Revised bipartisan housing bill passes U.S. House, one step closer to becoming law
The U.S. House overwhelmingly passed its revised version of the 21st Century Road to Housing Act, sending the bipartisan legislation meant to address the housing crisis over to the Senate for approval.
“Today, we proved Washington still works,” Rep. French Hill, R-Ark., who sponsored the House amendment, said in a statement. “After months of bipartisan, bicameral negotiations – and with the partnership of the Trump Administration – the House delivered to make housing more accessible and affordable for American families.”
The House’s amendment, passed in a 396-13 vote, leaves much of the Senate-passed version untouched.
That includes provisions supporting manufactured housing expansion, streamlining environmental reviews for new housing construction, and establishing a pilot program to convert vacant and abandoned buildings into livable housing.
It also keeps the slight boost to the 15% cap on banks’ private investments in affordable housing and a ban on large institutional investors – defined as entities that own more than 350 housing units – from purchasing single-family homes for the next 15 years. Manufactured housing, multifamily homes, and build-to-rent properties are exempted from the ban.
But the House also implemented a handful of controversial changes that some senators have balked at, in particular axing a provision mandating that institutional investors sell rental homes they build to individuals within seven years of construction.
Supporters said that would expand the number of homes on the market and help drive down prices, while opponents argue it could distort markets and lead to widespread evictions.
The House-revised version also allows private equity to buy up housing that is supported with Low-Income Housing Tax Credits and other rent-restricting affordable housing programs.
Less controversial additions the House made include the insertion of the Housing Supply Frameworks Act. It directs the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development to create voluntary federal guidelines for jurisdictions looking to increase housing supply.
House lawmakers also included a swath of deregulatory community banking provisions aimed at making it easier for community banks to finance single-family housing construction.
They revised the Senate’s broad four-year Central Bank Digital Currency ban, allowing the Federal Reserve to issue a digital currency off-limits to the general public but available to financial institutions and the federal government.
Given broad bipartisan support for the majority of provisions in the bill, however, House leaders are hopeful enough senators will approve it. President Donald Trump has endorsed the House-revised bill and urged the Senate to send it to his desk.
Latest News Stories
Dem, GOP candidates begin signature-gathering for 2026
‘All hands on deck:’ Burrow says AWOL Democrats being pursued to be arrested
Dems say EPA cancelling $7B community solar grants ‘illegal,’ but ignore law
Attorney argues IL should honor TX warrants for absconding Dems
WATCH: Legislators urge return to capitol to deal with increasing Illinois energy costs
Parental rights groups concerned over DEI in Denver teacher contract
Homeland Secretary: Pritzker, Johnson are protecting dangerous criminals
Reports: DOJ probing NY AG’s fraud case against Trump
Trump warns of ‘Great Depression’ if appeals court curbs tariff power
Illinois in focus: DHS announces new facility; NFIB urges veto of regulations; minority scholarship lawsuit moves forward
Abbott to call ‘special session after special session’ in response to AWOL Dems
WATCH: Illinois In Focus Daily | Friday Aug. 8th, 2025