FHFA Controls Need Improvement, GAO Audit Finds
Summary
GAO completed its fiscal year 2025 audit of the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) and identified a significant deficiency in FHFA's internal controls over financial reporting, specifically regarding the review of financial statements for conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles. The deficiency arose from FHFA's major workforce reductions during FY 2025, during which it initially failed to determine that related costs, such as voluntary separation incentive payments, should be reported separately. GAO issued one recommendation to update FHFA's financial statement review procedures to include guidance for considering the effect of significant changes in transactions on financial statement presentation. FHFA disagreed with the finding but GAO maintains the recommendation would reduce the risk of misstatement. FHFA completed corrective actions for seven of nine open prior recommendations.
Federal agencies that undergo significant workforce restructuring should review their financial statement review procedures to ensure guidance explicitly requires staff to evaluate whether separation-related costs and other restructuring expenses require separate presentation or different classification under GAAP.
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What changed
GAO's fiscal year 2025 audit of FHFA identified a new significant deficiency in FHFA's internal control over financial reporting related to its review of financial statements for GAAP conformity. The deficiency stems from FHFA's failure to initially determine that costs associated with major FY 2025 workforce reductions, including voluntary separation incentive payments, should be reported separately. GAO recommends FHFA update its financial statement review procedures to include specific guidance requiring financial reporting personnel to consider the potential effect of significant changes in the magnitude or types of transactions on financial statement presentation. FHFA disagreed with this assessment. FHFA resolved a prior significant deficiency related to accounts payable accruals and completed corrective actions on seven of nine open prior recommendations.
Agencies and regulated entities subject to similar financial reporting requirements should note that workforce restructuring events can create presentation risks in financial statements if procedures do not specifically require staff to evaluate how significant operational changes affect transaction classification and disclosure.
Archived snapshot
Apr 23, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
GAO-26-108895 Published: Apr 23, 2026. Publicly Released: Apr 23, 2026.
Fast Facts
Each year, we audit the Federal Housing Finance Agency's financial statements.
During our 2025 audit, we found a problem with FHFA's controls that could lead to the financial statements not conforming to federal accounting standards.
Specifically, FHFA had major workforce reductions during FY 2025. We found that it didn't initially determine that related costs—such as voluntary separation incentive payments—should be reported separately.
Better guidance can help ensure that FHFA's financial statements are accurate and reported as required. Our recommendation addresses this issue.
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Highlights
What GAO Found
During GAO’s audits of the Federal Housing Finance Agency’s (FHFA) fiscal year 2025 financial statements, GAO identified a deficiency in FHFA’s controls over its review of its financial statements for conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles that represents a new significant deficiency in FHFA’s internal control over financial reporting. GAO also found that FHFA completed corrective actions to address seven of the nine recommendations from prior reports that remained open as of September 30, 2024. In conjunction with the recommendations it addressed, FHFA resolved the significant deficiency in controls over its review of accounts payable accruals that GAO reported as a result of its 2024 audits.
Why GAO Did This Study
In January 2026, GAO reported on the results of its audits of FHFA’s fiscal year 2025 financial statements and the deficiency in FHFA’s internal controls. This report presents (1) the deficiency GAO identified during its fiscal year 2025 audit, along with the related recommendation to address this deficiency, and (2) the status of FHFA’s corrective actions to address recommendations related to internal control over financial reporting deficiencies identified in prior reports that remained open as of September 30, 2024. As part of its fiscal year 2025 audits, GAO reviewed FHFA policies and procedures; interviewed FHFA management and staff; observed controls in operation; and tested controls to determine whether FHFA effectively designed, implemented, and operated these controls. GAO also followed up on the status of FHFA’s corrective actions to address open recommendations related to internal control over financial reporting deficiencies that GAO identified in prior reports.
Recommendations
GAO is making one recommendation. Specifically, GAO recommends that FHFA update its financial statement review procedures to include guidance to consider the potential effect of significant changes in transactions on the presentation of FHFA’s financial statements. FHFA disagreed that there is a deficiency that requires revision to existing procedures. As discussed in the report, GAO maintains that its recommendation would reduce FHFA’s risk of misstating its financial statements.
Recommendations for Executive Action
| Agency Affected | Recommendation | Status |
|---|---|---|
| Federal Housing Finance Agency | The Director of FHFA should update FHFA's financial statement review procedures to include specific guidance for financial reporting personnel to consider the potential effect of significant changes in the magnitude or types of transactions on the presentation of information in FHFA's financial statements. (Recommendation 1) | Open When we confirm what actions the agency has taken in response to this recommendation, we will provide updated information. |
Full Report
GAO Contacts
Anne Sit-Williams Director Financial Management and Assurance sitwilliamsa@gao.gov
Media Inquiries
Sarah Kaczmarek Managing Director Office of Public Affairs media@gao.gov
Public Inquiries
Topics
Auditing and Financial Management Financial statements Internal controls Accounting standards Financial reporting Federal housing Accounts payable Policies and procedures Voluntary early retirement Personnel records Housing finance
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