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HUD Awards More Than $40M In Housing Counseling Grants

The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) on Tuesday announced that it is making $40.25 million available to support housing counseling services for homeowners, homebuyers and renters. Such funding will also directly support the work of housing counseling offering required Home Equity Conversion Mortgage (HECM) sessions.

The new funding

“Through the 2023 Office of Housing Counseling Comprehensive Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO), HUD plans to award grants to more than 150 housing counseling agencies and intermediary organizations,” HUD said in an announcement of the NOFO. “These funds will equip individuals and families with the education and resources to make informed decisions regarding their housing needs.”

Julia Gordon. “Housing counseling continues to play a vital role in helping homebuyers, homeowners, and renters access and sustain suitable housing, particularly as housing instability and costs are on the rise.”

Notable increase from mid-2022

The NOFO amount of over $40 million reverses course on what had been falling disbursements for housing counseling. In mid-2023, HUD issued a NOFO of just over $14 million for housing counseling, a new low when compared to recent years.

HUD awarded over $41 million in counseling grants to agencies across the country in mid-2022. That round of funding included a specific provision to use a portion of the funds to train new HECM counselors.

HUD awarded $51.4 million in grants to 177 HUD-approved counseling agencies in early 2022, designed to support vulnerable communities, communities of color and those negatively impacted by COVID-19.

A similar amount was also disbursed to agencies in the fall of 2021, an increase from the $40 million in counseling grants to agencies issued in mid-2020. Another $43 million in housing counseling grants were issued to agencies twice in 2019, in June and October.

Meeting the needs of reverse counseling

The new figure is roughly in line with the $41 million issued in 2022, according to Jackie Boies, senior director of partner relations at Money Management International (MMI).

“At MMI we couldn’t be more pleased to see this long-awaited NOFO released,” Boies told RMD. “We look forward to submitting our application in support of obtaining maximum funding.  Our agency has grown this year through a merger and the creation of an affiliate network of housing counseling providers, positioning us to better support the housing and HECM counseling needs of consumers.”

GreenPath Financial Wellness added that while reverse counseling demand fell in 2023, the new funding will allow them to meet new demand if/when the time comes according to Jennifer Fraser, director of stakeholder engagement and contact center operations at GreenPath.

“As a national intermediary, GreenPath is always working to make the best use of grant funds to support the needs of as many clients as possible,” Fraser said. ” “While the call for reverse mortgage has dipped in 2023, as the environment becomes more favorable in 2024, these grant funds will help enable us to service that growth as it comes.”

Reverse mortgage counseling demand, adding more HECM counselors

Boies added that demand for HECM sessions has stayed elevated.

“Specific to seniors, the demand for reverse mortgage counseling remains high,” she said. “The vast majority of seniors indicate they want to utilize a reverse mortgage loan to cover the costs of aging in place—which might mean supporting their monthly income or funding home improvements and repairs. To best support the counseling needs of seniors, MMI utilizes HUD funding to offset the cost of reverse mortgage counseling.”

bolster its ranks of certified counselors, which would directly impact reverse mortgage counseling.

While HUD’s Office of Housing Counseling serves an estimated 1.2 million prospective mortgage borrowers every year, the office’s goal is to increase that to 3 million households a year, he said in October.

That goal would include “substantial growth in the reverse mortgage space,” he said.

“Respectfully many consumers who are benefiting from the reverse mortgage program can afford a reasonable fee for service moving forward,” he explained at the event.

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