• videocam Live Webinar with Live Q&A
  • calendar_month June 30, 2026 @ 1:00 PM ET/10:00 AM PT
  • signal_cellular_alt Intermediate
  • card_travel Real Property - Finance
  • schedule 90 minutes

Solar Financing for Affordable Housing After OBBBA: ITC Bridge Loans, Tax Credit Monetization, Capital Stack Design

About the Course

Introduction

This CLE webinar will guide counsel and finance professionals through the legal and structural mechanics of financing solar energy projects for affordable housing, with a focus on the deal structures, lending products, collateral packages, and intercreditor issues that arise when solar is layered onto an existing affordable housing capital stack—whether the property is a LIHTC partnership, a HUD-assisted or Section 8 property, public housing (including RAD conversions), or a mission-owned, naturally occurring affordable portfolio.

Description

The economics of solar on affordable housing are driven first by federal tax incentives—the investment tax credit and its bonus adders, plus depreciation—and only then by debt. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) compressed the runway dramatically: solar projects that did not begin construction by July 4, 2026 must be placed in service by Dec. 31, 2027 to claim the Section 48E credit, and prohibited foreign entity rules now constrain equipment sourcing. The presenter will explain how credit amount, eligibility certainty, and the chosen monetization path (tax equity, credit transfer, or elective/direct pay) dictate the financing structure, and how lenders bridge against those benefits through construction, placed-in-service, and cash realization.

The program will address the ownership models that determine who can use the credits—including how elective pay opened the door for nonprofits and public housing authorities—the principal lending products (ITC bridge facilities, construction financing, equipment safe-harbor loans, and term debt), the collateral package and underwriting considerations unique to these transactions, and the work of integrating a solar financing onto an already-encumbered property. Our authoritative presenter will compare how the consent, regulatory, and intercreditor landscape differs across property types: LIHTC investors and agency debt; HUD use agreements, HAP contracts, and surplus cash rules; public housing declarations of trust and RAD program requirements; and the lighter but cash-flow-constrained NOAH context. Presentation time will also include discussion of compliance overlays—prevailing wage and apprenticeship, foreign entity sourcing restrictions, Build America Buy America Act (BABA), Davis-Bacon Act (DBA), and federal program flow-downs—that directly affect both credit size and loan terms.

Listen as our presenter offers practical drafting and underwriting guidance, organized around a recurring deal example (a multi-property portfolio ITC bridge facility for a nonprofit owner), including beginning-of-construction and sourcing diligence, site control, and leasehold protections. The panelist's discussion will also address intercreditor and consent issues, completion assurance, recapture risk allocation, and tenant-benefit requirements.

Credit Information
  • This 90-minute webinar is eligible in most states for 1.5 CLE credits.


  • Live Online


    On Demand

Date + Time

  • event

    Tuesday, June 30, 2026

  • schedule

    1:00 PM ET/10:00 AM PT

I.  OBBBA impacts on Section 48E credit and foreign entity rules

A. Credit amounts

B. Eligibility considerations

C. Monetization paths: tax equity, credit transfer, or elective/direct pay

D. Lender bridge options

II. Structural mechanics of financing solar energy projects

A. Ownership models and deal structures

B. Lending products

C. Unique collateral packages and underwriting considerations

D. Intercreditor issues

III. Consent, regulatory, and the intercreditor landscape: How they differ across property types

IV.  Compliance overlays

A. Prevailing wage and apprenticeship

B. Foreign entity sourcing restrictions

C. BABA, DBA, and other federal program flow-downs 

The webinar will review these and other important issues:

  • How do OBBBA deadlines affect Section 48E solar credit eligibility?
  • What monetization path best supports the financing structure?
  • How should lenders underwrite ITC bridge and construction loans?
  • What consent and intercreditor issues arise across property types?
  • How do compliance overlays affect credit size and loan terms?