HOTMA Compliance Changelog
As the regulations surrounding HOTMA come into better focus, NCHM is committed to ensuring that our training materials are as up-to-date as possible. Below you will find a thorough changelog that tracks all adjustments made to our course materials as guidance comes from HUD.
Last Updated: December 9, 2024
HOTMA Compliance Presentation Adjustments Summary
This is a summary of what has changed recently to the HOTMA Compliance presentation.
December 9, 2024 (See Detailed Changelog)
- Adjusted forty slides
- Added seven new slides
- Adjustments for clarity
October 9, 2024 (See Detailed Changelog)
- Adjusted twelve slides
- Revised and shortened slides (12-15) to reflect new HUD compliance dates
- Adjustments for clarity
September 17, 2024 (See Detailed Changelog)
- Adjusted two slides
- Added three new slides (Slides 75-77) to explain new asset disposal rules
August 16, 2024 (See Detailed Changelog)
- Consolidated all types of excluded assistance into one chart
- Edited and added new bullet points regarding the use of 2024 values
- New slides added (Slide 64 and Slide 85)
- Consolidated four slides into two slides (Slides 64-69)
- Adjustments for clarity
- Minor changes on twenty-one slides (more information found in the Detailed Changelog below)
May 22, 2024 (See Detailed Changelog)
- Adjustments for clarity
- Minor changes on twelve slides (more information found in the Detailed Changelog below)
March 4, 2024 (See Detailed Changelog)
- Incorporated guidance from HUD on TSP and EIV Deadline change
- Adjustments for clarity
- Minor changes on four slides (more information found in the Detailed Changelog below)
February 7, 2024 (See Detailed Changelog)
- Incorporated guidance from HUD on Asset Limitations and other topics
- Swapped positions of multiple slides
- Adjustments made for clarity
- Removal of five slides
- Addition of four slides
- Clarifications and minor changes on twenty-two slides (more information found in the Detailed Changelog below)
January 29, 2024 (See Detailed Changelog)
- Swapped positions of multiple slides
- Adjustments made for clarity
- Removal of one slide
- Addition of one slide (Interim Recertification Decision Tree)
- Minor clarifications on sixteen slides (more information found in the Detailed Changelog below)
November 15, 2023 (See Detailed Changelog)
- Swapped positions of multiple slides
- Adjustments made for clarity
- Minor clarifications on six slides (more information found in the Detailed Changelog below)
October 17, 2023 (See Detailed Changelog)
- The cash value of a checking account is now its current balance; obtain a minimum of one statement that reflects the current balance of banking/financial accounts.
- O/As and PHAs may choose not to allow self-certification, at their discretion (and this must be part of your policies and procedures).
- O/As and PHAs are allowed far more discretion in processing certifications
- A site’s EIV Policies and Procedures ultimately outline how and when each EIV Report will be used.
- Various formatting improvements
October 2, 2023 (Detailed Changelog Coming Soon)
- The IRS plans to follow HOTMA guidance when it comes to income and asset determination, though LIHTC programs will not be subject to the asset limitations under Section 104.
- MFH programs will be required to be “as compliant as possible” until their software is ready for HOTMA changes. Full compliance is required by no later than January 1, 2025.
- PIH programs have been told to bring their programs into compliance as quickly as possible, but no later than January 1, 2025.
- The Passbook Rate will be 0.40% in 2024.
- Workers’ compensation is only counted when it will be received in regular intervals, and for a period of one year or longer.
- Count only excess student financial assistance when the excess comes from sources other than those covered by the HEA or the Bureau of Indian Education. Certain Section 8 households will follow the pre-HOTMA guidance.
- Asset limitations – including the $100,000 asset cap and the restriction on real property suitable for occupancy – apply to Section 8, including 202/8, as well as PHA programs and HCV programs.
- Trusts will only be counted as assets when they are under the control of any household member.
- Certain payments that end up in assets that are counted on the certification must be deducted from the cash value of the asset – though asset income is still calculated based upon the actual value of the asset.
- HUD has issued further guidance on how to use the “prior year’s income” for recertification purposes.
- Some household changes will be recorded using a “Non-Interim Transaction” instead of an Interim Reexamination.
- Sites are not required to use the Income Discrepancy Tool and the Income Validation Tool until HUD updates EIV’s logic.
- Fosters are not counted as family members (do not count their income or assets), but they are counted as household members (count them when determining unit size).
September 13, 2023 (See Detailed Changelog)
- PIH programs have been told to bring their programs into compliance as quickly as possible, but no later than January 1, 2025.
- Fosters are not counted as family members; exclude their income and assets. Fosters are only considered for unit size and utility allowances.
- In-kind donations are only excluded when they come from food banks and other similar organizations.
- Workers compensation is always excluded from income.
- The final rule states that student financial assistance does not include gifts from family or friends
- The asset restrictions – including the $100,000 asset cap and the restriction on real property suitable for occupancy – only apply to Section 8 PBRA, PHA programs, and HCV programs.
HOTMA Compliance Changelogs
Below, you will find all the changelogs for the HOTMA Compliance course. Please click the icon on the changelog entry to expand to see the complete details.
Please note that updated Course Presentation PDFs are not available on this page, but instead will be emailed directly to each participant as changes are made.
December 9, 2024 Changelog (Click To Expand)
Impacts: Original Printing to 12/12/24
Sessions: August 2023 through December 2024
Slide 6
Added sentence: “Rural Housing Services will also delay compliance until July 1, 2025.”
Slide 12
Revised final bullet to: “HUD MFH has confirmed that it will not issue non-compliance findings based on HOTMA-related changes for any certifications effective before the July 1, 2025 deadline.
Slide 13
Moved RHS deadline to July 1, 2025 column
Slide 25
Added “are excluded” at the end of the statement in the righthand box.
Slide 30
Removed grid for clarity.
Slide 34
Removed extraneous text in righthand box for clarity. Removed second-to-last bullet and consolidated previous bullet for clarity.
Slide 35
Changed “one” to “a”.
Slide 52
Changed “2024” to “2025”
Slide 53
Changed third bullet to “In 2025, this is set at 0.45%.” Changed fourth bullet, changed “implement” to “use”. Added fifth bullet: “MFH sites may only use the new rate if they have implemented HOTMA using the rent override feature.”
Slide 54
Changed “$50,000” to “$51,600”
Slide 55
Changed “$50,000” to “$51,600”. Adjusted AR effective dates on chart so they begin with the year 2025.
Slide 56
Changed “$50,000” to “$51,600”
Slide 57
Adjusted page numbers cited to “62-63”. “$50,000” to “$51,600”.
Slide 59
Tightened language in boxes
Slide 60
Removed boxes
Slide 61
Changed “$50,000” to “$51,600”
Slide 62
Changed “$50,000” to “$51,600”. Underlined “separately”. Shifted final bullet.
Slide 63
Changed “$50,000” to “$51,600”
Slide 64
Changed “$50,000” to “$51,600”. Adjusted example to maintain consistency with new asset threshold.
Slide 65
Changed “$50,000” to “$51,600”
Slide 66
Changed “$50,000” to “$51,600”
Slide 76
Changed “$100,000” to “$103,200”
Slide 80
Added “Restore-Rebuild” next to RAD [this is the new program name].
Slide 84
Changed “$100,000” to “$103,200”
Slide 87
Restructured slide; the chart will now assist those reading the Implementation Guidance in substituting the 2024 numbers in the notice with the new 2025 numbers.
Slide 101
Updated “2024” to “2025” where applicable
Slide 102
Updated “2024” to “2025” where applicable
Slide 104
Updated the note: “NOTE: Deduction values were not adjusted from 2024 to 2025”.
Slide 108
Third bullet – replaced “definitions of income” with “methods of income calculation”
Slide 110
Changed first bullet under step 2 to “If the site had executed an IR certification, use the annual income from that certification, unless there have been additional changes.”
Slide 111
Reformatted text for clarity.
Slide 116
Changed “site’s” to “10%” in two instances for clarity
Slide 117
Restructured first sentence to “Following HUD’s new IR guidance is all about determining whether income has increased by 10% or more.”
Slide 118
Rearranged the order in which sentences appear.
Slide 119
Added “Sites may use any percentage up to 10%” under second bullet
Slide 127
Changed bullet three to “The impacts HOTMA has on EIV”. Changed “residents” to “applicants” in final bullet
Slide 129 (New Slide)
TRACS 203A
Slides 131 and 132 (Old Slides 130 & 131)
Switched places
Slide 133 (Old Slide 132)
Revised header to “The 9887, 9887A, and 9886 forms have all changed.”
Slide 134 (New Slide)
Tenant certification forms – 50059
Slide 135 (New Slide)
Tenant certification forms – 50058
Slide 136 (New Slide)
Tenant certification forms – TIC
Slide 137 (New Slide)
Race/ethnic reporting form
Slide 138 (New Slide)
Leases
Slide 139 (New Slide)
Other updated forms
Slide 153 (Old Slide 146)
Adjusted AR/interview dates to fit better with new compliance date
October 9, 2024 Changelog (Click To Expand)
Impacts: Original Printing to 10/9/24
Sessions: August 2023 through October 2024
Slide 6
Added final bullet point: “HUD delayed full compliance until July 1, 2025, for HUD Multifamily Programs and issued an indefinite delay for HUD Public and Indian Housing Programs.”
Slide 10
Added “In this class, we will cover:” to the top of the slide.
Slides 12-15
Removed to reflect HUD’s updated compliance dates. The new slides appear from 12-13.
Slide 13 (Old Slide 15)
Changed “webinar” to “course”
Slide 52 (Old Slide 50)
Tightened language on the first sentence; now says, “Once HOTMA’s income and asset provisions are in effect, sites must be vigilant about how the annual inflationary adjustment will impact eligibility and calculations when it comes to assets.”
Slide 53 (Old Slide 51)
Tightened language on final bullet: “PHAs are granted continued flexibility in choosing whether to implement the updated figure immediately or to continue to use their previous rate until they implement HOTMA.”
Slide 55 (Old Slide 53)
Removed the second bullet (unnecessary). Added “subsidized” before “…sites must still third-party verify…”
Slide 58 (Old Slide 56)
Tightened language on first bullet; added “Most” in front of “…handbooks…”
Slide 67 (Old Slide 69)
Removed unnecessary “…under Section 5.603b”
Slide 78 (Old Slide 80)
Removed redundant final statement
Slide 101 (Old Slide 103)
Changed AR dates in the example to align with new HOTMA implementation dates.
Slide 102 (Old Slide 104)
Added “HOTMA-compliant” before “…reexamination…” to the first bullet for clarity. Changed the beginning of bullet three to “One year after that…” at the beginning for clarity.
September 17, 2024 Changelog (Click To Expand)
Impacts: Original Printing to 9/17/24
Sessions: August 2023 through September 2024
Slide 64
Added asterisk after “$50,000”
Slides 75-77
Added three new slides to explain new asset disposal rules
Slide 103 (Old Slide 100)
Changed “September” to “December” in fifth bullet.
August 16, 2024 Changelog (Click To Expand)
Impacts: Original Printing to 8/16/24
Sessions: August 2023 through August 2024
Slide 2
Removed “has been updated to reflect” from the first sentence.
Slide 10
Changed “three” to “several.”
Slide 12
Changed “will reflect” to “reflects.”
Slide 15
Changed “must update” to “were required to update.”
Slide 29
Removed “in intervals of $25” from the first bullet. (Not a rule change.)
Slide 30
Removed “, and will change in intervals of $25”. (Not a rule change.)
Slide 33
Italicized “in addition to” in the first bullet.
Slide 36
Added “and Federal Register entries” after “CFR.”
Slide 39
- Removed “or the Bureau of Indian Education” from item a. (Repetitive; BIE sources are part of the HEA.)
- Added “student” before “financial assistance” for clarity in item b.
- Removed “or the Bureau of Indian Education” from the third bullet point. (Repetitive; BIE sources are part of the HEA.)
Slide 40
- Consolidated all types of excluded assistance into one chart.
- Redesigned the slide.
Slide 41
Bolded “will” for emphasis.
Slide 49
- Removed two bullet points.
- Added new bullet point: “This exception may change with future years’ appropriations.”
Slide 54
Edited the second bullet point and added a new one to confirm: “We will use the 2024 values in our classwork.”
Slide 55
- Added an asterisk to the third bullet point.
- Substituted “the updated” for “0.40%” for clarity.
Slide 56
Added an asterisk to the third bullet point.
Slide 58
Reorganized the slide so that the real property discussion appears second.
Slide 64
Inserted a new slide.
Slides 64-69
Reformatted tables and used new examples. Consolidated four slides into two.
Slide 73 (Old Slide 75)
Changed the first bullet to “Household E…” for consistency.
Slide 75 (Old Slide 78)
Added “; or” to the third bullet for consistency. Removed “.620 or 24 CFR Part 982”. (Not a rule change.)
Slide 77 (Old Slide 79)
Changed “required” to “qualified for” in the third bullet for clarity.
Slide 82 (Old Slide 84)
Added an asterisk after “$100,000” (previously omitted).
Slide 85
Inserted a new slide.
Slide 93
Added: “The definition of ‘elderly/disabled’ family is unchanged.”
Slide 102 (Old Slide 103)
Added final note: “NOTE: Deduction values will not be adjusted in 2025.”
Slide 112 (Old Slide 113)
- Revised the third bullet to: “PHAs and O/As must run the EIV Income Report 120 days after admission.”
- Added a period to the final bullet.
Slide 119 (Old Slide 120)
Changed “increase” to “change” in the fifth bullet.
Slide 129 (Old Slide 130)
Changed “next” to “first HOTMA-compliant” in the second bullet.
May 22, 2024 Changelog (Click To Expand)
Impacts: Original Printing to 5/13/24
Sessions: August 2023 through May 2024
Slide 10
Changed “three” to “several”
Slide 11
Changed “will reflect” to “reflects” in bullet one
Slide 15
Changed “must” to “were required to” in bullet one
Slide 36
Added “and Federal Register entries” after “CFR”
Slide 58
Added “in cash value” after bullet four
Slide 68
Reclassified the land as “real property” (typo)
Slide 73
Substituted Table F2 for text
Slide 75
Adjusted values of example numbers by a factor of 10
Slide 77
Simplified CFR reference
Slide 94
- Added “the definition of elderly/disabled family is unchanged.”
- Fixed subsequent sentence structure
Slide 120
Changed “increase” to “change” in bullet five
Slide 130
Changed “next” to “first HOTMA-compliant” in bullet two
March 4, 2024 Changelog (Click To Expand)
Impacts: Original Printing to 3/7/24
Sessions: August 2023 through March 2024
Slide 15
First bullet – changed “March 31, 2024” to “May 31, 2024”
Slide 31
Fourth bullet – removed “not”
Slide 123
First bullet – removed “be”
Slide 128
Final bullet – changed “tenancy” to “assistance”
February 7, 2024 Changelog (Click To Expand)
Impacts: Original Printing to 2/8/24
Sessions: August through February
Slides 2
Added to the header “and revised on February 2, 2024.”
Bullet 1 – Changed “are” to “may be”
Slide 6
Added final bullet: “The Implementation Guidance was revised on February 2, 2024.”
Slide 9
Added final statement: “Sites operating under these programs should anticipate further guidance directly from the program’s regulatory body.”
Slide 13
Changed page numbers to 8-9
Slide 23
Removed bullet 5 (it has its own slides now)
Slide 27
Bullet 2 – Changed to “The exclusion extends to workers’ compensation payments, regardless of the frequency or length of the payments.”
Slides 31-32
NEW SLIDES
Previous Slide 34 / New Slide 36
Changed page numbers to 83-85
Previous Slide 47 / New Slide 49
Modified middle section to consolidate two bullet points: “If the student is the head of household, co-head, or spouse and is 23 or younger or does not have dependent children, then 479B assistance will be part of the total equation.”
Second-to-last bullet – Added “Again” to beginning of sentence
Slide 50
NEW SLIDE
Previous Slide 52 / New Slide 55
Added final bullet – “Sites are granted flexibility in choosing whether to implement the 0.40% figure immediately, or to continue to use their previous rate until they implement HOTMA.”
Previous Slide 54 / New Slide 57
Bullet 3 – Added “or may borrow the form on pgs. 127-129 of the Implementation Guidance”
Slides 67-71
REMOVED SLIDES
Previous Slide 76 / New Slide 75
Revised entire slide: Excluding Amounts from Assets
If a family certifies that they have received a Federal tax refund or a refundable tax credit in the last 12 months, that amount must be deducted from the family’s net assets.
Example
- Household G currently has a non-interest-bearing checking account with a cash value of $1,000 and a savings account with a cash value of $5,000. The savings account will generate $10 of actual yearly income.
- Their assets total cash value is $6,000.
- During their interview, they disclosed that six months ago, they received a Federal tax refund in the amount of $4,500.
- The site must subtract $4,500 from the family’s assets.
- $6,000 – $4,500 = $1,500
- The countable asset total is $1,500. The site must still count the $10 of actual yearly income, in full.
Previous Slide 77 / New Slide 74
Added Bullet 7 – “Any amounts recovered in any civil action or settlement based on a claim of malpractice, negligence, or other breach of duty owed to a family member arising out of law that resulted in a member of the family being a person with disabilities”
Previous Slide 82 / New Slide 91
Added Bullet 2 – “Families may still only deduct child care costs for children age 12 and younger.”
Previous Slide 90 / New Slide 99
Bullet 2 – Changed to “To ease this burden, the new 10% standard will be phased in over a 24-month period, beginning on the effective date of the household’s next AR or IR following the site’s implementation of HOTMA.”
Previous Slide 91 / New Slide 100
Bullet 1 – Changed to “At their December 2023 AR…”
Bullet 5 – Changed to “At their December 2024 AR…”
Then added a bullet in-between the circumstances to state that the site implements HOTMA in September 2024.
Previous Slide 92 / New Slide 101
Removed chart
Bullet 1 – Changed to “Beginning the first time an existing, qualified household undergoes a reexamination, they will be subject to a 5% threshold.
Bullet 2 – Changed to “One year later, they will be subject to a 7.5% threshold.”
Bullet 7 – Changed to “O/As and PHAs have the discretion to offer continued hardship relief for families who were eligible for it at their previous location, and who would be treated as new admissions in their program.
Previous Slide 100 / New Slide 109
Bullet 4 – Added sentence “The site may use verification documentation obtained for the most recent IR.”
Previous Slide 101 / New Slide 110
Bullet 4 – Changed “Paycheck” to “Paystub”
Previous Slide 102 / New Slide 111
Added final bullet – “Sites utilizing the safe harbor provision are not required to run the EIV Income Report at the time of AR.”
Slide 113
NEW SLIDE
Previous Slide 104 / New Slide 114
Consolidated middle two bullets to emphasize that increases in earned income after a previous reduction in income may warrant an IR, depending on the sites’ policies.
Previous Slide 121 / New Slide 131
Changed page numbers to 114-118
Previous Slide 137 / New Slide 147
Added a final comment: “We encourage you to read through the applicable notices for even more information.”
January 29, 2024 Changelog (Click To Expand)
Impacts: Original Printing to 1/12/24
Sessions: August through January
Slides 2
Bullet 2 – changed “effective” to “enforced”
Slide 12
Changed to:
The Code of Federal Regulations will reflect HOTMA changes as of January 1, 2024, but full compliance is mandatory on January 1, 2025.
- Sites should continue to follow pre-HOTMA regulations until the following:
- Their software is HOTMA-ready
- They have made adjustments to their EIV Policies & Procedures and Tenant Selection Plans/Admissions and Continued Occupancy Policies
- Residents have executed HOTMA-compliant leases
- Residents have been given proper notice of changes (per local landlord/tenant law)
- HUD has confirmed that it will not issue non-compliance findings based on HOTMA-related changes in 2024.
Moved Slides 120-122 to Slides 13-15
Previous Slide 34 / New Slide 37
Bullet 1 – changed to “There are some adjustments to how student financial assistance will be treated, and now all programs follow the same rules.”
Previous Slide 48 / New Slide 51
Bullet 2 – changed final phrase to “and we will provide the current values for 2024.”
Previous Slide 49 / New Slide 52
Bullet 3 – changed to “In 2024, this is set at 0.40%.”
Previous Slide 64 / New Slide 67
Changed header to “Asset Limitation 1: Specific Restriction on Real Property”
Bullet 1 – changed to “Households may not begin receiving assistance if they own real property that is suitable for occupancy.”
Previous Slide 65 / New Slide 68
Changed header to “Asset Limitation 1: Specific Restriction on Real Property”
Previous Slide 66 / New Slide 69
Changed header to “Asset Limitation 1: Specific Restriction on Real Property”
Previous Slide 67 / New Slide 70
Changed header to “Asset Limitation 2: $100,000* Threshold
Added final bullet: “In several industry meetings, HUD has reminded O/As and PHAs not to make any eligibility-related decisions based on new asset limitation rules until it has issued further guidance.”
Previous Slide 68 / New Slide 71
Changed header to “Asset Limitation 2: $100,000* Ineligibility Remedies”
Previous Slide 69
Removed
Previous Slide 85 / New Slide 87
Bullet 1 – revised to ‘The “medical expense” deduction has been renamed the “health and medical care expense deduction”.’
New Slide 105
Interim Recertification Decision Tree
Previous Slide 103 / New Slide 106
Changed first sentence to “Following HUD’s new IR guidance is all about determining the percentage by which income is changing.”
Previous Slide 104 / New Slide 107
Added bullet 3 – “The household had not undergone an IR previously.”
Previous Slide 110 / New Slide 113
Bullet 1 – Revised to “Households were still eligible to claim the EID leading up to January 1, 2024.”
Previous Slide 113 / New Slide 116
Final bullet – revised to “How to prepare residents for HOTMA changes going forward”
November 15, 2023 Changelog (Click To Expand)
Impacts: Original Printing to 11/17/23
Sessions: August 17-18 through November 16-17
Slides 11-12
Swapped positions of slides
Slide 35
Change “the income is fully excluded” to “fully excludes, with two exceptions we will discuss later)
Slide 51-75
Swapped positions of several slides
Slide 63
First sentence now only says “If a household has assets with a total cash value of more than $100,000*, they are ineligible to begin receiving assistance.”
Slide 64
Replaced sentence about “grandfathering,” with “O/As have discretion not to enforce asset limitations on existing tenants, at all.”
Slide 66
Changed the first sentence to “As of 2024, households may not begin receiving assistance if they own real property that is suitable for occupancy”
Slide 67
Added sentence “O/As may choose not to enforce this policy on existing residents.”
Slide 82
Changed amounts in lower box to reflect Elderly/Disabled family deduction.
Slide 97
Added Note that says “HUD no longer requires 4-6 paycheck stubs to calculate income. The new standard is to use only 2.
October 17, 2023 Changelog (Click To Expand)
Impacts: Original Printing to 10/12/23
Sessions: August 17-18 through October 12-13
*New Slide 53*
The cash value of a checking account is now its current balance; obtain a minimum of one statement that reflects the current balance of banking/financial accounts.
Slide 74
- Remove “NCHM recommends that you third-party verify all assets in 2024 and upon move-in.”
- Add “O/As and PHAs may choose not to allow self-certification, at their discretion (and this must be part of your policies and procedures).”
- Add header to chart “**SAMPLE ASSET VERIFICATION PROCEDURE**”
*New Slide 95*
Annual and Interim Recertifications
One of the most significant changes under HOTMA involves processing certifications.
O/As and PHAs are allowed far more discretion in the process:
- Income calculation and verification
- Determining hardship relief/eligibility
- Income thresholds that trigger an IR
Sites must outline their procedures and treat all households in the same manner.
(Old Slide) 116
- Add “Remember: a site’s EIV Policies and Procedures ultimately outline how and when each EIV Report will be used.”
- Remove picture (for more space for text).
September 13, 2023 Changelog (Click To Expand)
Impacts: Original Printing to 9/13/23
Sessions: August 17-18, August 24-25, September 7-8, September 14-15
Page 9, Slide 6
Add bullet point: An email update was released July 18, 2023 requiring PHAs to bring their programs into compliance with the HOTMA final rule as quickly as possible, but no later than January 1, 2025.
Page 10, Slide 8
Change the final bullet point to “The Low Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC) program*
Page 11, Slide 10
Change “March 14, 2023” to “March 16, 2023”
Page 13, Slide 14
Change “24 CFR 5.60” to “24 CFR 5.609”
Page 17, Slide 21
Add bullet point: “Actual yearly income from retirement savings accounts”
Page 17, Slide 22
Revise all content below regulation boxes to the following:
- This aligns other affordable housing programs’ rules with that of Public and Indian Housing’s rules surrounding fosters in its programs.
- Foster children and foster adults are not family members, therefore none of their income or assets are counted.
- They will appear on the certification but will not be included when determining income limits.
- They should be considered when determining appropriate unit size and utility allowance.
- HUD has not changed the rules regarding other family members receiving payments to care for foster children.
*New Slide 23*
EXAMPLE
Household K consists of a Head of Household and their Foster Child.
The Head of Household earns $30,000 annually as a part-time receptionist. They receive $1,000 monthly in foster care payments from the state Office of Child and Family Services for providing care for the Foster Child.
A couple of afternoons each week, the Foster Child works at an ice cream shop, where they earn $10,000 per year. Their paternal grandparents send him $100 cash each month.
Only the HOH’s wages of $30,000 are counted.
Page 18, (New) Slide 24
Delete existing examples; revise to just one: “An applicant is currently unhoused, living out-of-doors. Once he has a permanent residence and thus storage, he will visit various community resource centers to receive donations of hygiene items, cleaning supplies, clothing, and other necessities free of charge on an ongoing basis.”
Page 19, (New) Slide 26
Revise “New Regulation” to “Insurance payments and settlements for personal or property losses, including but not limited to payments through health insurance, motor vehicle insurance, and workers’ compensation.”
Revise remainder of content to the following:
“HUD clarified that any insurance payments or settlements received for a personal or property loss (typically through an insurance company) are specifically excluded from income.
This was only implicitly excluded as covered under the “lump sum” rules of the past.
EXAMPLES
A resident was involved in a workplace accident and receives workers’ compensation payments of $454 weekly. This is excluded.
A renter’s insurance policy initially paid a household $10,000 for property loss when their unit was involved in a fire, then adjusted the claim upon appeal. The household receives another $5,000 later. Both these amounts are excluded.”
Page 21, (New) Slide 30
Third-to-last bullet point: correct spelling of “distribution”
Page 23, (Old) Slide 33
Clarify topic phrase to say “FORMS OF STUDENT FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE THAT ARE ALWAYS EXCLUDED”
Page 23, (Old) Slide 34
Remove “Money from friends or family”
Page 25, (Old) Slide 37
Revise final three bullets for grammatical errors:
“Always use Bucket 1 first. Only use Bucket 2 if you need to. Anything leftover in Bucket 2 is counted as excess income.”
Page 30
Revise first sentence to “The Hill Family lives in apartment #404, a two-bedroom project-based Section 8 unit at Forest Meadows Apartments.”
Page 34, (Old) Slide 48
[Asset Verification Procedures are now filled in]:
Verify all assets
Self-certify
Self-certify
Verify all assets
Self-certify
Self-certify
Verify all assets
Page 37, (New) Slide 54
Revise second bullet point to “This rule applies to Section 8 PBRA and to housing offered under any PIH program.”
Page 37, (New) Slide 55
Add final bullet point: “Remember: this rule only applies to Section 8 PBRA and to housing offered under any PIH program.”
*New Slide 56*
If a household has assets with a total cash value of more than $100,000*, they are ineligible for assistance.
EXAMPLE
Household L is a current tenant at a Section 8 PBRA property. They are due for annual recertification effective 3/1/2024, and their assets are listed below:
Type | Cash Value | Income |
Money Market | $75,000.00 | $1,975.00 |
Savings | $20,000.00 | $40.00 |
CD | $15,000.00 | $150.00 |
Checking | $5,000.00 | $2,165.00 |
TOTAL CASH/VALUE INCOME | $115,000.00 | $2,165.00 |
What is the correct course of action?
- Give them notice to vacate the unit; they are no longer eligible for tenancy.
- Tell them they are no longer eligible for assistance effective 3/1/2024.
- Follow the O/A’s nonenforcement/exception policy and allow them to cure their asset ineligibility by 9/1/2024.
- No action is needed; the asset threshold does not apply to Section 8 PBRA properties.
Page 38, (Old) Slide 55
Add first sentence: “HUD has imposed further asset restrictions for Section 8 PBRA and housing offered under any PIH program.”
Item d has been moved to the slide that follows.
Page 39, (Old) Slide 57
Add ribbon to bottom of slide: “Remember: this rule only applies to Section 8 PBRA and to housing offered under any PIH program.”
Page 39, (Old) Slide 58
Add after bullet point three: “If the total amount that these items are worth exceeds $50,000*, count them all.”
Remove final two bullet points.
*New Slide 62*
VALUE OF RETIREMENT ACCOUNTS AND AMOUNTS EARNED BY SUCH ACCOUNTS
PREVIOUS REGULATION: Balances held in retirement accounts are counted if the money is accessible to the family member. The income earned by the account is included as asset income.
NEW REGULATION: The value of any retirement accounts recognized as such by the IRS are not included in net family assets.
- Retirement accounts accessible to family members, like 401(k)s, 403(b)s, IRAs, and Keoghs, have amounted to significant assets in the past.
- HUD has clarified under Section 5.603(b) that these will no longer be included as assets.
- The income generated by such accounts (interest, dividends, etc.) is therefore not to be included.
- Once periodic payments are received, those payments are included as non-asset income.
*New Slide 63*
VALUE OF RETIREMENT ACCOUNTS AND AMOUNTS EARNED BY SUCH ACCOUNTS
EXAMPLES
- A resident has a 401(k) to which they contributes 3.5% of their weekly pay. It has a cash value of $43,158.00. It earns 6% on average annually as invested. Although they could access it with a penalty, they will not retire or take periodic payments for another 25 years. This is not an asset.
- A retired resident has an IRA with a cash value of $215,750.00. It earns 8.25% annually as invested. They take quarterly distributions of $3,000.00, for an annual total distribution of $12,000.00. This is not an asset. The $12,000.00 in distributions is non-asset income.
Page 40, (Old) Slide 60
Add final bullet point: “Retirement savings accounts, such as 401(k)s, 403(b)s, and IRAs.”
Page 42
Revise typo on Passbook Savings Rate to “0.06%”
Page 50
Under “Income” portion, revise “January to August” to “May to December”
Page 52
Question 7, option d – change to “$63,135”
Page 55
Question 7, option c – change to “$63,135”
Page 60, (Old) Slide 67
Second bullet point – remove “(and will be rounded down to the nearest multiple)”
Page 61 (Old) Slide 69
Revise each instance of “exception” to “exemption”
*New Slide 74*
Child Care Deduction Hardship Exemption
EXAMPLE
Household I consists of a disabled Head of Household and their eight-year-old son. The Head of Household receives SSDI income. They had been looking for part-time work for several months and were benefitting from the child care deduction during this time.
Annual Income: $10,800
Adjusted Income: $3,000
TTP: $90 TR: $0
UA: $100 UR: $10
They were involved in an accident that exacerbated their disability and they had to pause their job search. This makes them ineligible for the child care deduction.
Annual Income: $10,800
Adjusted Income: $10,752
TTP: $269 TR: $169
UA: $100 UR: $0
If the household cannot afford its Tenant Rent, they can request a hardship exemption and continue benefitting from the child care deduction for 90 days.
Page 63, (Old) Slide 73
REMOVED
Page 63, (Old) Slide 74
Add to top of slide: “The final rule allows sites to add together a household’s eligible health and medical care expenses and disability expenses, prior to subjecting them to the threshold.”
*New Slide 80*
The Final Rule acknowledges that the increased threshold may place an undue burden on existing subsidized residents that are currently qualified to deduct their expenses.
To ease this burden, the new 10% standard will be phased in over a 24-month period, beginning in 2024.
Page 65, (Old) Slide 78
Change “EXAMPLE” to “EXAMPLES OF POTENTIAL HARDSHIPS”
Page 72, (Old) Slide 83
Revise first two bullets to the following:
- When a site is executing an Annual Recertification/ Reexamination (AR), they must examine the prior year’s income and make adjustments to reflect current income if there have been any changes during the year.
- For a Move-In (MI), Initial Certification (IC), or a New Admission, sites use anticipated income
*New Slide 91*
Following HUD’s new IR guidance is all about determining 10% of income and comparing it to the proposed increase.
EXAMPLE
- Household F’s annual gross income is $40,870. This includes $26,000 from the Head of Household’s annual salary and $14,870 from the Spouse’s Social Security benefits.
- The Spouse reports she is now also receiving SSI benefits in the amount of $6,648 per year.
- Calculate 10% of the household’s current income.
$40,870 × 10% = $4,087
- Compare the amount of the increase to the 10% threshold.
$6,648 > $4,087
- This household must undergo an IR.
*New Slide 92*
Not all income increases will require an IR.
EXAMPLE
- Household J had no income upon move-in. Two months later, the Head of Household reports that he got a job with a salary of $23,500 per year.
- Though this is an increase that amounts to more than a 10% difference in income, this increase is due to earned income.
- No IR is required.
Page 73, (Old) Slide 86
Second bullet point – remove typo “is”
Page 74, Slide 87
REMOVED
Page 73, (Old) Slide 88
Revise first sentence to “An O/A has adopted a policy that only allows IRs for income decreases when the decrease amounts to 10% of their annual income.”
Revise final bullet point to “This household would not be granted an IR under the site’s policies.”
Page 75, (Old) Slide 89
Remove final bullet point.
Add two bullet points:
- Remember: Any time an IR is triggered, you still must ask the household to verify all changes.
- Continue to execute IRs for changes in family composition (e.g.: move-ins/move-outs).
*New Slide 96*
Executing Multiple IRs
January 2024 | MI | Zero Income |
February 2024 | New unemployment reported – $10,000 IR Required | |
March 2024 | ||
April 2024 | IR | IR adding unemployment in effect |
May 2024 | New employment reported – $30,000 No IR Required | |
June 2024 | Employment raise reported – $32,000 No IR Required | |
July 2024 | New Child Support reported – $10,000 | |
August 2024 | ||
September 2024 | IR | IR adding Child Support AND $32,000 employment in effect |
October 2024 | ||
November 2024 | ||
December 2024 | ||
January 2025 | AR | Employment – $32,000 Child Support – $10,000 |
Page 76, (Old) Slide 92
Revise typo to “income”
Page 78, (New) Slide 102
Add to second bullet point “They are still counted for purposes of determining unit size and utility allowances.”
Change third bullet point to “EIV does not need to be run at the time of an Interim Recertification.”
*New Slide 103*
As of September 2023, there has been very limited guidance surrounding how EIV is changing.
A few reports will require new official guidance to align with HOTMA requirements:
Income Discrepancy Report
Income Validation Tool (IVT)
New Hires Report
Multiple Subsidy Report & Existing Tenant Search (in the context of Fosters)
Continue to run and use EIV reports as before.
Page 78, (Old) Slide 96
SWAP WITH SLIDE 97
Page 79, (Old) Slide 97
Remove “HUD-9887” from forms list
Change eighth bullet point to “The 9887 and 9886 will be changing.”
Add asterisk after “tenancy”
Add bullet “It’s unclear how the 9887-A will be changing.”
Add asterisk clarifier “*Sometimes a household’s subsidy is terminated, but the household chooses to remain in their unit. If they qualify for subsidy again later in their tenancy, they would need to sign the form again.”
SWAP WITH SLIDE 96
Page 80, (Old) Slide 99
Remove “September” from first bullet point.
Page 80, (Old) Slide 100
Change “October” to “September” in first bullet point.
Change bullet points 2 to 6 to the following:
- Make tenants aware of the following:
- New HUD Model lease
- New 9887 terms
- Revised HUD Fact Sheet for Determining Rent and EIV & You Brochure
- Your updated Tenant Selection Plan (TSP)
- Your revised Income Questionnaire
*New Slide 109*
Historically, HUD has been “hands-off” when it comes to waiting list management.
Sites need to decide the extent to which they will directly inform applicants and pre-applicants of HOTMA’s changes.
Ultimately, sites will need to update their applications for new residents as well as any standard communications they use with their waiting list population.
It is up to the O/A or PHA’s discretion how to handle current applicants who will be ineligible for subsidy once HOTMA is in effect.
Page 83, (Old) Slide 105
Change “March 14, 2023” to “March 16, 2023”
Page 83, (Old) Slide 106
Remove numbering paradigm; revert to bullets
*New Slide 116*
Alternative Rent
The alternative non-public housing rent (alternative rent) is a monthly amount equal to the greater of:
The applicable fair market rent for the unit; or
The amount of monthly subsidy provided for the unit.
Each year, HUD will provide PHAs with guidance on calculating the amount of “monthly subsidy” provided to the unit.
Page 84, (Old) Slide 107
Remove numbering paradigm; revert to bullets
Page 84, (Old) Slide 108
Change header to “NPHOI Consequences”
Page 85, (Old) Slide 109
Remove final three bullet points
Add bullet point to the end: “See PIH Notice 2023-03 for more information on the NPHOI lease.”
Page 86, (Old) Slide 111
Change “3/14/2023” to “3/16/2023”
Page 88, Question 2
Change “August 1” to “8/1/2024”
Page 88, Question 4
Add “care” after “medical”
Page 89, Question 7
Add as second-to-last sentence in the question: “The site creates an IR to reflect these changes.”
Page 89, Question 8
Revise Extremely Low Income typo “80%” to “30%”
Page 94, Question 4
Add “/disabled” next to “elderly”
Page 94, Question 6
Change option b to “$60,650”
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