The Department of Housing and Urban Development is seeking applications for its Pathways to Removing Obstacles to Housing Grant.
Donor Name: U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)
State: All States
County: All Counties
Type of Grant: Grant
Deadline: 08/03/2026
Size of the Grant: More than $1 million
Grant Duration: More than 5 Years
Details:
The Pathways to Removing Obstacles toHousing (PRO Housing) program provides competitive awards to State governments, County governments, City or township governments, Metropolitan Planning Organizations (MPOs), and Multijurisdictional Entities to help communities reduce regulatory barriers to affordable housing production and preservation and increase the housing affordability.
Goals and Objectives
- As President Trump said in his Executive Order on Removing Regulatory Barriers to Affordable Home Construction (March 13, 2026),
- The American dream of homeownership depends on a dynamic housing market in which a varied inventory of new homes is built and renovated each year. Layers of unnecessary regulatory barriers, slow permitting processes, and onerous mandates at all levels of government have delayed construction, restricted development, and driven up the costs of new housing. These constraints have made housing less affordable for many Americans.
- It is the policy of my Administration to reduce regulatory barriers to building homes and to steward taxpayer dollars in a manner that promotes housing affordability.
Funding Information
The minimum grant award is $5 million and maximum grant award is $10 million.
Grant Period
72-months
Eligibility Criteria
If your organization is not an eligible applicant, your application won’t be reviewed or scored, and you won’t receive funding from HUD.
- State governments
- County governments
- City or township governments
- Others
Additional Information on Eligibility
- You cannot apply as an individual.
- Faith-based organizations may apply just like any other organization. HUD does not have any policies or practices that unfairly target these institutions.
For more information, visit Grants.gov.


