If you work in community banking or at a credit union, you have heard of CRA. But even outside the industry, understanding CRA is important for anyone who wants to understand why banks partner with organizations like Dream Home Fund. Here is the full picture.
What Is the Community Reinvestment Act?
The Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) is a federal law enacted in 1977. It was passed in response to the practice of redlining, the systematic denial of banking services to residents of minority and low-income neighborhoods. CRA requires federally insured banks and thrifts to help meet the credit needs of the communities in which they operate, including low- and moderate-income neighborhoods.
How CRA Is Evaluated
Federal banking regulators, the OCC, Federal Reserve, and FDIC, periodically examine banks for CRA compliance and assign ratings: Outstanding, Satisfactory, Needs to Improve, or Substantial Noncompliance. These ratings are public and affect a bank's ability to open branches, merge with other institutions, and make acquisitions.
Banks that want to grow have strong incentives to earn and maintain Satisfactory or Outstanding CRA ratings.
What Counts for CRA Credit?
CRA examiners evaluate three areas: lending, investing, and services. For our purposes, the most relevant are:
- Lending: Mortgage loans to low- and moderate-income borrowers, small business loans in LMI areas, community development loans
- Investing: Equity investments in CDFIs, Low Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC) projects, and other community development vehicles
- Services: Financial literacy programs, homebuyer education, serving on nonprofit boards
Why This Matters for Dream Home Fund Partnerships
When banks and CDFIs partner with Dream Home Fund, they are not just doing good, they may be earning CRA credit that has regulatory value. This alignment of mission and compliance interest is part of what makes DPA partnerships attractive to regulated financial institutions.
The Evolving CRA Landscape
CRA regulations have been updated in recent years, with regulators modernizing the framework to account for digital banking, online lending, and broader community development activities. The core principle, that banks have an affirmative obligation to serve the communities where they take deposits, remains intact. If anything, the regulatory environment is strengthening the incentives for mission-aligned partnerships.
Is Your Institution a Fit?
If you work at a bank, credit union, or CDFI that is looking for mission-aligned community development partnerships in the housing space, Dream Home Fund would welcome the conversation. Contact us to discuss how a capital partnership might serve your CRA strategy and your community.
Ready to take the next step?
Dream Home Fund provides down payment assistance to help families like yours achieve homeownership. Get in touch today.
How to Get DPA