The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development is accepting comments on proposed standardization of loan application forms, which could open up the market for manufactured home products.
In a draft letter submitted this week
The FHA, a unit of HUD, has
"FHA believes these changes will encourage greater lender participation in the Title I program," the draft letter said.
Applicants for manufactured-home and property improvement loans are currently required to use a form specific for each product type. FHA's proposal would replace the two separate forms with the application commonly used for conventional loans insured by the government-sponsored enterprises, alongside a HUD-specific Title I addendum.
Adoption of the industry-standard URLA would simplify the lending process for factory-built homes, "enabling lenders to use existing origination system technology to collect borrower data, which eliminates the financial burden of acquiring multiple software licenses," FHA said.
With the U.S. facing an
HUD itself has been at the head of the charge
Last year, HUD also introduced an office of manufactured housing programs as an independent unit falling under the jurisdiction of the FHA commissioner.
In another sign of recognition of the likely growth the segment will have, the Federal Housing Finance Agency unveiled a
In analysis of some of the initial data released by the FHFA, the Urban Institute this week found manufactured property prices growing at "nearly identical rates as those for site-built homes" between 2000 and 2024.
In 2023, almost 1.1 million prefabricated homes were shipped across the country, according to U.S. Census Bureau data. States with the greatest supply of manufactured units in the U.S. — Texas, North Carolina and Florida — accounted for over one quarter of all shipments over the past thirty years. The three states are among those that have generally benefited the most from price appreciation.