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FHA Seeks Public Comment Regarding Minimum Property Requirements

HUDSHARM

Freshman Member
Joined
May 29, 2026
Professional Status
General Public
State
Texas
FHA Seeks Public Comment Regarding Modernizing Its Single Family
Housing Minimum Property Requirements

Today, the Federal Housing Administration (FHA), published a Request for Information (RFI) Regarding Single Family Minimum Property Requirements (MPR) (Docket No. FR-6609-N-01) in the Federal Register for public comment.

FHA’s Minimum Property Requirements (MPR) have long supported the safety and soundness of the single family homes the agency insures. However, these standards have not undergone a comprehensive update in over two decades and no longer reflect current industry practices. FHA MPRs are dated, creating unnecessary burdens that increase housing costs, discourage industry participation, limit access to FHA financing — particularly for first time and low- to moderate-income American homebuyers — and outweigh the benefits they provide.

To rectify this — and in line with the administration’s overall efforts to reduce burdensome regulations and minimize undue costs — FHA has issued today’s RFI seeking stakeholder comment on ways in which to modernize and streamline program requirements. This feedback will guide efforts to ultimately align the agency’s MPR standards with today’s industry practices.

While FHA is interested in hearing all perspectives, it is particularly interested in receiving input on the following topics:

  • What are the advantages and/or disadvantages of FHA’s current MPRs?
  • How could FHA streamline and/or simplify its MPR policies?
  • Are there important factors FHA should consider when modernizing MPR policies?
  • What specific FHA MPRs are no longer applicable or necessary?
  • Do current FHA MPRs adequately protect borrowers utilizing FHA-insured single family mortgage programs to finance a home?
  • Are MPRs clearly communicated in FHA policies?
  • Is the FHA-approved appraiser’s scope of work to identify MPR deficiencies aligned with modern appraisal practices?

Interested stakeholders are encouraged to review and provide comments following the methods outlined in the RFI (Docket No. FR-6609-N-01) through June 29, 2026.

https://appraisersblogs.com/systemic-failures-in-FHA-appraisal-n-loan-review/#google_vignette
 
While the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) seeks to streamline and modernize its Minimum Property Requirements (MPR) to reduce regulatory burdens, any modernization efforts must aggressively address the catastrophic loophole where lax reporting, broken appraisal management company (AMC) oversight, and deficient loan review tiers completely strip away borrower protections.
What is the point of requiring MPRs if they are not enforced? Unenforced MPRs create a dangerous, false sense of security for consumers who trust that an FHA-insured property is safe, sound, and secure. When the system fails to enforce these baselines, MPRs cease to be a protective shield and instead become a bureaucratic facade. This facade greenlights defective homes for closing while actively concealing hazards from the very buyers the program is designed to protect.
As demonstrated by the public case study “Systemic Failures in FHA Appraisal and Loan Review” (published May 2026 on AppraisersBlogs),
Systemic Failures in FHA Appraisal and Loan Review - Appraisers Blogs
the greatest threat to first-time and low-to-moderate-income homebuyers is not the stringency of MPR standards themselves, but the total collapse of the upstream enforcement and validation mechanisms. When basic eligibility factors—such as private well and septic separation distances—are misreported or ignored, it bypasses the entire FHA safety net. This leads directly to unhabitable housing, consumer financial distress, and avoidable foreclosures. Modernization must balance administrative simplicity with rigid enforcement accountability.
II. The Blind Spot: Lender and AMC Coercion of Appraisers
Cont. Attached.


https://www.regulations.gov/document/HUD-2026-0727-0001
 

Attachments

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Maybe, someone in the G'ment is seeing the light. AMC's, Sleazy MTG. brokers and Realtors will do ANYTHING to make the Quota, Make the deal work. Collect the $$$$.
It's human nature if you don't care about the 1st timer or desperate buyer that needs a house. Make the AMC, Lender. Broker Happy at all cost, or be gone from there radar.
I don't care what the issues are, I see what I see, report what I saw and let the AMC or Lender attempt to make the bad go away.
 
Go back to the rotating panel system that HUD had prior to 1994 so they buyer at least has a chance to get an honest appraiser. Keep the eligible appraisers local so the broker can't bring in a ringer from out of state.
 
Taken from above;
When basic eligibility factors—such as private well and septic separation distances—are misreported or ignored, it bypasses the entire FHA safety net. This leads directly to unhabitable housing, consumer financial distress, and avoidable foreclosures. Modernization must balance administrative simplicity with rigid enforcement accountability.
II. The Blind Spot: Lender and AMC Coercion of Appraisers

Further supports OSU rotation methodology, to support modernization of proven factors.
 
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