(UNITED STATES) The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development has imposed a sweeping HUD policy change that, as of May 25, 2025, bars most non-permanent residents from accessing FHA‑insured mortgages. The shift—laid out in Mortgagee Letter 2025-09—removes FHA loan eligibility for visa holders, including workers on H‑1B and L‑1 visas and students on F‑1 status, unless they hold lawful permanent resident status. It applies nationwide across all FHA programs and affects borrowers, lenders, and immigrant‑heavy housing markets that relied on FHA’s low down payment entry point.
According to analysis by VisaVerge.com, the impact will be felt most in areas where first‑time buyers with mixed‑status households once turned to FHA for flexible credit standards and down payments as low as 3.5%. Now, unless an applicant is a U.S. citizen, a lawful permanent resident with USCIS documentation, or a citizen of Micronesia, the Marshall Islands, or Palau, FHA financing is off the table.

HUD released the change on March 26, 2025, with FHA case‑number compliance required for case numbers assigned on or after May 25, 2025. The restriction covers Title II single‑family forward mortgages—such as 203(b) and 203(k) loans—along with Title I property improvement and manufactured home loans and Home Equity Conversion Mortgages (HECM). Non‑credit qualifying streamline refinances are also subject to the same status checks.
Lenders must document citizenship or permanent resident status with USCIS‑issued records; a Social Security card alone no longer proves eligibility. HUD moved in tandem with the Department of Homeland Security, signing a data‑sharing Memorandum of Understanding in March 2025 that requires lenders to depend on immigration records to confirm status. The agency says the move follows policy direction in President Trump’s February 19, 2025 executive order “Ending Taxpayer Subsidization of Open Borders,” which instructs federal agencies to prioritize benefits for U.S. citizens and green card holders.
The new rule reverses previous Biden‑era guidance that had allowed some non‑permanent residents—including DACA recipients with valid work authorization and Social Security numbers—to access FHA insurance. Housing groups say the reversal closes a path that helped many working families, especially where private mortgage insurance pricing or tight credit made conventional financing difficult. HUD officials, however, frame the decision as a taxpayer fairness issue.
“There will be no more illegal aliens getting HUD‑backed home loans… It is unconscionable for those who play by the rules and work hard to purchase a home.” — HUD Secretary Scott Turner
While FHA did not historically track detailed residency categories, mortgage investors and large lenders are already retooling their pipelines to reject ineligible applications early and avoid case‑number assignments that could violate the policy.
Policy Changes Overview
At the core of the HUD policy change is a strict definition of who is eligible. Eligible borrowers are only:
– U.S. citizens
– Lawful permanent residents (green card holders) with USCIS documentation
– Citizens of the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, or the Republic of Palau
Everyone else—non‑permanent residents without green cards—now falls outside FHA’s insured umbrella. That includes:
– Holders of work, study, and other temporary visas (e.g., H‑1B, L‑1, F‑1)
– People with pending asylum or refugee cases
– DACA recipients who previously might have qualified with an Employment Authorization Document and a Social Security number
The rule applies to all FHA‑insured channels:
– Title II forward mortgages (including 203(b) purchase loans and 203(k) renovation loans)
– Title I loans for property improvements and manufactured homes
– HECM reverse mortgages
– Non‑credit qualifying streamline refinances
To enforce the new bar, lenders must:
– Verify status using USCIS‑approved documents
– Record citizenship responses on each Uniform Residential Loan Application (URLA)
– Understand that a Social Security card alone is no longer sufficient
Lenders that fail to follow the verification steps risk insurability issues and compliance findings when FHA audits files.
Timing and Case‑Number Rule
- Bright line: Any FHA case number assigned on or after May 25, 2025 must meet the new standards.
- Applicants who started the process earlier but did not secure a case number before that date fall under the stricter rule.
- Non‑permanent residents who already hold FHA loans cannot use FHA for future transactions, including streamline refinances or new purchase loans.
- The rule does not call for accelerated foreclosures or loan recalls, but it closes common refinance paths immigrants used when improving credit or dropping mortgage insurance.
HUD’s cooperation with DHS deepens status checks and creates a clear data trail for enforcement. FHA now expects USCIS‑source evidence, limiting exceptions loan officers once used to include strong visa holders in FHA deals. Mortgage investors and banks are circulating compliance alerts, warning brokers that files without solid USCIS evidence will not reach underwriting.
The National Association of Realtors highlights uneven market consequences. Because FHA does not collect detailed residency data, precise shares of affected borrowers are hard to measure. Still, industry experience shows FHA has been a lifeline for many first‑time buyers in immigrant communities; if that lifeline disappears, purchase timelines could lengthen and rental demand could rise as buyers seek alternatives.
Impact on Applicants and Lenders
For visa holders, the practical outcome is stark: FHA loan eligibility is gone unless and until they become lawful permanent residents. This removes a product known for easier credit overlays and lower down payments (often 3.5%).
Consequences for different groups:
– H‑1B and L‑1 workers: Those with mid‑700s credit scores and steady employment may now need conventional financing or portfolio loans. Conforming underwriting is less forgiving for international credit histories or short U.S. credit length.
– F‑1 students and OPT graduates: FHA access that some secured via work authorization and a Social Security number is now closed. These borrowers will need specialized “foreign national” or portfolio products.
– Mixed‑status households: Structuring around a U.S. citizen or permanent resident co‑borrower remains an option but shifts debt ratios and qualification to that borrower’s credit and income.
Operational impacts on lenders and brokers:
– Intake must include the citizenship selection on the URLA for every FHA submission.
– Loan officers should discuss status early to avoid issuing pre‑approvals that cannot convert to FHA case numbers.
– Training, pricing tools, and automation require updates to steer ineligible customers to alternatives.
– Compliance teams must implement guardrails in loan origination systems to flag citizenship answers and block FHA program codes unless proper status is documented.
– Underwriters will maintain tick lists for acceptable USCIS proofs (while avoiding naming specific forms publicly as documentation standards evolve).
Refinancing effects:
– Homeowners who obtained FHA loans as non‑permanent residents before the change cannot use FHA for future transactions.
– They must consider conventional products, portfolio loans, or waiting for permanent residency to regain FHA access.
Loan Options for Visa Holders After the FHA Shift
Visa holders still have pathways, though with tradeoffs. Mortgage advisors recommend early planning, comparing offers, and thorough documentation.
Key alternatives:
1. Conventional loans
– Require higher credit scores and prefer lower debt‑to‑income ratios.
– Mortgage insurance costs vary by credit and LTV.
– Some lenders accept alternative credit documentation, but policies are less flexible than FHA historically.
2. Portfolio loans
– Lenders keep loans in their portfolio and can design programs for non‑permanent residents.
– Often accept foreign income/assets; pricing is higher and down payments commonly 15%–30%.
3. Foreign national loan programs
– Accept international bank statements and larger gift funds.
– Require larger reserves, higher rates, and tighter appraisals.
4. Seller financing or private loans
– Short‑term solutions that require legal review and an exit plan.
5. State and local housing programs
– Rules vary; many now tie eligibility to permanent status. Check local requirements early.
Recommended borrower actions:
– Work with a mortgage advisor experienced with non‑permanent residents.
– Consider structuring loans around an eligible co‑borrower in mixed‑status households.
– Expect candid status conversations and status documentation at the outset.
Typical intake path lenders now use:
1. Application and disclosures — URLA completed with citizenship section; FHA disqualification explained if applicable.
2. Status documentation — USCIS evidence collected for lawful permanent residents.
3. Eligibility screening — If ineligible for FHA, lender evaluates alternative products.
4. Underwriting — Alternative paths require extra documentation of income, assets, and sometimes international records.
5. Closing plan — Finalize product, cash‑to‑close, and timelines; some aim to refinance later after status change.
Compliance changes include scripts for sensitive conversations, file checklists documenting status, and marketing pivots in FHA‑dependent markets toward conventional and portfolio products.
Practical Tips for Borrowers Post‑Change
- Save larger down payments to improve pricing and offset stricter underwriting.
- Build U.S. credit history: maintain on‑time payments and low credit utilization.
- Keep clear documentation of income and assets, including records of funds transferred from abroad.
- Map visa timelines and employment contracts to ensure loan term alignment with status expectations.
- Ask lenders for side‑by‑side comparisons of conventional, portfolio, and foreign national options, including all fees and prepayment penalties.
Political and Market Context
The rule reflects a policy shift from earlier Biden‑era guidance. Supporters argue it protects taxpayers and directs FHA resources to those with permanent ties. Critics warn it will slow homeownership growth in communities building roots while awaiting permanent status.
HUD plans to incorporate residency requirements into a future update of HUD Handbook 4000.1
, the FHA Single Family Housing Policy Handbook, to provide a single reference for lenders and auditors. In the meantime, Mortgagee Letter 2025-09 and lender bulletins are the guiding documents. HUD and DHS coordination signals continuing verification pressure and likely ongoing clarifications on edge cases (e.g., mixed‑status households, conversions to permanent residency mid‑process).
As of September 1, 2025, no exemptions or reversals have been announced. Stakeholders expect more lender FAQs and policy clarifications, and mortgage executives anticipate enhanced enforcement and file reviews to ensure case numbers assigned after the effective date match eligible status categories.
For the official policy, review Mortgagee Letter 2025-09 on the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development website: https://www.hud.gov. Borrowers should consult loan officers and, where needed, an immigration attorney about timing for status changes that may open options later.
Key Takeaways
- Effective date: May 25, 2025 — any FHA case number assigned on or after this date must meet the new standards.
- Eligibility limited to: U.S. citizens, lawful permanent residents with USCIS evidence, and citizens of Micronesia, the Marshall Islands, or Palau.
- Critical documentation: USCIS‑issued proof is required; Social Security card alone is insufficient.
- Scope: Applies across all FHA programs (Title II forward mortgages, Title I loans, HECM, and non‑credit qualifying streamline refinances).
- Alternatives: Conventional loans, portfolio loans, foreign national programs, seller financing, and some local housing programs — each with higher costs or stricter requirements.
- Action for borrowers: Plan early, document carefully, save larger down payments, and consult experienced mortgage advisors and immigration attorneys as needed.
The bottom line: As of May 25, 2025, FHA loan eligibility no longer extends to non‑permanent residents, including visa holders without green cards. Lenders must collect citizenship responses on every application and rely on USCIS‑backed proof for eligible borrowers. Visa holders can still pursue homeownership but should expect higher credit standards, larger down payments, and closer scrutiny. Housing markets that rely on FHA at the entry level may experience disruption as buyers and lenders adapt.
This Article in a Nutshell
Mortgagee Letter 2025-09, effective for FHA case numbers assigned on or after May 25, 2025, restricts FHA mortgage eligibility to U.S. citizens, lawful permanent residents with USCIS documentation, and citizens of Micronesia, the Marshall Islands, or Palau. The rule removes access for most non‑permanent residents — including H‑1B, L‑1, F‑1 visa holders and many DACA recipients — and applies across all FHA programs, including Title II forward mortgages, Title I loans, HECM reverse mortgages, and non‑credit qualifying streamline refinances. HUD and DHS established data sharing to require USCIS proof; Social Security cards alone no longer establish eligibility. Lenders must document citizenship on the URLA and adapt intake, underwriting, and compliance systems. Visa holders can pursue alternatives such as conventional, portfolio, foreign‑national, or private financing, but these typically require higher credit scores, larger down payments, and stricter documentation. HUD plans to update Handbook 4000.1; no exemptions were announced as of September 1, 2025.