Trump Administration Moves to End Housing Assistance for Mixed Immigration Families

WASHINGTON, Feb 19 (Reuters) – ⁠The ⁠Trump administration took steps ⁠on Thursday toward ending federal housing assistance ​for households with mixed immigration status, as it seeks to stop ‌ineligible migrants from benefiting ‌from the funding.

The U.S. Department of Housing and ⁠Urban Development ⁠said it estimates approximately 24,000 undocumented migrants, ineligible migrants ​and “fraudsters” in 20,000 mixed-status households benefit from HUD assistance. 

Under the proposed rule, a family would not be eligible for assistance unless ​every member residing in a household is determined to ⁠have eligible ⁠status.

Families with at least ⁠one ​family member with U.S. citizenship or eligible immigration status would ​be eligible for ⁠prorated assistance.

It would also require verification of citizenship and eligible immigration status for people seeking federal housing assistance.

The department acknowledged the rule would adversely affect some tenants but ⁠said this would ultimately be offset by the reallocation of HUD ⁠funds to the intended recipients.

“HUD’s proposed rule will guarantee that all residents in HUD-funded housing are eligible tenants,” Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Scott Turner said in a statement. 

National Housing Law Project executive director Shamus Roller decried the move, which he said would evict tens of thousands of families with ⁠mixed immigration status from HUD housing and put many other federally-assisted tenants at risk.

In 2019, President Donald Trump’s first administration sought to implement a similar rule, ​but it was later withdrawn.

(Reporting by Jasper Ward ​in WashingtonEditing by Rod Nickel)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

Reuters

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