HR-4495-117
Ordered to be Reported (Amended) by the Yeas and Nays: 28 - 23.
Sponsored by Maxine Waters (D-CA)
What it does
This bill would create a federal grant program administered by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). HUD would distribute funds to states and other eligible entities, which would then provide financial assistance to qualifying first-time, first-generation home buyers. Assistance could cover down payments, closing costs, mortgage interest rate reductions, shared equity home subsidies, or pre-move-in home modifications for people with disabilities. Eligibility would be subject to income limits, occupancy requirements, approved mortgage types, and mandatory home buyer counseling.
Who benefits
First-time home buyers whose parents did not own a home — particularly lower- and moderate-income households who lack family wealth to draw on for a down payment or closing costs. People with disabilities seeking accessible housing modifications. Shared equity homeownership programs and the nonprofit or government entities that run them. Real estate agents, mortgage lenders, title companies, and home builders who would see increased demand from newly eligible buyers entering the market.
Who is hurt
Federal taxpayers who fund the grant program. Existing home buyers and sellers in markets where increased demand could put upward pressure on home prices, potentially making housing less affordable for buyers who do not qualify for grants. Competing buyers in tight housing markets who do not meet the first-generation eligibility criteria. States and localities that administer the program would bear administrative costs and compliance burdens.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the inability to inherit or receive family wealth for a down payment is one of the most significant barriers to homeownership for lower-income Americans, and that this program directly targets that gap. They contend that homeownership is a primary vehicle for building household wealth, and that first-generation buyers are structurally excluded from that path through no fault of their own. Supporters also argue that the program's income limits, counseling requirements, and occupancy rules are designed to ensure funds reach genuine owner-occupants rather than investors, making it a targeted and accountable use of federal dollars. They further note that expanding homeownership broadens the tax base and stabilizes communities.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that injecting federal grant money into the housing market would increase demand without increasing the supply of homes, which could drive up prices and ultimately harm the affordability it aims to improve — including for low-income buyers who do not qualify. They contend that the program creates an unequal playing field by giving some buyers a taxpayer-funded advantage over others competing for the same limited housing stock. Opponents also argue that defining eligibility based on parental homeownership history raises administrative complexity and potential for fraud, and that housing affordability is better addressed through zoning changes and supply-side policies than through demand-side subsidies. They further question whether a federal program is the appropriate mechanism, arguing states and localities are better positioned to address their own housing markets.