Rule2026-06951

Multi-Family Housing Simple Transfer Pilot Program

Primary source

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Published
April 10, 2026
Effective
December 31, 2027

Issuing agencies

Agriculture DepartmentRural Housing Service

Abstract

The Rural Housing Service (RHS) has extended its Simple Transfer Pilot Program until December 31, 2027. This initiative streamlines transfers for certain USDA Section 514 Farm Labor Housing and 515 Rural Rental Housing properties. The program simplifies extensive application requirements, previously applied to all property ownership changes, for less complex transactions. This aims to reduce costs and improve processing times. RHS will evaluate the program's effectiveness, with successful changes potentially incorporated into permanent regulations to encourage property preservation and portfolio revitalization.

Full Text

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<title>Federal Register, Volume 91 Issue 69 (Friday, April 10, 2026)</title>
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[Federal Register Volume 91, Number 69 (Friday, April 10, 2026)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 18275-18277]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [<a href="http://www.gpo.gov">www.gpo.gov</a>]
[FR Doc No: 2026-06951]



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Rules and Regulations
                                                Federal Register
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Federal Register / Vol. 91, No. 69 / Friday, April 10, 2026 / Rules 
and Regulations

[[Page 18275]]



DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE

Rural Housing Service

7 CFR Part 3560

[Docket No. RHS-26-MFH-0067]


Multi-Family Housing Simple Transfer Pilot Program

AGENCY: Rural Housing Service, USDA.

ACTION: Extension of pilot program.

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SUMMARY: The Rural Housing Service (RHS) has extended its Simple 
Transfer Pilot Program until December 31, 2027. This initiative 
streamlines transfers for certain USDA Section 514 Farm Labor Housing 
and 515 Rural Rental Housing properties. The program simplifies 
extensive application requirements, previously applied to all property 
ownership changes, for less complex transactions. This aims to reduce 
costs and improve processing times. RHS will evaluate the program's 
effectiveness, with successful changes potentially incorporated into 
permanent regulations to encourage property preservation and portfolio 
revitalization.

DATES: Pilot Duration: The effective date of the Simple Transfer Pilot 
Program is extended to December 31, 2027, at which time the RHS may 
extend the pilot program (with or without modifications) or terminate 
it depending on the workload, budget and resources needed to administer 
the program, feedback from the public, and the effectiveness of the 
program.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For general information about the 
pilot program, contact Jessica Long, Asset Management Division at 
<a href="/cdn-cgi/l/email-protection#0d67687e7e646e6c236162636a4d787e696c236a627b"><span class="__cf_email__" data-cfemail="dfb5baacacb6bcbef1b3b0b1b89faaacbbbef1b8b0a9">[email&#160;protected]</span></a> or at 270-392-4526.
    Owners that are interested in participating in the pilot program 
should contact the project's assigned servicing specialist in the Field 
Operations Division. The assigned specialist can be found on the 
Agency's website at <a href="https://www.sc.egov.usda.gov/data/MFH.html">https://www.sc.egov.usda.gov/data/MFH.html</a>. Select 
the file under the heading Multifamily Housing 514 & 515 Property 
Assignments. The servicing specialist is listed in the column labeled 
``Assigned To'' and their email is in the column ``Assigned To Email.''

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

Authority

    Title V, Section 506(b) of the Housing Act of 1949, as amended; 42 
U.S.C. 1476(b).

Background

    RHS is committed to helping improve the economy and quality of life 
in rural areas by offering a variety of programs such as loans, grants, 
and loan guarantees to help create jobs, expand economic development, 
and provide critical infrastructure investments. RHS also provides 
technical assistance, loans, and grants by partnering with agricultural 
producers, cooperatives, Indian tribes, non-profits, and other local, 
state, and federal agencies.
    The Multi-family Housing Program (MFH), an RHS program, assists 
rural property owners through loans, loan guarantees, and grants that 
enable owners to develop and rehabilitate properties for low-income, 
elderly, and disabled individuals and families as well as domestic farm 
laborers. MFH works with the owners of its direct and farm labor 
housing loan properties to subsidize rents for low-income tenants who 
cannot afford to pay their full rent. These programs assist qualified 
applicants that cannot obtain commercial credit on terms that will 
allow them to charge rents that are affordable to low-income tenants.

Summary of Updates to the Pilot Program

    1. The pilot program is extended by two years until December 31, 
2027.
    2. The Agency is adding exception criteria for the restrictive use 
requirement.

Transfer Types: Simple and Standard Transfers

    MFH utilizes a variety of tools to revitalize and preserve the 
physical and financial health of more than 12,000 properties currently 
in USDA's rural rental portfolio. The Agency may authorize limited 
demonstration programs to test new approaches to offering housing under 
the statutory authority granted to the Secretary, as set forth in 42 
U.S.C. 1476(b) and 7 CFR 3560.53(t). Such demonstration programs may 
authorize procedures and requirements that differ from those set forth 
in statute or regulation. However, any program requirements that are 
not expressly exempted, whether statutory or regulatory, remain in 
effect.
    There are two primary types of ownership changes that require 
approval by MFH which are (1) a change in the borrower entity's 
organizational structure or (2) a transfer of ownership to a new 
entity. Organizational changes that include changes in a borrower's 
current ownership entity structure are addressed in 42 U.S.C. 1485(h) 
and 7 CFR 3560.405. Transfers, which are sales of projects to new 
owners that continue to operate the projects in the 515 program, are 
detailed in 42 U.S.C. 1485(h) and 7 CFR 3560.406.
    MFH has identified the need to simplify the transfer of ownership 
for certain types of transactions. The current process places the same 
submission requirements on applicants regardless of the complexity of 
the transaction, resulting in undue burdens for relatively 
uncomplicated transfers, thereby reducing potential transfer and 
preservation activity in the portfolio. To address this issue, MFH has 
implemented the Simple Transfer Pilot Program which offers three 
additional transfer options as a way to encourage preservation and 
revitalize its portfolio. MFH expects that by reducing application 
requirements for certain types of transfers, the result will be lower 
transaction-related costs for applicants and improved processing times. 
At the end of the pilot program, MFH will evaluate the findings with 
consideration towards, if successful, future regulatory changes that 
could be codified into 7 CFR part 3560 and applied program wide.

Discussion of the New Transfer Pilot Program

    (1) Simple Transfer Pilot Program: For a simple transfer, under 
certain conditions the Agency will process an application for an 
ownership change without requiring full rehabilitation financing and/or 
reserve account funding typically needed to approve a standard 
transfer. Simple transfers include restrictions on new debt, equity 
payouts, and other limitations that are not included for standard 
transfers.

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    The Agency must determine that the new owner can operate the 
property successfully and that the ownership change will benefit the 
government and tenants even if there are remaining rehabilitation needs 
post-transfer. The property must meet the required conditions to be 
processed as a simple transfer. The Asset Management Division (AMD) 
will process simple transfers.
    (2) Standard Transfer: All transfers that do not meet the 
requirements for a simple transfer are considered standard transfers. 
Standard transfers often include third-party financing, such as Low-
Income Housing Tax Credits (LIHTC), and may include one property or 
multiple properties in a portfolio. Standard transfers follow the 
guidance in 7 CFR 3560.406. The Production and Preservation Division 
(P2) will continue to process standard transfers.

Implementation of the Simple Transfer Pilot Program

    Eligible properties include Section 514 Farm Labor Housing and 
Section 515 Rural Rental Housing properties. Eligibility for the pilot 
program will be based on property conditions and the ability and 
willingness of the buyer and seller to meet required simple transfer 
conditions. Buyers must meet the eligibility criteria in 7 CFR 
3560.406. Applicants must be able to clearly demonstrate that the 
property can operate successfully under new ownership. Applicants must 
abide by the regulatory requirements set forth in 7 CFR part 3560 and 
the requirements set forth in applicable statutes, except for the 
exceptions made available through this pilot program, as detailed in 
this Notice.
    Under the pilot program, three simple transfer options are 
available to address different property circumstances, which are 
outlined below:

Option 1: Simple Transfer With Expedited Ownership Change Required

    Option 1 is the most streamlined transfer process. It is available 
in circumstances where the Agency determines that an expedited 
ownership change is in the best interest of the Government, property, 
and tenants.
    (1) Requirements:
    (i) Property is in acceptable physical condition as determined by 
the Agency based on information submitted by the applicant, available 
in Agency files, or available from third parties, AND
    (ii) Conditions exist that require an expedited transfer, including 
but not limited to: deceased borrower or general partner, hardship, 
insolvency, receivership, imminent loan maturity, or sale to nonprofit 
under prepayment, AND
    (iii) No additional debt will be incurred by the Buyer or secured 
by the property as part of the transfer, AND
    (iv) New owner (nonprofit or for-profit) will provide a plan for 
the long-term viability of the property, which may include 
recapitalization/rehabilitation or resetting of reserves. The Agency 
must determine that the proposed viability plan demonstrates the 
continued physical and financial viability of the property.
    (2) Pilot Program Modification to current Standard Transfer 
Requirements in 7 CFR 3560:
    (i) No Capital Needs Assessment (CNA) is required with the transfer 
application (the CNA requirement in 7 CFR 3560.406(d)(5) is exempted 
for transfers qualifying for Option 1).
    (ii) No new valuation of the property is required with the transfer 
application (the requirement in 3560.406(d)(3)(i) and (ii) that the 
security value of the housing project be determined at the time of 
transfer is exempted for transfers qualifying for Option 1).
    (iii) The maturity date and amortization period of the loan will 
not be changed or extended unless the Agency determines that an 
extension of the term is in the best interests of the Government, 
property and tenants.
    (iv) No equity payout can be included as part of the transaction. 
Equity payout to transferor shall not be paid for by project funds and 
shall not be secured by the property. If agreed to by both parties, 
equity may be paid outside of the transaction.
    (v) The project must meet minimum reserve account requirements as 
determined by the Agency. The Agency may require a post-transfer 
analysis to reset annual reserve deposits as a condition of the 
approved viability plan, which could include completion of a property 
conditions survey, a CNA, or another analysis acceptable to the Agency.
    (vi) As part of this extension, the pilot program will also include 
an exception to the restrictive use requirement in 7 CFR 3560.406(g). 
These exceptions are intended to streamline transfers in situations 
where affordability restrictions are already preserved through family 
continuity or estate planning measures, while ensuring compliance with 
statutory requirements and tenant protections. Each transfer under 
these provisions must be reviewed by the Agency to confirm eligibility 
and documented appropriately. The restrictive use exception will only 
be considered in two specific scenarios:
    (a) when a property is transferred to an heir or heirs following 
the death of the current owner, OR
    (b) when a property is transferred for estate planning purposes 
where ownership and control remain with the existing borrower.

Option 2: Simple Transfer With Rehabilitation

    Option 2 is designed for properties that require rehabilitation 
and/or resetting of the annual deposit to the reserve account.
    (1) Requirements:
    (i) Property is or will be fully subsidized post-transfer OR rents 
can be increased without adversely impacting occupancy and without a 
term extension, AND
    (ii) No additional amortizing debt will be incurred by the Buyer or 
secured by the property as part of the transfer, AND
    (iii) One of the following conditions applies:
    (a) Based on a CNA, rehabilitation is needed now that cannot be 
funded by the current reserve account, OR
    (b) Property is in acceptable condition, with only minor upfront 
rehabilitation or repairs needed, as determined by the Agency based on 
information submitted by the applicant, available in Agency files, or 
available from third parties. Reserves are sufficient to meet any 
upfront rehabilitation needs but are inadequate to address future 
rehabilitation needs.
    (2) Pilot Program Modification to current Standard Transfer 
Requirements in 7 CFR 3560:
    (i) No new valuation of the property is required with the transfer 
application (the requirement in 3560.406(d)(3)that the security value 
of the housing project be determined at the time of transfer is waived 
for transfers qualifying for Option 2).
    (ii) The Agency may approve a junior lien for deferred financing as 
provided in 3560.409, except that: (a) deferred financing must at a 
minimum be coterminous with the Agency's loan(s), and (b) the Agency 
may set a maximum per unit limit on rehabilitation that can be approved 
under Option 2.
    (iii) The maturity date and amortization period of the loan will 
not be changed or extended, except that a term extension may be 
permitted in accordance with CFR 3560.406(j) if required by the 
deferred lender to preserve affordability for a longer period.
    (iv) No equity payout can be included as part of the transaction. 
Equity payout to transferor shall not be paid for by project funds and 
shall not be secured by the property. If agreed to by both

[[Page 18277]]

parties, equity may be paid outside of the transaction.

Option 3: Simple Transfer With Future Rehabilitation/Recapitalization 
Plan

    Option 3 provides flexibility to nonprofits and government agencies 
to complete an acquisition of a preservation-worthy property even if 
resources for rehabilitation of the property are not available at the 
time of the transfer. An appraisal and CNA are required as part of the 
transfer application.
    (1) Requirements:
    (i) Based on a CNA, rehabilitation is needed that cannot be fully 
funded by the current reserve account or resetting of the existing 
reserve deposits, AND
    (ii) The purchaser is a nonprofit organization or government 
agency, AND
    (iii) The new nonprofit or government agency owner will pursue a 
strategy to rehabilitate/recapitalize the property with Agency and/or 
third-party funds within two years of the transfer closing date. The 
Agency must determine that the recapitalization plan will meet the 
physical and financial needs of the property the new owner is likely to 
obtain the Agency and/or third-party funds, and the property can 
function successfully until rehabilitation/recapitalization is 
complete.
    (2) Pilot Program Modification to current Standard Transfer 
Requirements in 7 CFR 3560:
    (i) The Agency will waive the necessary reserve requirement 
adjustment under 7 CFR 3560.406(d)(5). The new owner must address the 
rehabilitation needs identified in the CNA over a period not to exceed 
two years after the closing date of the transfer. The Agency must 
approve the new owner's proposed rehabilitation plan and the new 
owner's plan to obtain funding for the rehabilitation prior to approval 
of the transfer.
    (ii) The Agency will monitor the progress and implementation of the 
approved plan as part of routine project servicing. The new owner may 
propose changes to the approved plan; however, RD must authorize in 
writing any changes before they are implemented.
    For all simple transfer options, health, safety, environmental, 
civil rights, and applicable accessibility requirements must be 
resolved at the time of transfer. The property must be rated 
``performing'' in the internal risk rating tool unless an exception is 
approved by the Agency.
    In cases where MFH determines that none of the simple transfer 
options are viable for a project, the property owner should follow the 
standard transfer requirements in 7 CFR 3560.406. The Agency may also 
determine that other servicing actions are more appropriate based on 
the property's circumstances.
    Standard transfer requirements have not changed and are outlined in 
7 CFR 3560.406.
    A checklist and other information have been developed and are 
available by: (1) contacting the assigned servicing specialist, which 
can be found at USDA Service Center Agencies Online Services; or (2) 
refer to the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section in this Notice.

Transfer Processing Steps

    A property owner should contact the assigned Field Operations 
Division (FOD) servicing specialist if interested in a transfer under 
the pilot program. The servicing specialist will take the lead in 
intake of the information and in partnership with AMD and lead the 
concept call with the applicant. After the conversation with the 
applicant, the package will either be transferred to AMD for 
processing, or the servicing specialist will notify the applicant in 
writing of the decision to not proceed with the simple transfer process 
and the reasons.

Paperwork Reduction Act

    The regulatory exceptions for this pilot contain no new reporting 
or recordkeeping burdens under OMB control number 0575-0179 that would 
require approval under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 
Chapter 35).

Non-Discrimination Statement

    In accordance with Federal civil rights law and U.S. Department of 
Agriculture (USDA) civil rights regulations and policies, the USDA, its 
Agencies, offices, and employees, and institutions participating in or 
administering USDA programs are prohibited from discriminating based on 
race, color, national origin, religion, sex, disability, age, marital 
status, family/parental status, income derived from a public assistance 
program, political beliefs, or reprisal or retaliation for prior civil 
rights activity, in any program or activity conducted or funded by USDA 
(not all bases apply to all programs). Remedies and complaint filing 
deadlines vary by program or incident.
    Persons with disabilities who require alternative means of 
communication for program information (e.g., Braille, large print, 
audiotape, American Sign Language, etc.) should contact the State or 
local Agency that administers the program or contact USDA through the 
Telecommunications Relay Service at 711 (voice and TTY). Additionally, 
program information may be made available in languages other than 
English.
    To file a program discrimination complaint, complete the USDA 
Program Discrimination Complaint Form, AD-3027, found online at <a href="https://www.usda.gov/about-usda/general-information/staff-offices/office-assistant-secretary-civil-rights/how-file-program-discrimination-complaint">https://www.usda.gov/about-usda/general-information/staff-offices/office-assistant-secretary-civil-rights/how-file-program-discrimination-complaint</a> and at any USDA office or write a letter addressed to USDA 
and provide in the letter all of the information requested in the form. 
To request a copy of the complaint form, call (866) 632-9992. Submit 
your completed form or letter to USDA by:
    (1) Mail: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Office of the Assistant 
Secretary for Civil Rights, 1400 Independence Avenue SW, Washington, DC 
20250-9410; or
    (2) Fax: (833) 256-1665 or (202) 690-7442; or
    (3) Email: <a href="/cdn-cgi/l/email-protection#eebe9c81899c8f83c0a7809a8f858bae9b9d8a8fc0898198"><span class="__cf_email__" data-cfemail="8adaf8e5edf8ebe7a4c3e4feebe1efcafff9eeeba4ede5fc">[email&#160;protected]</span></a>.
    USDA is an equal opportunity provider, employer, and lender.

George Kelly,
Administrator, Rural Housing Service.
[FR Doc. 2026-06951 Filed 4-9-26; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410-XV-P


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Indexed from Federal Register on April 10, 2026.

This is legal information, not legal advice. Laws vary by jurisdiction and change frequently. Always verify current law with official sources and consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction for advice on your specific situation.