Section 8 of the USHA (42 U.S.C. 1437f) authorizes housing assistance to aid lower-income families in renting safe and decent housing. Housing assistance payments are limited by FMRs established by HUD for different geographic areas. In the Housing Choice Voucher (HCV) program, the FMR is the
basis for determining the "payment standard amount" used to calculate the maximum monthly subsidy for an assisted family. See 24 CFR 982.503. HUD also uses the FMRs to determine initial renewal rents for some expiring project-based Section 8 contracts, initial rents for housing assistance payment
contracts in the Moderate Rehabilitation Single Room Occupancy program, rent ceilings for rental units in both the HOME Investment Partnerships program and the Emergency Solution Grants program, calculation of maximum award amounts for Continuum of Care recipients and the maximum amount of
rent a recipient may pay for property leased with Continuum of Care funds, and calculation of flat rents in Public Housing units. In general, the FMR for an area is the amount that would be needed to pay the gross rent (shelter rent plus utilities) of privately owned, decent, and safe rental housing of a
modest (non-luxury) nature with suitable amenities and is typically set at the 40th percentile of the distribution of gross rents. HUD's FMR calculations represent HUD's best effort to estimate the 40th percentile gross rent paid by recent movers into standard quality units in each FMR area. In addition, all
rents subsidized under the HCV program must meet reasonable rent standards.
As of October 2, 2000, HUD required FMRs to be set at the 50th percentile for areas where HUD determined higher FMRs were needed to help families assisted under certain HUD programs find and lease decent and affordable housing (65 FR 58870). On November 16, 2016, HUD published a Final Rule entitled "Establishing a More Effective Fair Market Rent System; Using Small Area Fair Market Rents in the Housing Choice Voucher Program Instead of the Current 50th Percentile FMRs" (Small Area FMR final rule) (81 FR 80567), with an effective date of January 17, 2017. The Small Area FMR final rule eliminates the 50th percentile FMR provisions in the FMR regulations (24 CFR 888.113)
1 and provides that areas currently designated as 50th percentile areas remain 50th percentile areas until their current 3-year eligibility period expires. At the end of the 3-year eligibility period, these areas revert to 40th percentile FMR status. If PHAs in areas converting from 50th percentile FMRs to 40th percentile FMRs meet the deconcentration criteria specified in 24 CFR 982.503(f), available at:
https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CFR-2016-title24-vol4/pdf/CFR-2016-title24-vol4-sec982-503.pdf, they may petition HUD to maintain payment standards based on 50th percentile rents on that basis. The following areas completed their 3 years of 50th percentile eligibility in FY 2018 and will revert to 40th percentile FMR status in FY 2020:
FY 2018 50TH-PERCENTILE FMR AREAS REVERTING TO 40TH PERCENTILE FMRS IN FY 2020
Baltimore-ColumbiaTowson, MD MSA. |
Philadelphia-CamdenWilmington, PA-NJDE-MD. |
Washington, DC-VAMD HUD Metro FMR Area |
West Palm BeachBoca Raton, FL HUD Metro FMR Area |
The following is a list of FMR areas that retain 50th percentile FMRs for FY 2020, along with the year that they will revert to 40th percentile status:
FY 2020 50TH-PERCENTILE FMR AREAS WITH YEAR OF REVERSION TO 40TH PERCENTILE FMRS
Bergen-Passaic, NJ HUD Metro FMR Area .................................. |
2020 |
Spokane, WA HUD Metro FMR Area ........................................... |
2020 |
San Diego-Carlsbad-San Marcos, CA MSA .................................. |
2020 |
Footnotes:
1Separately from the Small Area FMR regulations, HUD also calculates and posts 50th percentile rent estimates for the purposes of Success Rate Payment Standards, as defined at 24 CFR 982.503(e) (estimates available at:
http://www.huduser.gov/portal/datasets/50per.html), which policy was not changed by the Small Area FMR rule.