing local tax burden that can weaken long-term affordability even after a property is built.
Those approaches can collide in practice. Property-tax relief can improve operating stability for existing and new LIHTC housing, but it may not fully offset the impact of reduced credit availability if SB 476 shrinks the state LIHTC contribution that helps fill financing needs.
At stake is the pipeline of affordable rentals in a state where LIHTC serves as the primary production tool. In Georgia, the LIHTC program supports rental housing for households earning between 20% to 80% of Area Median Income, making the outcome of House Resolution 1392 and Senate Bill 476 consequential for renters, developers, and local governments that rely on predictable rules for both taxes and credits.
House Resolution 1392 and Senate Bill 476 Renew Tax Relief for Lihtc
Georgia is debating two tax measures affecting affordable housing: HR 1392, which proposes lower property tax rates for LIHTC developments, and SB 476, which would phase out state-level tax credits by 2031. While the property tax relief aims to reduce operating costs, the reduction in state credits could create significant financing gaps for new projects. Both bills currently reside in the House Ways & Means Committee.
