Housing Policy Research Grant Notice of Funding Opportunity
🏛 Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)
✓ Free, no account · Source: Grants.gov · Last verified Jul 16, 2026
Can you apply?
This grant is for researchers, academic institutions, and nonprofit organizations interested in conducting policy research on housing issues. The HUD Housing Policy Research Grant supports empirical research that produces new knowledge to inform federal housing policy and practice. Eligible applicants typically include universities, colleges, research institutions, and nonprofits with demonstrated capacity to conduct rigorous research. The geographic scope is national, and activities supported include original research on topics such as housing affordability, housing discrimination, homelessness, community development, fair housing, and other housing-related policy questions. Applicants must have institutional support and research infrastructure to conduct high-quality, peer-reviewed research.
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Program description
The Housing Policy Research Grant Notice of Funding Opportunity provides competitive awards to eligible applicants, including institutions of higher education, nonprofit, and for-profit institutions. Awards made through this NOFO will fund quality research projects that: (1) contribute to knowledge about housing policy in the United States; and (2) generate actionable insights and evidence that can applied by policymakers and communities in the short-term.
Who can apply
Eligible applicants
- 501(c)(3) Public Charity
- City / Municipal Government
- Colleges (all higher ed)
- County Government
- Nonprofits
- Private University
- Public University
- Small Business (SBA-defined)
- State Government
Demographic focus
How to apply
Application links
Key dates & requirements
Required documents
- SF-424 (Application for Federal Assistance)
- Project narrative (typically 25-30 pages)
- Detailed research methodology and work plan
- Budget narrative and justification
- Organizational capacity statement
- Letters of institutional support and commitment
- Biographical sketches of key personnel
- Resumes of research team members
- Data access letters (if using restricted datasets)
- Privacy/IRB documentation (if human subjects involved)
Program contact
- 👤 Department of Housing and Urban Development
- 📧 researchpartnerships@hud.gov
- 📞 202-402-2440
Funding track record
No recent recipient data available for CFDA 14.536 in our database.
This can happen for newer programs, programs that use non-standard award types (loans, direct payments, fellowships), or those funded through sub-agencies under different codes.
FAQ
Who is eligible to apply for this grant?
Eligible applicants typically include institutions of higher education, nonprofit research organizations, and other entities with demonstrated research capacity. Individuals must apply through an institution or organization.
What is the deadline and application window?
Applications are due June 1, 2026. The application window opens April 30, 2026, giving applicants approximately one month to prepare and submit their proposals.
What types of research activities are supported?
This grant supports original empirical research on housing policy issues, including but not limited to housing affordability, discrimination, homelessness, fair housing, community development, and housing market analysis.
How competitive is this grant?
HUD research grants are typically very competitive. Success requires strong methodological rigor, clear policy relevance, a qualified research team, and institutional support. Preliminary data or pilot findings strengthen applications.
What is the typical funding range?
Funding amounts vary, but HUD research grants typically range from $50,000 to several hundred thousand dollars depending on project scope and complexity. Check the NOFO for specific year funding information.
💡 Tips for applicants
- Establish clear policy relevance: Frame your research question in terms of how findings will directly inform HUD policy decisions or improve housing outcomes for vulnerable populations.
- Demonstrate methodological rigor: Use sound research design (RCTs, quasi-experimental, longitudinal, or robust qualitative methods). Include a detailed data analysis plan and timeline.
- Show institutional commitment: Secure letters of support from your institution's research administration office, include evidence of available resources, and demonstrate access to necessary data or study populations.
- Align with HUD's current priorities: Review recent HUD policy goals and strategic plans. Connect your research to ongoing departmental priorities like housing affordability, equity, or underserved populations.
- Build a strong research team: Include principal investigators with relevant expertise and track records in housing research. Consider including practitioners or stakeholders as collaborators to strengthen real-world applicability.
⚠️ Common mistakes
Applications often fail due to weak policy relevance—reviewers want to see how your research will actually inform HUD decisions, not just contribute to academic knowledge. Another common rejection reason is insufficient methodological detail or overly ambitious scope that cannot be accomplished within the proposed timeline and budget. Finally, weak institutional support or unclear resource commitment signals that the applicant's home institution may not adequately support the research execution.
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