Citizenship and immigration eligibility rules remain one of the most misunderstood compliance areas in HUD assisted housing. Multifamily owners and operators must navigate a complex mix of federal statutes, regulatory requirements, and HUD handbook guidance when determining eligibility for assistance under Section 214. Misinterpreting these requirements can result in improper admissions, incorrect subsidy calculations, and findings during Management and Occupancy Reviews.
This program provides a practical and compliance focused breakdown of how citizenship and eligible immigration status requirements actually work in HUD assisted multifamily programs. Participants will walk through the key regulatory principles that govern who may receive housing assistance, how mixed status households must be handled, and what documentation owners are required to obtain and maintain in tenant files. The session will also clarify common misconceptions surrounding noncitizen eligibility, including the important distinction between individuals who may legally reside in the unit and those who are eligible to receive housing subsidy.
The webinar also addresses the operational side of compliance. Attendees will learn how to properly verify immigration status using the SAVE system, understand the documentation requirements tied to various immigration categories, and apply HUD rules to determine whether assistance must be prorated. Special attention will be given to handling verification delays, avoiding discrimination risks, and properly coding citizenship status on the HUD 50059.
By the end of the session, participants will have a clear framework for applying HUD’s citizenship and immigration requirements consistently, accurately, and in a way that protects both program integrity and fair housing obligations.
Webinar Objectives
This program addresses the confusion many housing providers face when determining eligible immigration status for HUD housing assistance. Staff often struggle with identifying acceptable documentation, understanding SAVE verification results, and distinguishing between individuals who can live in a unit versus those who can receive subsidy. The training explains how to apply HUD’s Section 214 requirements correctly and how to avoid common mistakes that lead to compliance findings. It also provides clear guidance on handling mixed status households, properly prorating assistance, managing verification delays without penalizing residents, and ensuring file documentation supports eligibility determinations.
Webinar Agenda
- Uncertainty about which immigration statuses qualify for HUD housing assistance
- Confusion about SAVE verification responses and what they actually mean
- Improper handling of mixed status households and proration calculations
- Incorrect or incomplete tenant file documentation related to citizenship verification
- Fear of violating fair housing or national origin protections while conducting immigration verification
Webinar Highlights
Participants will be able to:
- Understand which immigration statuses meet HUD’s definition of eligible noncitizen for housing assistance
- Apply the correct process for verifying immigration status using the SAVE system
- Identify when subsidy must be prorated for mixed status households
- Document citizenship and immigration eligibility correctly in tenant files and on the HUD 50059
- Implement compliant procedures that verify eligibility while avoiding discrimination risks
Who Should Attend
- Executive Directors of Affordable and Assisted Housing Properties
- Owners and Managing Partners of HUD Multifamily Pro3perties
- Asset Managers and Portfolio Managers
- Compliance Directors and Compliance Managers
- Property Managers and Regional Property Managers
- Occupancy Specialists and Leasing Coordinators
- Accounting Managers and Finance Directors involved in rent calculations
- Public Housing Authority Staff working with PBRA RAD or Section 8 layered properties
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