The Housing Fund (THF) was established in 1996 as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit Community Development Financial Institution (CDFI) operating throughout Tennessee. The organization emerged from Nashville's Agenda, a 1993 community-visioning effort, and was initially chartered as the Nashville Housing Fund before expanding statewide in 2005. Over nearly three decades, THF has maintained a mission to create and sustain affordable housing and inclusive-development opportunities in underserved communities across the state.
THF offers a focused suite of mortgage-related products and services designed specifically for low- to moderate-income borrowers. Primary offerings include down-payment assistance loans (enabling first-time homebuyers to purchase with minimal upfront capital), development lending for affordable-housing construction and rehabilitation projects, consumer-lending products to facilitate and sustain homeownership, homebuyer education programs, and community impact programs. The organization has also expanded into energy-saving home retrofits and loans for community facilities and small businesses, though mortgage-focused assistance remains their core competency.
What distinguishes THF is their CDFI designation and proven track record: they have assisted over 4,400 first-time homebuyers with more than $37 million in down-payment assistance loans and provided over $89 million in financing to 3,200+ individuals and organizations for home purchase, rehabilitation, or construction. They demonstrated crisis response capacity during Nashville's 2010 flood, distributing $13+ million in federal disaster aid and authoring a $30 million HUD Neighborhood Stabilization Program application. Their multi-state footprint (Tennessee, Kentucky, and partnerships in multiple counties) and willingness to serve foreclosed/vacant property redevelopment distinguish them from purely local lenders.
THF is genuinely nonprofit and mission-driven, but their services are geographically limited to Tennessee and adjacent regions, and their down-payment assistance products are specifically designed for first-time homebuyers in lower-income brackets—not a conventional mortgage lender for general population. As a CDFI, they prioritize underserved communities over competitive rates, making them ideal for their target demographic but potentially not comparable to mainstream mortgage institutions.