The Neighborhood Assistance Corporation of America (NACA) was founded in 1988 by the Boston Hotel Workers Union, emerging from the negotiation of the first-ever housing trust fund. Over 36 years, NACA has evolved into a mission-driven nonprofit focused on closing the racial wealth disparity gap through character-based lending and advocacy against high-cost lending practices. The organization has served 3 million people overall and helped 500,000 achieve homeownership through 75,000 mortgages, with $20 billion in mortgage commitments.
NACA's primary offering is their "Best in America Mortgage," featuring no down payment, no closing costs or fees, no mortgage insurance requirements, and no credit score consideration in the lending decision. As of March 31, 2026, rates are fixed at 5.625% for 30-year terms, 5.125% for 20-year terms, and 5.125% for 15-year terms. The organization also conducts HUD housing counseling (accounting for 30% of all HUD housing counseling nationally) and operates "Achieve the Dream" events across the country where prospective borrowers can meet with their team and become NACA Qualified.
NACA distinguishes itself through explicit rejection of credit-score-based lending, instead evaluating applicants based on character and circumstances. Their approach targets historically underserved communities, particularly low-to-moderate income people and people of color. Beyond mortgages, NACA actively campaigns against predatory landlords and corporate real estate investors, positions their work as advocacy for economic justice, and operate volunteer opportunities (NACtivist program) and podcast content hosted by founder Bruce Marks.
While NACA's mission and terms are compelling, prospective borrowers must attend multi-day in-person "Achieve the Dream" events to qualify, and the website provides limited detail on underwriting timelines, loan approval rates, or application requirements beyond attending these events. The organization's activist positioning and focus on specific geographic events means accessibility varies by location.