FHFA
The Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) announced new proposed housing goals for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac for 2025-2027, reaffirming their mission to purchase mortgages that “responsibly promote equitable access to affordable housing that reaches low- and moderate-income families, minority communities, and other underserved populations.”
On the single-family side, the FHFA proposes that 25% of the purchase mortgages acquired by Fannie and Freddie go to borrowers earning less than 80% area median income, a drop from the 28% required in the current housing goals.
FHFA also set a new goal for very low-income purchases (borrowers earning less than 50% AMI) at 6%, down from 7% in the current plans. The income refinance goal of 26% as proposed is unchanged, as is the purchase sub-goal for low-income census tracts at 4%. The minority census tracts home purchase goal as proposed for 2025-2027 is 12%, up from the current 10%.
Latest Posts
Freddie Mac launches new quality control platform
Nov 17, 2025Known as Quality Control Advisor Plus, the platform consolidates previously separate QC systems and uses technology to automate the review and remediation of delivered loans.
-
FHFA eyes assumable and portable mortgages, raising questions for lenders
Nov 12, 2025 -
WSJ: Fannie Mae officials fired amid mortgage fraud probe
Nov 12, 2025 -
CIC Credit joins FICO’s direct license initiative
Nov 12, 2025 -
How much would a 50-year mortgage cost homebuyers?
Nov 09, 2025 -
Mortgage industry backs LLPA changes but is divided over priorities
Nov 05, 2025 -
Habib’s proposal to FHFA would bring LLPA relief for second homes, cash-out refis
Nov 04, 2025 -
FHFA inspector general role vacant after reported ouster of Joe Allen
Nov 03, 2025 -
Fannie Mae cuts 62 jobs under FHFA’s push to streamline operations
Oct 31, 2025 -
Debate heats up around GSEs’ potentially larger role as MBS buyers
Oct 30, 2025 -
Real estate leaders praise federal housing action, stress first-time buyer help
Oct 30, 2025 -
Freddie Mac’s earnings slowly ticking back up amid credit losses
Oct 30, 2025