HUD Insights – May 2026

HUD policy is moving on several fronts this month, and each update touches a different part of the FHA multifamily landscape: construction costs, federal funding, rental supply, and program flexibility. Here are the latest HUD Insights multifamily developers and owners need to know:

1. HUD Updates Rules to Simplify Environmental Review Process

The story: HUD issued Mortgagee Letter 2026-04 with changes to several Multifamily Accelerated Processing (MAP) Guide environmental review requirements. The updates cover railroad vibration, pressurized pipelines, high-voltage lines and fall zones, and outdoor noise-sensitive uses. The changes could reduce certain study requirements, design conflicts, and timing issues on sites with nearby infrastructure or outdoor amenities.

  • Rail lines: HUD removed the separate railroad vibration requirement from MAP Guide Chapter 9.
  • Pipelines: HUD returned to the 10-foot buffer from qualifying pressurized pipeline easements, with no added pressure tests or depth calculations.
  • High-voltage lines/fall zones: HUD now applies the restriction to residential structures and playgrounds, not parking lots or other open areas.
  • Exterior noise: HUD clarified that several outdoor spaces are not noise-sensitive, including dog runs, trails, open areas, hot tubs, many sports courts, and rooftop gathering spaces with grills.

“Environmental review can shape a deal long before underwriting begins. These changes give borrowers and development teams more room to evaluate sites on their actual risk profile, rather than treating proximity alone as a deal constraint.”
– Adlana Buck, FHA Chief Underwriter, X-Caliber

The follow-up: The changes apply immediately to applications that have not reached initial endorsement. HUD also plans separate guidance on railyards.

The bottom line: The practical value of the Mortgagee Letter is not just fewer requirements; it is a clearer read on whether a site can move forward under FHA before design, reports, and timing assumptions get too far along.

2. HUD Rescinds Energy Code Rule for New Construction

The story: HUD rescinded the 2024 rule that tied certain FHA-financed new construction, including multifamily, to the 2021 International Energy Conservation Code (IECC) or ASHRAE 90.1-2019 standards. HUD programs now return to the energy standards that applied before the 2024 rule.

  • HUD said the change removes a mandatory nationwide standard that could have added between $20,000 and $31,000 to new-construction costs.
  • HUD had previously delayed implementation of the rule until Dec. 31 after a federal court vacated it.
  • The 2021 IECC applied to multifamily low-rise buildings up to three stories, and ASHRAE 90.1-2019 applied to multifamily buildings with four or more stories.

“By repealing this onerous mandate, the Trump administration is making it easier for builders to construct more housing supply at an attainable price for Americans.”
– Bill Owens, Chairman of the National Association of Home Builders, said in a statement

The follow-up: Borrowers should confirm which energy standard applies to their specific FHA 221(d)(4) deal, especially if the project is already in design or application review. Housing and lending groups will likely continue watching how HUD applies baseline standards after the rescission.

The bottom line: This may reduce cost and compliance uncertainty for some FHA new construction deals but does not remove energy-efficiency requirements entirely.

3. Lawmakers Push Back on Build-to-Rent Restrictions

The story: A bipartisan group of 76 House lawmakers sent a letter to congressional leadership, asking to remove or revise Section 901 of the Senate-passed 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act. The provision would require certain large institutional investors to sell newly built single-family rental homes after seven years. Lawmakers and housing groups argue the language could also affect build-to-rent (BTR) communities, which multifamily developers invest in.

  • The coalition says Section 901 could limit new build-to-rent supply.
  • Lawmakers argue the provision could reduce rental options in markets where households need more housing choices.
  • Trade groups have warned that the language may create financing uncertainty for build-to-rent and single-family rental projects.
  • The debate sits inside broader House-Senate negotiations over the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act.

“By applying a mandatory seven-year divestiture requirement and sweeping definitions of ‘purchase’ and ‘investment control,’ Section 901 would effectively halt the production of build- to-rent housing nationwide and eliminate hundreds of thousands of future units.”
– Bipartisan House coalition letter

The follow-up: House and Senate negotiators will decide whether the BTR language stays, changes, or comes out of the final package. Housing groups will likely keep pressing for revisions as the broader housing bill moves forward.

The bottom line: Although this legislation is not directly geared toward FHA, it would eliminate the possibility of BTR product being completed under HUD’s multifamily programs. The loss of this product type could affect rental supply models, developer activity, and investor participation.

4. HUD Updates 2026 FHA Multifamily Statutory Loan Limits

The story: HUD published its annual adjustment to the basic statutory mortgage limits for FHA multifamily housing programs. The 2026 limits reflect a 2.3% CPI-U increase and cover several FHA multifamily programs, including Section 221(d)(4), 223(f), 231, and others. The update gives borrowers and lenders a refreshed statutory ceiling to use in early FHA sizing conversations.

  • Section 221(d)(4) limits vary by structure type and unit mix, with separate schedules for elevator and non-elevator properties.
    • Range: $68,401 for a non-elevator efficiency unit to $146,274 for a 4+ bedroom elevator unit.
  • Section 223(f) limits are higher than 221(d)(4) in several unit categories, which matters when comparing construction/substantial rehab financing with acquisition/refinance options.
    • Range: from $68,733 for a non-elevator efficiency unit to $154,259 for a 4+ bedroom elevator unit.
  • HUD also identifies “high-cost areas” where statutory limits may increase above the base amount, subject to program rules and HUD approval.

The follow-up: Borrowers should revisit early FHA sizing assumptions if statutory limits constrain loan proceeds, especially for higher-cost markets or larger-unit projects. Lenders will still need to test each deal against the full underwriting stack, including DSCR, LTV/LTC, replacement cost, operating assumptions, and program eligibility.

The bottom line: Higher statutory limits can help some FHA multifamily deals clear a sizing hurdle, but they do not automatically increase proceeds. The real impact depends on which constraint controls the loan amount.

5. MBA Proposes FHA Enhancements for Opportunity Zones

The story: The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) sent HUD recommendations to improve FHA multifamily execution for Opportunity Zone transactions. The proposals focus on underwriting flexibility, mixed-use projects, faster processing, and mortgageable developer fees. MBA frames the recommendations as a way to reduce FHA execution friction and better align HUD financing with Opportunity Zone capital timelines. MBA recommends:

  • Treating Opportunity Zone properties more like middle-income properties
  • Allowing 1.11x DSCR and 90% LTC for qualifying construction deals
  • Expanding commercial income and space flexibility for mixed-use projects
  • Creating an FHA Express Lane for Opportunity Zone transactions
  • Allowing developer fees to be mortgageable

MBA said the changes would “reduce friction in FHA execution” and better align FHA financing with Opportunity Zone timelines.

The follow-up: HUD has not adopted these recommendations, but borrowers should watch for their influence in future Mortgagee Letters, MAP Guide updates, or other HUD guidance.

The bottom line: These proposals could matter for FHA 221(d)(4) borrowers using Opportunity Zone equity or developing mixed-use projects in designated areas if they become program changes.

6. FY2027 HUD Budget Review Moves Forward

The story: Congress now decides what to keep, change, or reject in the White House’s 2027 federal budget proposal. House and Senate appropriators are hosting a slew of hearings to iron out details of their respective proposals. A hearing to discuss a THUD bill, which covers transportation and housing funds, is scheduled for May 21. To recap, the White House proposal calls for:

  • A nearly $11 billion cut to HUD’s discretionary spending
  • No impact to FHA operations
  • Elimination of HOME and Community Development Block Grant programs
  • A 5% reduction in project-based rental assistance
  • Slight increase for tenant vouchers

“Congressional appropriations hearings are an early step in a long federal funding process. The proposal will move through hearings, markups, negotiations, and likely revisions before Congress reaches a final spending bill. So, borrowers should track the direction of the debate without treating any single proposal as settled policy.”
– Megan Booth, Vice President of Commercial Real Estate Finance Policy, Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA)

The follow-up: Watch for how appropriators separate topline HUD funding from program-level details, including rental assistance renewals, administrative capacity, and housing production programs. The key question for borrowers is not only how much HUD receives but whether final funding supports timely program administration and stable execution.

The bottom line: HUD’s funding picture will likely change several times before Congress reaches a final spending bill. FHA multifamily borrowers should treat this as an early signal while watching for changes that could affect program staffing, processing capacity, and assisted housing resources.

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