Preventing Benefit Cuts

One of the biggest barriers to economic prosperity for America’s lowest-income families is the lack of decent, accessible, and affordable homes. Research shows that when people have a stable, decent, and accessible home that they can afford, they are better able to find employment, achieve economic mobility, age in place, perform better in school, and maintain improved health.
 
Federal rental assistance programs help more than 10 million people — overwhelmingly families with children, older adults, people with disabilities, full-time caregivers, and workers paid low wages — remain housed. Rental assistance is a vital tool to combat the affordable housing crisis, helping families afford the cost of rent and freeing up more income for other necessities, like nutritious food, medical care, transportation, and school supplies.  

Proposals to limit access to federal housing benefits would leave even more low-income people without a stable home, making it harder for them to climb the economic ladder and live with dignity. Congress should reject proposals like work requirements and time limits that decrease access to housing assistance and instead enact proven solutions that help struggling families earn more and get ahead. This starts with expanding—not slashing—programs that help families keep a safe, stable roof over their heads.

HUD Proposed Rule: Time Limits and Work Requirements

On March 2, HUD proposed allowing public housing agencies (PHAs) and HUD-assisted owners to impose work requirements and time limits on assisted families. If implemented, such policies will lead to more families and children experiencing eviction and homelessness, with people of color at greater risk

Under the proposal, millions risk losing their assistance if they exceed strict time limits, cannot meet harsh work requirements, or struggle to meet burdensome new reporting requirements. According to a July 2025 Center on Budget and Policy Priorities analysis, a 2-year time limit in HUD programs (specifically, public housing, Housing Choice Vouchers, and project-based rental assistance) would result in an estimated 3.3 million people losing their rental assistance.  

While this proposal itself would not require adoption of these policies, HUD’s proposed changes would allow states to mandate time limits and/or work requirements.

Take Action

Submit your own comment, urging HUD to withdraw the proposed rule. The comment deadline is May 1 at 11:59 pm ET. 

Use NLIHC’s comment template, tailored to your unique perspective, to elaborate on the harms of the proposal.

Memo to Members and Partners Articles

Concrete Steps Congress Can Take To Solve America’s Housing Crisis

The National Low Income Housing Coalition released today Opportunities to End Homelessness and Housing Poverty in the 116th Congress, a memo to incoming senators and representatives on concrete steps they can take to help address one of the most critical issues facing extremely low income families…

Congress Strips Additional Work Requirements for SNAP before Passing Farm Bill

Congress passed an $867 billion farm bill, after a proposal that would have made cuts and placed stronger work requirements for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP or food stamps) benefits program was rejected. The House approved the bill by a vote of 369-47 after the Senate had…

NLIHC Signs SAVE for All Campaign Principles

NLIHC has signed the Strengthening America’s Values and Economy (SAVE) for All Campaign principles. The campaign brings together national, state and local advocacy groups, service providers, faith-based organizations, policy experts, and labor and civil rights organizations from every state to…