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The Continuum of Care (CoC) program, administered by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), is the largest federal grant specifically targeted to assistassisting people experiencing homelessness.
CoC funds are awarded through a competitive process announced in annual Notices of Funding Opportunity (NOFOs). The CoC NOFOs set priorities that, in part, determine which grantees receive funding.
The FY2024 appropriations law gave HUD the authority to issue a two-year NOFO for the CoC program in FY2024 and FY2025. HUD issued an FY2024-FY2025 NOFO on July 31, 2024, providing that applicants "are only required to submit one CoC application that will be applicable to the FY2024 and FY2025 funds. HUD reserves the right to award available FY2025 funds … based on this NOFO competition." The NOFO further provided that "HUD also reserves the right to modify this NOFO or issue a supplemental FY 2025 CoC and YHDP [Youth Homeless Demonstration Program] NOFO if necessary (e.g., to accommodate a new CoC or YHDP priority or new funding source)."by some that existing grantees could fail to qualify for continuing funding to maintain housing and services for their clients.
The FY2025 NOFO's release led to a series of actions:Lawsuits challenging the FY2025 NOFO were filed on November 25, 2025, and December 1, 2025. On December 8, 2025, prior to a hearing on the lawsuits19, the parties agreed to a joint schedule to resolve the issues.
In mid-December, HUD withdrew the FY2025 NOFO, stating, stating that it would "make appropriate revisions" and reissue "a modified NOFO well in advance of the deadline for obligation of available Fiscal Year 2025 funds." While HUD has until September 30, 2027, to obligate FY2025 funds, some current grants may end as soon as January 2026.
CoC grantees—nonprofit organizations, public housing authorities, governmental entities, and tribes—use CoC funding to provide housing and services for people experiencing homelessness. Listed belowBelow are eligible housing and services interventions and the share of FY2024 funding devoted to each.
CoCprogram grantees and other stakeholders in a geographic area establish planning bodies, also called Continuums of Care (CoCs), to set priorities and strategies to address homelessness in their communities. Together, they submit a unified application to HUD for CoC funding they submit a unified application to HUD for CoC funding through a designated Collaborative Applicant.
The FY2024 appropriations law gave HUD the authority to issue a two-year NOFO for the CoC program in FY2024 and FY2025. HUD issued an FY2024-FY2025 NOFO on July 31, 2024, which provided that "CoCs are only required to submit one CoC application that will be applicable to the FY2024 and FY2025 funds. HUD reserves the right to award available FY2025 funds … based on this NOFO competition."
However, FY2025 funds were not released pursuant to the FY2024-FY2025 NOFO, and instead HUD released the FY2025 NOFO on November 13, 2025.
The majority of CoC funds awarded in prior years have been used to renew grants; in FY2024, nearly 88% of funds went to renew existing grants (including Youth Homeless Demonstration ProgramYHDP grants), almost 4% to grants for new projects, and 5% to combined renewal/expansion projects.
Starting with the FY2012 NOFO, through FY2024, HUD divided the CoC competition into two funding tiers in order to prioritize renewal grant funding:
The statute governing the CoC program statute requires that certain selection criteria be contained in the NOFO. For example, the statute requires HUD toHUD must consider a CoC's previous performance in reducing homelessness. But HUD also sets priorities that are used to award points in the competition. in the grant competition.
FY2024-FY2025 NOFO priorities included using a housing first approach (offering housing without preconditions such as substance use treatment and resident choice of services), emphasizing system and program changes to address racial equity, and improving assistance to LGBTQ+ individuals.
The replacement FY2025 NOFO would have changed, if implemented, would change the tiered funding percentages, priorities, and scoringprocess and priorities compared to the FY2024-FY2025 NOFO. The FY2025 replacement NOFO proposes to do the following (the withdrawn FY2025 NOFO proposed these same changes):maintainNOFO (withdrawn as of the date of this Insight) would have done the following: