Rural Lenders Gain Power in USDA Loan Pilot
Published Date: 3/19/2026
Notice
Summary
Starting September 1, 2026, eligible lenders can approve certain rural home loans themselves without waiting for USDA’s pre-approval, thanks to a new two-year pilot program. This change speeds up the loan process for low- and moderate-income families buying homes in rural areas, while USDA keeps an eye on how lenders handle this new power. The pilot aims to make home buying easier and faster, with no extra cost to borrowers.
Analyzed Economic Effects
4 provisions identified: 2 benefits, 2 costs, 0 mixed.
Lenders Get Delegated Approval Power
Starting September 1, 2026, eligible lenders participating in the LITE Delegated Authority Pilot can approve Section 502 guaranteed rural home loans themselves and obtain Loan Note Guarantees with limited USDA involvement. The pilot runs two years, ending September 28, 2028.
Faster Rural Loan Approvals, No Extra Cost
If you are a low- or moderate-income family buying a home in an eligible rural area, approved lenders in the pilot can speed up approvals so you get loan decisions faster and without added cost to borrowers. The notice says GUS (automated) submissions will be completed within 2 business hours and the Agency will issue the Loan Note Guarantee within two business days after receipt.
Strict Lender Eligibility and Operational Rules
To join the pilot, lenders must meet criteria such as originating at least 10 SFHGLP loans in the last 12 months, demonstrate above-average performance on delinquencies/loss/defaults over the past two years, have no failed Corrective Action or Reduced Sample Reviews in the past 24 months, be registered in SAM with a UEI, and complete mandatory recertification training. Lenders must also pay guarantee fees electronically at closing and enter into a User Agreement.
Ongoing Oversight, File Reviews, and Sanctions Risk
Participating lenders will face monitoring that includes an initial review of the first 5 to 15 loan files and monthly reviews of 2% of originated files per lender; lenders will have 90 days to correct identified problems or risk removal from the pilot. The Agency may suspend or terminate delegated status, issue cease-and-desist orders, and loans remain subject to future indemnification per Sec. 3555.108(d).
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Key Dates
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