Introducing Market Reports—search the largest database of commercial real estate market reports.

AOC Introduces $30B Plan For Federal Social Housing Authority

AOC introduced the Homes Act of 2024, which proposes a federal social housing authority with a $30B annual budget.
AOC Introduces $30B Plan For Federal Social Housing Authority
  • Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Sen. Tina Smith introduced a bill to create a $30B federal social housing authority.
  • The proposed agency would develop and finance affordable housing projects, focusing on co-ops, community land trusts, and public housing.
  • If passed, the Homes Act of 2024 would generate 1.25M housing units over 10 years, targeting areas hardest hit by housing shortages.
Key Takeaways

According to Bloomberg, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Sen. Tina Smith introduced the Homes Act of 2024, proposing the creation of a federal social housing authority with a $30 billion annual budget to address the affordable housing crisis.

How It Works

The bill seeks to offer a public alternative to private developers to meet the growing need for affordable housing, particularly for low-income households. 

CRE MBA banner with text 'Advance your career

The new agency would provide financing and development for resident-owned co-ops, community land trusts, and public housing projects.

The proposed social housing authority would operate under HUD, offering upfront grants and low-interest loans. 

Projects financed through the agency would set aside 40% of units for extremely low-income households and 30% for low-income households, ensuring affordability for decades.

Global, Local Models

The bill draws on successful social housing programs in Austria and Denmark but is designed for U.S. conditions. 

It builds on local nonprofit housing strategies seen in New York City and Vermont, positioning it as a public option for affordable housing development.

Challenges Ahead

While the plan represents a bold effort to address the affordable housing crisis, the $30B annual funding requirement faces tough odds in Congress. 

Advocates argue, however, that the proposal’s scale is essential to meet the growing housing demand and secure long-term affordability.

Related To
RECENT NEWSLETTERS
View All
Class A Occupancy Hits Two-Year High, But Class B Still Leads
June 13, 2025
READ MORE
NYC Bans Broker Fees for Renters—But Landlords Are Hiking Rents Fast
June 12, 2025
READ MORE
Starwood Property Fund Still Under Pressure With $850M in Redemption Requests
June 11, 2025
READ MORE
CRE Returns Outpace Housing for the First Time Since 2022
June 10, 2025
READ MORE
Build-to-Rent Is Reshaping the Future of Multifamily Investing
Why Now Is the Smartest Time to Be in Multifamily Development
How Multifamily Operators Are Turning Vacancy Into $23K/Month
CRE Daily - No Cap

podcast

No CAP by CRE Daily

No Cap by CRE Daily is a weekly podcast offering an unfiltered look into commercial real estate’s biggest trends and influential figures.

Join 65k+
  • operators
  • developers
  • brokers
  • owners
  • landlords
  • investors
  • lenders

who start their day with CRE Daily.

The latest news and trends in commercial real estate delivered to your inbox. Get smarter about what matters in just 5-minutes or less.