FHFA Renews Data Collection on Lender Community Efforts
Published Date: 11/18/2025
Notice
Summary
The Federal Housing Finance Agency wants to keep collecting info about how lenders support their communities and is asking for your thoughts before renewing this for three more years. This affects banks and lenders who provide community support data, with comments due by January 20, 2026. No big costs or changes, just a smooth extension to keep things running.
No Economic Impacts Identified for this Document
Your PRIA Score
Personalized for You
How does this regulation affect your finances?
Sign up for a PRIA Policy Scan to see your personalized alignment score for this federal register document and every other regulation we track. We analyze your financial profile against policy provisions to show you exactly what matters to your wallet.
Key Dates
Department and Agencies
Related Federal Register Documents
2026-05160 — Amendment Reinstating “Grandfather” Exceptions to Restrictions on Private Transfer Fee Covenants
The Federal Housing Finance Agency just brought back special 'grandfather' rules that let Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and Federal Home Loan Banks deal with certain private transfer fees on homes—rules that were accidentally removed in 2024. These exceptions apply retroactively all the way back to July 16, 2012, so no one misses out. If you’re involved in mortgages or home sales, this means smoother transactions and clearer rules starting March 17, 2026.
2026-04207 — Proposed Collection; Comment Request
The Federal Housing Finance Agency wants to keep collecting info for its Affordable Housing Program for three more years, but they need your thoughts first! If you’re involved in affordable housing or just curious, now’s the time to speak up before April 3, 2026. This helps keep paperwork simple and the program running smoothly without extra costs or delays.
2026-02325 — Fair Lending, Fair Housing, and Equitable Housing Finance Plans
Starting March 9, 2026, the Federal Housing Finance Agency is scrapping its 2024 rule that made big mortgage companies follow specific fair housing and lending plans. This change affects Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the Federal Home Loan Banks, freeing them from some reporting and compliance duties. No new costs or fees are coming, but these companies will have more flexibility in how they handle fair lending and housing rules.
2025-19429 — Enterprise Liquidity Requirements; Federal Home Loan Bank System Boards of Directors and Executive Management; Federal Home Loan Bank Unsecured Credit Limits; Withdrawal
The FHFA is hitting pause and withdrawing its earlier plans to change rules about money safety, leadership roles, and borrowing limits for Federal Home Loan Banks. This means no new rules are coming right now, but they might try again later with fresh ideas. Banks and their leaders can relax for now, with no immediate money or deadline worries.
2026-05463 — Correcting Amendment Reinstating “Grandfather” Exceptions to Restrictions on Private Transfer Fee Covenants; Correction
The Federal Housing Finance Agency fixed a small mistake in a recent rule about private transfer fee covenants. They clarified that the rule reinstating 'grandfather' exceptions isn’t asking for public comments. This correction took effect on March 20, 2026, and mainly affects homeowners and property buyers dealing with these fees.
2026-04814 — Orders: Reporting by Regulated Entities of Stress Testing Results as of December 31, 2025; Summary Instructions and Guidance
The Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) just ordered certain financial companies to report their stress test results from the end of 2025 by March 5, 2026. These tests check if companies can handle tough money situations, helping keep the housing market safe and steady. If you’re one of these companies, get ready to share your results on time to avoid any penalties!
Previous / Next Documents
Previous: 2025-20123 — Proposed Collection; Comment Request
The Federal Housing Finance Agency wants to keep collecting info for its Affordable Housing Program and is asking the public to share their thoughts by January 20, 2026. This is about extending a paperwork process for three more years without adding extra costs or big changes. If you’re involved in affordable housing, now’s your chance to speak up and help shape the future!
Next: 2025-20125 — Center for Scientific Review; Amended Notice of Meeting
The Center for Scientific Review changed a key meeting for the MIRA research award from two days to just one day on November 6, 2025. This affects scientists applying for the award and anyone tracking NIH research schedules. The meeting is private, so no public attendance is allowed, but the date change helps keep things on track without extra costs or delays.