Title 40 › Subtitle SUBTITLE I— - FEDERAL PROPERTY AND ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES › Chapter CHAPTER 5— - PROPERTY MANAGEMENT › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER III— - DISPOSING OF PROPERTY › § 550
Lets federal agencies give, sell, lease, or transfer extra federal land and buildings to other agencies or to state and local groups for public uses like schools, health research, parks, low-income housing, national service, or historic monuments. The agency head in charge of each use (Education, Health and Human Services, Interior, Housing and Urban Development, or the CEO of the Corporation for National and Community Service) handles the transfer and enforces any rules on the property. The General Services Administrator can reject a proposed transfer if the Administrator objects within 30 days after being told. Some rules are specific. School and health property can go to states, local governments, public or nonprofit schools and hospitals (must be 501(c)(3)). Park and historic property deeds must require permanent public use and can return to the government if the use stops. HUD transfers for low-income housing must support self-help building where residents do significant labor (while accounting for disabilities), meet local building codes, and be sold below market; HUD must reduce the price by 75 percent of market value (or more if justified). Historic-monument transfers can be given free if Interior and the National Park advisory board agree; income from allowed business activities must be used for public preservation and Interior can audit records. Officials can change or remove deed rules if the property no longer serves its original purpose, but they may add conditions to protect government interests. "State" here means the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and U.S. territories and possessions.
Full Legal Text
Public Buildings, Property, and Works — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
40 U.S.C. § 550
Title 40 — Public Buildings, Property, and Works
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73