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HUD Rule Promotes Work Requirements for Public Housing

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Detected March 14th, 2026
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Summary

The Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) has proposed a rule to provide public housing authorities and Section 8 project-based rental assistance owners with flexibility to implement work requirements and time limits for work-capable adults. This initiative aims to encourage self-sufficiency and reduce long-term dependency on housing assistance.

What changed

HUD has proposed a new rule that would allow public housing authorities and owners of Section 8 project-based rental assistance to implement work requirements and time limits for adults capable of working. This proposed change aims to shift housing assistance from long-term dependency to a temporary support system that encourages self-sufficiency and upward mobility. The rule is presented as a correction to existing policies that are perceived to disincentivize work and contribute to long waiting lists for assistance.

Regulated entities, specifically public housing authorities and Section 8 project-based rental assistance owners, should review this proposed rule to understand the potential new flexibilities for implementing work requirements. While the document highlights the benefits and rationale, it does not specify a compliance deadline or direct actions for entities beyond reviewing the proposal. The associated Federal Register document (linked in the content) would contain the official comment period and further details on implementation timelines once finalized.

What to do next

  1. Review the proposed rule for potential implementation of work requirements and time limits.
  2. Monitor the Federal Register for the official publication and comment period of the proposed rule.

Source document (simplified)


1. News
2. ICYMI | Secretary Turner & Governor Sanders in Fox Digital: 'Why HUD’s proposed rule is a springboard to the American Dream'

ICYMI | Secretary Turner & Governor Sanders in Fox Digital: “Why HUD’s proposed rule is a springboard to the American Dream”

WASHINGTON, DC - Secretary Scott Turner and Governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders penned an opinion piece in Fox Digital highlighting HUD’s proposed rule giving public housing authorities and Section 8 project-based rental assistance owners flexibility to implement work requirements and time limits for work-capable adults – helping restore dignity, promote well-being, and open pathways to self-sufficiency.

“Public housing was never meant to be a hammock, but a springboard to a life of self-sufficiency…By restoring federal rental assistance to its intended role as temporary support, we can help more American families build brighter lives and better futures,” wrote Secretary Turner and Governor Sanders.

Read more in Fox Digital here and below:

Public Housing and Section 8 rental assistance in America were created to provide a temporary helping hand to families during times of hardship, not to trap them in long-term dependency. Yet almost half of non-elderly, able-bodied households getting support from the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) didn’t have a single person working in 2024. It’s time for a change.

We got here because well-intentioned federal policies drifted away from their original purpose, leaving many people stuck in subsidized housing for years, sometimes decades, while millions of families sit on waiting lists with no help at all.

HUD’s proposed rule aims to correct that drift by restoring a simple, commonsense principle: HUD housing assistance should encourage work, self-sufficiency, and upward mobility while keeping a strong safety net for the elderly and disabled. Under the Trump administration’s proposed regulation, no longer would able-bodied, able-minded individuals be allowed to waste away on welfare with no hope or dignity.

Arkansas became the first state in the nation to bring work requirements to the forefront in state law after I, Governor Sanders, signed the Housing Welfare Reform Act of 2023 into law. This commonsense law ensures that an individual who is able to work is required to work, train, or volunteer if they’re living on the taxpayers’ dime. Public housing authorities, however, have not been permitted to require work or limit time under current rules. Without HUD’s proposed rule, Arkansas is unable to enforce the law on the books.

Public housing was never meant to be a hammock, but a springboard to a life of self-sufficiency. Federal housing assistance, as currently structured, disincentivizes work and leads to a long national waitlist for housing assistance for those who need a hand up.

Capable adults receiving assistance are staying longer and longer on welfare. Recent evidence presented to Congress shows that nearly 90% of able-bodied Section 8 voucher recipients will spend more than five years in subsidized housing, and half will spend more than 15 years. It is not uncommon for multiple generations of a family to live in subsidized housing over decades. We must break this hopeless cycle.

There is extensive real-world evidence supporting work requirements and/or time limits on public housing benefits. Across the country, nearly 40 Moving to Work housing agencies have tested work requirements or time limits, showing America that these programs can change lives.

This proposal would finally allow Arkansas to empower all public housing agencies and Section 8 residents in the state to move towards self-sufficiency, as the law intends.

Arkansas will set the example for more states to follow because the Trump administration is empowering state and local leaders who best understand their residents and communities to decide whether and how to implement these policies, within clear regulatory bounds. No longer will there be a one-size-fits-all mandate from Washington.

HUD estimates that under our proposal, between 19,000 and 79,000 families nationally will move out of subsidized housing in the first year, opening doors for new families in need. This is a win-win situation. The families leaving assistance will earn more, contribute more to their own rent and stand on firmer financial ground, while the families finally getting assistance will receive the help they’ve been waiting on for years.

Most importantly, this is about dignity. Work is a pathway to meaning, independence, and stability. Study after study shows that prolonged unemployment erodes well-being, worsens health, decreases life expectancy and harms children’s prospects. By contrast, when adults work, families are healthier, communities are stronger, and futures are brighter. A rising tide lifts all boats.

We believe in the potential of our fellow Americans. By restoring federal rental assistance to its intended role as temporary support, we can help more American families build brighter lives and better futures.

Follow @SecretaryTurner on X , FB , and Instagram .

Follow @HUDgov on X , FB , and Instagram.

HUD.gov

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
Various Federal Agencies
Instrument
Rule
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Draft
Change scope
Substantive

Who this affects

Applies to
Employers Healthcare providers
Geographic scope
National (US)

Taxonomy

Primary area
Housing
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Employment & Labor Consumer Protection

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