HR6644-119

Passed Senate

21st Century ROAD to Housing Act

119th Congress Introduced Dec 11, 2025

Summary

What This Bill Does

The 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act is a broad housing-policy package. It changes HUD, USDA, VA, FHA, public housing, rural housing, housing counseling, disaster recovery, manufactured housing, modular housing, small-dollar mortgage, voucher, and community-development authorities. The bill is aimed at expanding housing supply, reducing financing and regulatory barriers, modernizing reviews, improving disaster recovery, and coordinating federal housing programs.

The bill also reaches beyond ordinary housing programs. It adds investor and public-housing oversight provisions, makes changes affecting veterans and disability-benefit income treatment, requires HUD-USDA-VA coordination, directs GAO studies, and includes a Federal Reserve central bank digital currency restriction.

Who Benefits and How

Affordable housing developers, homebuilders, modular housing manufacturers, manufactured housing producers, rural housing developers, public housing agencies, and community development organizations benefit from broader eligible uses, streamlined reviews, updated standards, and new or revised grant and financing tools. Rural borrowers and rural housing applicants benefit from USDA program improvements.

Homebuyers, mortgage borrowers, voucher holders, renters, veterans receiving disability benefits, and households using HUD or USDA housing programs benefit where the bill expands counseling, small-dollar mortgage access, voucher landlord participation, income-treatment protections, and interagency coordination. Disaster-affected communities benefit from the Long-Term Disaster Recovery Fund and CDBG disaster recovery structure.

Who Bears the Burden and How

The Department of Housing and Urban Development, Department of Agriculture, Department of Veterans Affairs, Federal Housing Administration, Federal Housing Finance Agency, Government Accountability Office, Federal Reserve Board, public housing monitors, and public housing receivers must implement new programs, studies, guidance, reports, memoranda, oversight duties, and restrictions.

Housing investors, mortgage lenders, financial institutions, public housing agencies, landlords, and regulated housing market actors face new disclosure, program, oversight, or eligibility conditions depending on the section. Federal taxpayers and appropriators bear the fiscal burden of expanded or revised grants, pilots, studies, and administrative programs even though the bill includes a no-additional-funds clause.

Key Provisions

  • Directs HUD to support housing supply frameworks and issue point-access block building guidelines.
  • Requires HUD and USDA to coordinate environmental review treatment for covered housing programs.
  • Revises HOME, rural housing, voucher, public housing, and community development authorities.
  • Updates manufactured housing and modular housing rules.
  • Creates or studies FHA small-dollar mortgage tools and housing counseling reforms.
  • Excludes certain veterans disability benefits from covered housing income calculations.
  • Requires HUD, USDA, and VA interagency coordination on housing programs.
  • Creates disaster recovery reforms through a Long-Term Disaster Recovery Fund and CDBG disaster recovery grants.
  • Adds GAO studies, oversight provisions, investor-related rules, and public housing monitor or receiver provisions.
  • Restricts Federal Reserve central bank digital currency activity in the housing package.

Evidence Chain:

This summary is generated from the full bill text using AI analysis. Expand "Detailed Analysis" below for identified beneficiaries/burden bearers with clause-level evidence links.

At a Glance

What This Bill Does

Revises federal housing, mortgage, rural housing, public housing, veterans housing, disaster recovery, manufactured housing, modular housing, and community-development authorities to expand supply and alter program administration.

Key Policy Areas

Housing, Mortgage Finance, Rural Development, Veterans, Disaster Recovery

Primary Purpose

Revises federal housing, mortgage, rural housing, public housing, veterans housing, disaster recovery, manufactured housing, modular housing, and community-development authorities to expand supply and alter program administration.

Policy Domains

Housing Mortgage Finance Rural Development Veterans Disaster Recovery

Housing supply, finance, rural housing, veterans housing, and disaster recovery

Identified Gains
  • Affordable housing developers
  • Homebuilders
  • Modular housing manufacturers
  • Manufactured housing producers
  • Rural housing developers
  • Public housing agencies
  • Mortgage borrowers
  • Veterans receiving disability benefits
  • Voucher holders
  • Disaster-affected communities
Model: codex-gpt-5 | Version: bill_summary_v2 | Source: eas
Homebuilders: , ,
Voucher holders:
Mortgage borrowers: ,
Public housing agencies: ,
Rural housing developers:
Affordable housing developers: ,
Disaster-affected communities: ,
Modular housing manufacturers:
Manufactured housing producers:
Veterans receiving disability benefits: ,
Identified Costs
  • Department of Housing and Urban Development
  • Department of Agriculture
  • Department of Veterans Affairs
  • Federal Housing Administration
  • Federal Housing Finance Agency
  • Government Accountability Office
  • Federal Reserve Board
  • Housing investors
  • Mortgage lenders
  • Public housing monitors
  • Federal taxpayers
Model: codex-gpt-5 | Version: bill_summary_v2 | Source: eas
Mortgage lenders: ,
Federal taxpayers: , , , , , , , , , ,
Housing investors:
Federal Reserve Board: ,
Public housing monitors:
Department of Agriculture: , ,
Department of Veterans Affairs: ,
Federal Housing Administration:
Federal Housing Finance Agency:
Government Accountability Office: ,
Department of Housing and Urban Development: , , , , , , , , , ,

Legislative Progress

Passed Senate
Introduced Committee Passed
Jun 16, 2026

Motion by Senator Thune to refer to Senate Committee on …

Jun 16, 2026

Cloture motion on the motion to concur in the House …

Jun 16, 2026

Motion by Senator Thune to concur in the House amendment …

Jun 16, 2026

Measure laid before Senate by motion. (consideration: CR S2813-2316)

Jun 16, 2026

Motion to proceed to consideration of the House message to …

Jun 2, 2026

Message on House action received in Senate and at desk: …

May 20, 2026

House agreed to Senate amendment with amendment pursuant to H. …

May 20, 2026

Resolving differences -- House actions: House agreed to Senate amendment …

May 20, 2026

Mar 16, 2026

Message on Senate action sent to the House.

Stakeholder Effects

cui bono?

How this legislation distributes effects. Mention counts reflect frequency, not effect magnitude.

Construction
34 mentions across 34 clauses
+34 positive

Affordable housing and community development projects financed by public-welfare investments, Affordable housing developers, Affordable housing developers benefiting from zoning and planning reforms

Government
34 mentions across 34 clauses
-34 negative

Eligible housing agencies running escrow accounts, Federal homelessness program administrators, Government Accountability Office analysts

State & Local Government
14 mentions across 14 clauses
+9 positive -5 negative

Community development block grant recipients, Local governments and Indian tribes, Local governments and tribal grantees seeking pattern-book funding

Positive-direction: Local governments and Indian tribes, Local governments and tribal grantees seeking pattern-book funding, Participating jurisdictions using HOME funds, State and local HOME grantees administering small projects, State, regional, and local entities seeking housing planning grants

Negative-direction: Community development block grant recipients, New York City Housing Authority management, State manufactured-housing regulators

Households
13 mentions across 13 clauses
+12 positive ?1 uncertain

HUD-assisted families enrolled in the escrow pilot, Low-income families in Section 8 or public housing, Low-income families in assisted housing

Residential Tenants
8 mentions across 8 clauses
+8 positive

Public housing residents affected by agency procurement transparency, Public housing residents affected by prolonged federal oversight, Residential tenants in federally assisted rental housing

Real Estate
7 mentions across 4 clauses
+1 positive -6 negative

Covered public housing agencies, Federal public housing monitors, Landlords participating in Section 8

Positive-direction: Landlords participating in Section 8

Negative-direction: Covered public housing agencies, Federal public housing monitors, Public housing receivers

Homebuyers
7 mentions across 7 clauses
+7 positive

Homebuyers receiving HUD-supported counseling, Homebuyers seeking small-dollar mortgages, Mortgage applicants who may qualify for VA loans

Finance
7 mentions across 7 clauses
+3 positive -4 negative

Lenders participating in FHA multifamily mortgage insurance programs, Mortgage lenders and housing enterprises using the standard application, Mortgage lenders participating in FHA small-dollar lending

Positive-direction: Lenders participating in FHA multifamily mortgage insurance programs, Mortgage lenders participating in FHA small-dollar lending

Negative-direction: Mortgage lenders and housing enterprises using the standard application

57/57
sections analyzed
Full impact breakdown

Bill Structure & Actor Mappings

Who is "The Secretary" in each section?

Domains
Housing Mortgage Finance Rural Development Veterans Disaster Recovery
Actor Mappings
"secretary"
→ Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, Agriculture, or Veterans Affairs as applicable

Key Definitions

Terms defined in this bill

2 terms
"affordable housing" §101

Housing for which monthly payment is not more than 30 percent of monthly household income.

"Long-Term Disaster Recovery Fund" §501

A fund used for community development block grant disaster recovery grants.

We use a combination of our own taxonomy and classification in addition to large language models to assess meaning and potential beneficiaries. High confidence means strong textual evidence. Always verify with the original bill text.

Learn more about our methodology