Affordability

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Co-op Casa gives working Tucsonans the financial benefits of homeownership — without the down payment, the risk, or the expiration date.

Governed by residents, not investors

Co-op Casa is governed by its residents, workers, and community leaders. There are no investors seeking returns — which means the monthly fee is set to cover costs, not to maximize yield. That single structural difference is what makes permanent affordability possible.

Residents own a share of the entire co-op rather than owning their home individually. It’s ownership without the risk — and without the barriers.

No down payment. No closing costs.

The typical 20% down payment required to buy a home is funded by grants and donated land — not by residents. There are no closing costs, no mortgage to qualify for, and no financial bet that the market will cooperate when you need to move.

  • No down payment or closing costs for residents
  • Leave on your own schedule, without delay or market risk
  • Co-op share is liquid — you get your equity back when you go

Build wealth every month

A portion of every monthly payment goes into a personal resident wealth account. Accounts grow through monthly rebates and annual bonuses tied to sustainability performance — the more the building saves on energy and water, the more residents earn.

  • Monthly wealth account grows with every payment
  • Year-end sustainability bonus when the building meets its targets
  • Building wealth for residents, not profits for landlords

Affordable forever — no expiration date

Most “affordable” housing has an expiration date of 15 to 30 years. Tax credit projects can revert to market rates. Affordability restrictions can expire. Co-op Casa’s nonprofit structure includes an irrevocable legal requirement that every property remain affordable housing in perpetuity.

Permanent affordability is not a goal — it is baked into our legal structure and cannot be undone.