Title 10 › Subtitle Subtitle A— General Military Law › Part IV— SERVICE, SUPPLY, AND PROPERTY › Chapter 169— MILITARY CONSTRUCTION AND MILITARY FAMILY HOUSING › Subchapter III— ADMINISTRATION OF MILITARY CONSTRUCTION AND MILITARY FAMILY HOUSING › § 2854a
Allows the Secretary to transfer family housing that is too damaged or worn out to be worth fixing. Housing counts as too costly to repair if repairs would cost more than 70% of building a new replacement. Transfers can include the land with the housing. This cannot be used for housing at bases already approved for closure or at overseas sites where the Department of Defense ends operations. The total value of housing the Defense Department can transfer this way in any fiscal year cannot go above $5,000,000. The buyer must pay the United States the fair market value, which the Secretary decides and which is final. The Secretary must wait 14 days after sending the appropriate congressional committees an electronic notice that explains why and gives estimates of the sale price, repair cost, and replacement cost. Some federal property, procurement, and homeless-assistance rules do not apply to these transfers (including parts of title 40 and 41 and Title V of the McKinney‑Vento Act). Money from sales goes into the military housing fund and may be used to build replacement units (but not more units than were sold), to repair or restore other military housing, and to reimburse the Secretary for costs of the transfer. That money is available without needing another appropriation. The Secretary will fix the exact land boundaries (for example, by survey) and can add other terms to protect the United States.
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Armed Forces — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
10 U.S.C. § 2854a
Title 10 — Armed Forces
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60