🏠 HUD Program

Good Neighbor Next Door
50% Off a Home for Public Servants

Teachers, firefighters, law enforcement officers, and EMTs can buy a HUD-owned home at 50% of the list price. Here's exactly how the Good Neighbor Next Door program works in Colorado.

50%
Off HUD List Price
3 Years
Residency Requirement
$100
Min. Down Payment with FHA
+1%
Rebate at Closing w/ Home Offer Ninja
In this guide
Section 01

What Is the Good Neighbor Next Door Program?

The Good Neighbor Next Door (GNND) program is a HUD initiative that sells government-owned foreclosure homes at a 50% discount to eligible public servants. The goal is to encourage community investment by helping the people who serve neighborhoods actually live in them.

HUD acquires homes through FHA foreclosures. Rather than selling them all on the open market, HUD reserves certain properties in designated "revitalization areas" exclusively for GNND participants for a 7-day listing window. If you qualify and there's a property available in your area, you can buy it at half price.

⚠️
Inventory is limited and competition can be high

GNND properties in Colorado are not always available. When a qualifying home does hit the list, multiple GNND-eligible buyers may apply during the 7-day window. If there are multiple applicants, HUD selects a winner by lottery. You must be actively watching the HUD homestore and be ready to move quickly.

Section 02

Who Qualifies for Good Neighbor Next Door?

📚
Teachers
Full-time teacher at a state-accredited public or private K-12 school in the revitalization area where the home is located. Must be employed by the school at time of purchase.
🚒
Firefighters
Full-time firefighter employed by a fire department serving the area where the home is located. Volunteer firefighters do not qualify.
👮
Law Enforcement
Full-time law enforcement officer employed by a federal, state, local, or tribal government agency. Must serve the area where the home is located.
🚑
EMTs / Paramedics
Full-time emergency medical technician employed by a state, county, or local government EMS provider serving the area where the property is located.

Additional requirements for all applicants

⚠️
"Serves the area" is important for teachers

For teachers, the school must be in the revitalization area - not just anywhere in Colorado. This is one of the most misunderstood requirements. If you're a Denver teacher but the available GNND home is in Colorado Springs, you won't qualify unless you're employed at a school within that specific revitalization area.

Section 03

How the 50% Discount Actually Works

Here's the key to understanding GNND: the discount isn't a grant. HUD sells you the home at 50% of its appraised "as-is" value - but the other 50% is structured as a "silent second mortgage" that disappears after 3 years of residency.

Example: Colorado GNND Purchase

HUD appraised value$280,000
GNND purchase price (50% off)$140,000
Silent second mortgage (HUD keeps)$140,000
FHA loan on $140,000 (3.5% down)$4,900 down
With FHA + GNND special: min. down$100
Silent mortgage forgiven after 3 years$140,000 SAVED
💡
FHA + GNND = as little as $100 down

When using an FHA loan to buy a GNND property, HUD allows a minimum down payment of just $100 (instead of the standard 3.5%). Combined with seller-paid closing costs, some GNND buyers close for almost nothing out of pocket - then walk away 3 years later with the full equity of a home worth twice what they "paid."

Section 04

The Silent Second Mortgage - What You Need to Know

The 50% discount is structured as a "silent" second mortgage held by HUD. Here's how it works:

⚠️
Early exit triggers repayment

If you sell, rent, or vacate the property before the 3-year mark, you must repay HUD on a prorated basis. The repayment amount decreases with each year you live there. If you leave after 2 years, you'd repay roughly one-third of the original discount. Plan to stay the full 3 years to keep the entire benefit.

Section 05

The 3-Year Residency Requirement

You must certify to HUD every year that the home is your sole primary residence. HUD takes this seriously:

The 3 years must be continuous. You must meet the occupancy requirement for the full 36 months to have the silent second mortgage forgiven. Missing the annual certification or failing an inspection can trigger repayment even if you technically lived there.

Section 06

How to Find GNND Properties in Colorado

GNND properties are listed exclusively on HUD's homestore website at hudhomestore.hud.gov. Here's the process:

  1. Register at HUDHomestore.gov

    Create a free account. You'll need this to view the full GNND listings and submit offers.

  2. Filter for GNND properties in Colorado

    Search by state, select Colorado, and filter for "Good Neighbor Next Door" properties. New listings appear every Friday and are open to GNND buyers exclusively for the first 7 days.

  3. Set up email alerts

    HUD doesn't send push notifications. Bookmark the Colorado GNND search and check it every Friday morning, or set up a third-party alert service to notify you when new listings appear.

📋
Colorado GNND inventory is sparse - here's what to expect

Colorado doesn't always have GNND listings available. Revitalization areas are designated by HUD and tend to be in communities with higher foreclosure concentrations. Front Range suburban markets with low foreclosure rates may go months without a single GNND listing. If you're set on GNND, be patient and be ready to act the moment a property appears.

What are "revitalization areas"?

HUD designates revitalization areas based on data including foreclosure rates, household income, homeownership rates, and the concentration of HUD-insured properties. These areas are updated periodically. A specific neighborhood in Colorado Springs or Pueblo that qualified last year may or may not qualify today. Check the current list on the HUD website or ask your agent.

Section 07

How to Buy a GNND Property - Step by Step

  1. Verify your eligibility

    Confirm your employment meets GNND requirements (full-time, serving the revitalization area). You'll need a letter from your employer at the time of offer.

  2. Get pre-approved

    Get pre-approved for an FHA loan (most common for GNND). The $100 minimum down FHA option is unique to GNND. Tell your lender upfront you're pursuing a GNND property.

  3. Register at HUDHomestore.gov

    You must be registered before you can submit an offer. Complete your profile and read the offer submission requirements.

  4. Find a HUD-registered agent

    To submit an offer on a HUD home, your agent must be HUD-registered. Home Offer Ninja agents can verify their HUD registration status - ask when you book your call.

  5. Monitor listings every Friday

    New GNND properties go live on HUDHomestore.gov every Friday. The 7-day exclusive GNND window closes the following Thursday. Check every week.

  6. Submit your offer during the 7-day window

    Offers are submitted online through HUDHomestore. Your agent helps prepare and submit. If multiple GNND buyers apply, HUD selects randomly by lottery.

  7. Close and begin your 3-year residency

    If selected, you proceed to closing. The silent second mortgage is recorded. Your 3-year clock starts at closing. Your Home Offer Ninja 1% rebate applies at closing too.

  8. Certify occupancy annually

    HUD will contact you to certify occupancy each year. Complete this on time. After 3 years, submit your final certification and HUD releases the silent second mortgage.

🥷
Ninja tip: Layer the 1% rebate on top of the GNND discount

Even at 50% of list price, you still pay a real purchase price with real closing costs. Your Home Offer Ninja 1% rebate is calculated on the actual purchase price you pay and applied to closing costs - reducing your out-of-pocket even on an already deeply discounted home.

FAQ

Common Good Neighbor Next Door Questions

Can I use a VA or conventional loan for a GNND property? +
Yes. While FHA is the most common choice (and the only option that allows the $100 minimum down), you can use a VA loan, conventional loan, or even cash to buy a GNND home. The 50% discount and silent second mortgage structure applies regardless of loan type. Veterans using a VA loan can combine the GNND discount with their zero-down benefit.
What condition are GNND homes typically in? +
GNND homes are HUD-owned foreclosures and are sold as-is. They may range from move-in ready to needing significant repairs. HUD typically provides a property condition report (PCR) and may have the property inspected before listing. You should still pay for your own independent inspection. If the home needs major work, consider whether a 203(k) renovation loan combined with GNND financing is possible - ask your lender.
What happens if I lose my qualifying job during the 3 years? +
HUD requires you to notify them if your employment changes. If you leave your qualifying job (teaching, fire, law enforcement, or EMS), you are required to contact HUD. In practice, HUD's focus is on continued occupancy as your primary residence - but you should not assume your occupancy alone is sufficient if you no longer hold a qualifying position. Contact HUD directly in that situation.
Can my spouse use the program if they're not the public servant? +
The GNND benefit is tied to the eligible public servant who must be on the mortgage and deed. Your spouse can co-sign the loan, but the primary buyer must be the qualifying public servant. The eligible employee must certify occupancy during the 3-year period.
What is the difference between GNND and other teacher home buying programs? +
GNND is a HUD-specific program that applies only to HUD-owned foreclosure properties with a 50% price discount. It's very different from general teacher mortgage assistance programs, which might offer down payment grants or preferential rates on any home. GNND's discount is deeper but applies to a very limited inventory. Other programs (like CHFA in Colorado) can be used to buy any eligible home on the market.

Public Servant Discount + 1% Back at Closing

Home Offer Ninja works with teachers, firefighters, law enforcement, and EMTs across Colorado. Book a free call - we'll help you navigate GNND availability and make sure you're ready to act when a property appears.

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