The Spring Street Brief
HUD has released its Fiscal Year 2026 Continuum of Care Notice of Funding Opportunity — $4.04 billion in federal homelessness assistance structured around a fundamental policy shift away from housing-first and toward recovery, self-sufficiency, and competitive performance accountability. For developers, syndicators, and lenders with exposure to supportive housing, the implications for operating subsidy assumptions are immediate. Key Takeaways: * HUD's FY2026 CoC NOFO releases $4.04 billion — described by HUD as a record funding level for the program. * $1.3 billion is specifically reserved for new projects, with explicit priority given to Transitional Housing and Supportive Services over permanent supportive housing. * Automatic renewal of CoC grants is eliminated; CoC recipients must now competitively scrutinize and prioritize projects based on performance outcomes. * HUD is conditioning funding on prohibiting facilitation of illicit drug use, directly targeting harm-reduction models that have operated within CoC-funded programs. * HUD is actively encouraging new applicants, signaling that incumbent grantees no longer hold a structural funding advantage. * Deals carrying CoC-dependent operating revenue — particularly those built on housing-first frameworks — face genuine renewal risk under the new NOFO structure. * State QAP scoring of supportive housing and lender underwriting of CoC grant revenue may need to be reassessed as the federal program's priorities realign. This NOFO represents the most significant structural overhaul of the CoC program in its history. For the affordable housing finance community, the shift isn't just ideological — it changes the risk profile of supportive housing deals that depend on CoC operating subsidies. Developers, syndicators, and lenders should review existing and pipeline deals for CoC revenue exposure, and state HFAs should expect pressure to realign supportive housing priorities in upcoming QAP cycles. The $1.3 billion in new project funding is a real opportunity, but only for organizations positioned to compete under the new performance and programmatic framework. Subscribe to The Spring Street Brief for daily updates on affordable housing in America.
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