HUD Extends HOTMA Compliance Deadline for CPD Programs to January 1, 2027
By A.J. Johnson
On December 30, 2025, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) published a Final Rule in the Federal Register, further extending the compliance deadline for implementing key provisions of the Housing Opportunity Through Modernization Act of 2016 (HOTMA) as they apply to Community Planning and Development (CPD) programs.
This action continues a pattern of delayed implementation and reflects HUD's ongoing operational and system-readiness challenges.
The Final Rule applies to the following CPD programs:
For all of these programs, mandatory compliance with the HOTMA final rule is now extended to January 1, 2027.
HUD originally published the HOTMA final rule on February 14, 2023, with an initial compliance date of January 1, 2024. Since then, HUD has issued multiple extensions, citing similar reasons each time.
In this latest rule, HUD explains that:
In short, the infrastructure still is not ready—and HUD is acknowledging that reality.
While full HOTMA compliance is delayed, the rule provides continued flexibility:
This "pick-and-choose" approach remains unusual from a regulatory perspective, but it is HUD's only practical option given uneven readiness across programs and jurisdictions.
HUD emphasizes that, even during the extension period:
In other words, this is not a regulatory "pause"—it is a delayed transition.
HUD has now extended HOTMA compliance for CPD programs multiple times, underscoring the agency's ongoing difficulty operationalizing its own regulations. While the extension provides welcome breathing room for grantees, it also prolongs uncertainty and heightens the risk of inconsistent implementation across jurisdictions.
Owners and administrators should use this period strategically: stabilize current compliance practices, monitor HUD guidance closely, and prepare for the now firm transition date of January 1, 2027.
When HOTMA finally arrives for CPD programs, it should arrive cleanly—because cleaning up a messy rollout later is far more expensive.
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