Department of Housing and Urban 
April 27, 2023 
Development (HUD) FY2024 Budget Request: 
Alyse N. Minter 
Fact Sheet 
Research Librarian 
  
This report provides a brief overview of the President’s FY2024 budget request for the 
Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). It links to relevant Administration 
 
budget documents and Congressional Research Service (CRS) reports. 
 
Congressional Research Service 
 
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Contents 
Introduction ............................................................................................................................... 1 
Department of Housing and Urban Development ............................................................... 1 
President’s FY2024 HUD Budget Request ............................................................................... 1 
Gross Budget Authority ...................................................................................................... 1 
Net Budget Authority .......................................................................................................... 2 
Offsetting Receipts .............................................................................................................. 2 
Funding Increases ............................................................................................................... 3 
New Mandatory Funding .................................................................................................... 4 
Funding Reductions ............................................................................................................ 4 
 
Figures 
Figure 1. Total HUD Discretionary Funding With and Without Savings from Offsets and 
Other Sources: FY2023 Enacted and FY2024 Request ............................................................... 3 
  
Tables 
Table 1. FY2023 Enacted Funding and FY2024 Request: Select HUD Accounts .......................... 4 
  
Contacts 
Author Information .......................................................................................................................... 5 
 
Congressional Research Service 
 
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Introduction 
This report provides a brief overview of the President’s FY2024 budget request for the 
Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). It links to relevant Administration 
budget documents and Congressional Research Service (CRS) reports.  
This report will not be updated to track legislative action during the appropriations process. 
Department of Housing and Urban Development 
Most funding for HUD programs and activities comes from discretionary appropriations provided 
each year through annual appropriations acts. The House and the Senate appropriations 
committees’ Transportation, HUD, and Related Agencies subcommittees generally consider 
HUD’s annual appropriations along with those for the Department of Transportation and several 
related agencies (including the Neighborhood Reinvestment Corporation, also known as 
NeighborWorks America and the Interagency Council on Homelessness). 
  For more information about HUD’s programs and activities, see CRS Report 
RL34591, Overview of Federal Housing Assistance Programs and Policy, by 
Maggie McCarty, Libby Perl, and Katie Jones. 
President’s FY2024 HUD Budget Request 
On March 9, 2023, the Biden Administration submitted its FY2024 budget request to Congress. 
  For more information about HUD’s budget request, see FY2024 Budget 
Appendix-HUD. 
  For additional detail about funding levels for specific programs and activities, see 
HUD’s FY2024 Congressional Budget Justifications. 
  For a comparison of FY2024 requested funding levels and FY2023 enacted 
funding levels for selected HUD accounts, see Table 1. 
Gross Budget Authority 
The President’s FY2024 budget request proposes $73.3 billion in gross discretionary 
appropriations for HUD, which would be the amount of new funding, or budget authority, 
available for HUD programs and activities, not accounting for budgetary savings from offsets and 
other sources. This amount is about $1.1 billion (2%) more than the $72.2 billion in gross 
discretionary appropriations provided in the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023 (P.L. 117-
328) (Figure 1).1 
Several accounts are slated for funding increases in the President’s FY2024 budget. The largest 
relative increase is for the HOME Investment Partnerships program (+20%; +$300 million 
relative to FY2023), and the largest overall increase is for the tenant-based rental assistance 
account, which funds the Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher program (+$2.4 billion; +8% 
relative to FY2023). 
                                                 
1 The FY2023 enacted appropriations total includes $3.6 billion in disaster relief supplemental funding for Tenant-
based Rental Assistance (Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher) and Project-Based Rental Assistance (Section 8 Project-
Based Voucher), as provided by Division N of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023 (P.L. 117-328). It does not 
include $5 billion for disaster recovery through the Community Development Fund, as provided by Division N of the 
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023 (P.L. 117-328). 
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 link to page 6 HUD FY2024 Budget Request: Fact Sheet 
 
Net Budget Authority 
When looking at net discretionary budget authority—accounting for the effect of budgetary 
savings from offsetting collections and receipts, rescissions, and other sources and also excluding 
all emergency-designated spending—the President’s FY2024 budget request would provide a 
larger increase relative to FY2023 than the increase in gross budget authority. As shown in 
Figure 1, accounting for these savings, the President’s FY2024 budget requests $67.8 billion in 
net discretionary funding for HUD, an increase of about $9.6 billion (17%) compared to the net 
budget authority provided in FY2023.2 The gross budget authority generally best reflects the 
amount of new funding available for HUD’s programs and activities in a year, whereas net budget 
authority is important for budgetary scorekeeping and compliance with statutory spending 
limitations. 
Offsetting Receipts 
The net increase from FY2023 enacted to FY2024 requested amounts is larger than the gross 
increase, in part, because available offsets are estimated to be less in FY2024 than in FY2023. 
Specifically, there is an estimated $4.9 billion (47%) decrease in budget savings, from $10.4 
billion in FY2023 to $5.5 billion in FY2024.3 This decrease is largely attributable to projected 
declines in offsetting receipts from mortgages insured by the Federal Housing Administration 
(FHA) in FY2024 relative to FY2023. Please note that these estimates of offsetting collections 
and receipts for FY2024 will likely change when the Congressional Budget Office re-estimates 
the President’s budget for the purposes of the congressional appropriations process. 
  For more information about offsetting collections and receipts and other 
components of the HUD budget, see CRS Report R42542, Department of 
Housing and Urban Development (HUD): Funding Trends Since FY2002, by 
Maggie McCarty. 
  For more information about FHA and how it is accounted for in the budget, see 
CRS Report R42875, FHA Single-Family Mortgage Insurance: Financial Status 
of the Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund (MMI Fund), by Katie Jones. 
                                                 
2 CRS uses offsetting receipts as estimated by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) in calculating net budget 
authority. The FY2024 President’s budget documents use a different estimate for FY2023 offsetting receipts than the 
CBO estimate provided in the conference agreement for the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023. As a result, in 
calculating the difference in net budget authority, this fact sheet utilizes the FY2023 offsetting receipts and net budget 
authority amounts provided in the conference agreement for the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023. Because CBO 
has not yet released estimates for FY2024 offsetting receipts, this fact sheet uses the estimates in the President’s budget 
documents for FY2024.  
The FY2023 net budget authority excludes $3.6 billion in disaster relief supplemental funding for Tenant-Based Rental 
Assistance (Section 8 HCV) and Project-Based Rental Assistance (Section 8 PBV), as provided by Division N of the 
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023 (P.L. 117-328).  
3 This fact sheet uses the FY2023 CBO estimate of $10.4 billion in offsetting receipts provided in the conference 
agreement for the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023. The President’s budget reports $8.3 billion as the amount of 
offsetting receipts for FY2023.  
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HUD FY2024 Budget Request: Fact Sheet 
 
Figure 1. Total HUD Discretionary Funding With and Without Savings from Offsets 
and Other Sources: FY2023 Enacted and FY2024 Request 
  
Source: Chart prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS). FY2023 and FY2024 figures taken from 
FY2024 President’s budget documents, the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) 
Congressional Budget Justifications, and the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023 (P.L. 117-328). 
Funding Increases 
The majority of HUD programs are proposed for funding increases in the FY2024 request relative 
to FY2023 enacted appropriations. Those with the largest proposed dollar increases include the 
following: 
  Tenant-Based Rental Assistance (Section 8 Housing Choice Vouchers), 
proposed for a $2.5 billion (8%) increase, provides funds to private landlords on 
behalf of low-income households. Of this amount, $565 million is to fund new 
incremental vouchers. 
  Project-Based Rental Assistance (Project-Based Section 8), proposed for a 
$996 million (7%) increase, funds long-term rental assistance contracts with 
owners of project-based Section 8 properties. 
  Public Housing Fund, proposed for a $379 million (4%) increase, provides 
grants to public housing agencies to fund public housing costs.  
  HOME Investment Partnerships Program, proposed for a $300 million (20%) 
increase, provides formula grants to states and eligible localities for various 
affordable housing activities targeted to low-income households. This amount 
includes a $100 million set-aside for the FirstHOME down payment assistance 
initiative.  
  Salaries and Expenses, proposed for a $128 million (7%) increase, which funds 
HUD program administration and staffing. 
  Homeless Assistance Grants, proposed for a $116 million (3%) increase, 
provide funds to local communities for a variety of housing and related services 
for individuals and families experiencing or at risk of homelessness. 
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New Mandatory Funding 
In addition to discretionary funding requests, the President’s budget requests new mandatory 
appropriations to address affordable housing supply, expand access to homeownership and 
affordable rental housing, and improve eviction prevention policies. In FY2024, this includes $10 
billion for down payment assistance, $7.5 billion for public housing, $7.5 billion for project-
based rental assistance, $3 billion for eviction prevention, and $1.2 billion in grants to remove 
barriers to affordable housing. 
Funding Reductions 
A few HUD programs are slated for funding reductions in the FY2024 request relative to FY2023 
enacted appropriations. Programs that are proposed for reductions include the following: 
  Choice Neighborhoods grants, proposed for a $165 million (47%) reduction 
relative to FY2023, provide competitive grants to revitalize distressed public 
housing or other HUD assisted housing. 
  Housing for the Elderly, proposed for a $52 million (5%) reduction relative to 
FY2023, provides grants and project-based assistance to support the development 
of low-income housing for elderly households. 
  Housing for Persons with Disabilities, proposed for a $4 million (1%) reduction 
relative to FY2023, provides competitive grants to support the development of 
low-income housing for persons with disabilities and their families. 
Table 1. FY2023 Enacted Funding and FY2024 Request: Select HUD Accounts 
(in billions of dollars) 
% Change, 
FY2023-
FY2023 
FY2024 
FY2024 
Accounts 
Enacted  Request  Request 
Salaries and Expenses (Mgmt. & Adm.) 
1.738 
1.866 
7% 
Tenant-Based Rental Assistance (Section 8 Housing Choice Vouchers) 
30.254a 
32.703 
8% 
Public Housing Fund 
8.514 
8.893 
4% 
Choice Neighborhoods 
0.350 
0.185 
-47% 
Self Sufficiency Programs 
0.175 
0.175 
0% 
Native American Programs 
1.020 
1.053 
3% 
Native Hawaiian Block Grant 
0.022 
0.022 
0% 
Housing, Persons with AIDS (HOPWA) 
0.499 
0.505 
1% 
Community Development Fund (including CDBG)b 
6.397c 
3.415 
-47% 
HOME Investment Partnerships 
1.500 
1.800 
20% 
Self-Help Homeownership (SHOP) 
0.063 
0.060 
-5% 
Homeless Assistance Grants 
3.633 
3.749 
3% 
Project-Based Rental Assistance (Project-Based Section 8) 
14.908d 
15.904 
7% 
Housing for the Elderly 
1.075 
1.023 
-5% 
Housing for Persons with Disabilities 
0.360 
0.356 
-1% 
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HUD FY2024 Budget Request: Fact Sheet 
 
Housing Counseling Assistance 
0.058 
0.066 
14% 
Research and Technology 
0.145 
0.155 
7% 
Fair Housing Activities 
0.086 
0.090 
5% 
Lead Hazard Reduction 
0.410 
0.410 
0% 
Source: Table prepared by CRS. FY2023 and FY2024 figures taken from FY2024 President’s budget documents, 
HUD Congressional Budget Justifications, and the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023 (P.L. 117-328).  
a.  FY2023 Tenant-Based Rental Assistance appropriations include $2.7 bil ion in disaster relief supplemental 
funding provided in Division N of P.L. 117-328. 
b.  Community Development Block Grant. 
c.  FY2023 Community Development Fund appropriations include $2.98 bil ion in earmarks. It does not include 
$5 bil ion for disaster recovery provided in Division N of P.L. 117-328. 
d.  FY2023 Project-Based Rental Assistance appropriations include $969 mil ion in disaster relief supplemental 
funding provided in Division N of P.L. 117-328. 
 
Author Information 
 
Alyse N. Minter 
   
Research Librarian 
    
 
 
Disclaimer 
This document was prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS). CRS serves as nonpartisan 
shared staff to congressional committees and Members of Congress. It operates solely at the behest of and 
under the direction of Congress. Information in a CRS Report should not be relied upon for purposes other 
than public understanding of information that has been provided by CRS to Members of Congress in 
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Congressional Research Service  
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