The HOME Reform Act of 2025 proposes key updates to the Federal HOME Investment Partnerships Program, aimed at making project delivery faster, simpler, and more flexible.

In Context: Representative Mike Flood (R-NE) has been collecting feedback on how to improve the HOME Investment Partnerships Program, specifically outlining what he calls the Four Horsemen of the Housing Apocalypse: federal requirements that drive up costs across all affordable housing including environmental reviews, Build America Buy America (BABA), Davis Bacon, and Section 3.

Representative Flood summarized the bill in a LinkedIn post with key modifications, including:

  1. Broader Income Eligibility
    • Expands potential tenant pools from “low-income families”(up to 80 percent AMI) by adding “workforce-income families” (up to 100 percent of AMI) to eligible populations.
  2. Faster, Simpler Compliance
    • If a project includes fewer than 50 units using HOME funds, it is now exempt from Davis-Bacon wage requirements and Section 3 hiring mandates—a significant increase from the previous 12-unit threshold.
    • The Build America, Buy America (BABA) Act shall not apply to units using HOME funds.
  3. Streamlined Environmental Reviews
    • Prevents a second review due to the addition or subtraction of other sources of federal assistance to a project; and
    • NEPA exemptions for infill, rehab, or small new construction (if less than 20 units use HOME funds in the project).
  4. Infrastructure Funding in Small Jurisdictions
    • Areas that do not receive assistance from CDBG grants can now use HOME funds to pay for infrastructure, such as roads, water/sewer lines, and utility hookups next to HOME or LIHTC projects.
  5. Greater Local Flexibility
    • Local governments won’t be restricted in choosing between rehabilitation, new construction, or other eligible uses of HOME funds unless federal law specifically limits it.
  6. More Time, Fewer Bottlenecks
    • Local governments will have 36 months (instead of 24) to use HOME Funds before they expire; and
    • Unused CHDO set-asides can be reallocated without CHDO involvement after three years.
  7. Affordable Housing Qualifications Modernized
    • Units occupied by Section 8 voucher holders are considered affordable housing as long as rent and contributions align with PHA guidelines;
    • HOME homeownership cap raised from 95 to 110 percent of median price; and
    • Allows shared equity models (e.g., land trusts, limited equity co-ops) to maintain long-term affordability.

What’s Next: The bill will be featured as part of a broader hearing, “HOME 2.0: Modern Solutions to the Housing Shortage,” rescheduled for 2 p.m. today in the Housing and Insurance Committee, chaired by Representative Flood. You can watch the livestream here.