Authored by Jeremy Portnoy via RealClearInvestigations,
Topline: The federal government is unable to verify that $5.8 billion in rental assistance paid to more than 204,000 recipients in 2024 was not fraudulent, according to the Department of Housing and Urban Developmentās latest annual report.
Key facts: HUD spent $15.2 billion on project-based rental assistance in 2024, which pays local housing authorities or private businesses and nonprofits to build affordable housing. That included $4.3 billion in āquestionable paymentsā to nearly 113,000 groups that may have been ineligible for funding, according to the financial report ā a mistake rate of over 26%.
HUD also gave $33.9 billion directly to families to help with rent payments, but the financial report claims $1.5 billion sent to almost 92,000 people was āquestionable.ā The estimates include $77 million paid to 29,715 dead people and $150.3 million paid to 9,472 people with invalid Social Security numbers.
But most of the flagged payments ā $5.2 billion ā were sent to people or businesses with inactive registrations in the System for Award Management. The federal government is generally not supposed to pay money to anyone not registered on SAM.gov. The online platform allows officials to ensure that a business is legitimate, not a fictional company trying to steal money from the government.Ā
Most of the recipients that did not register on SAM.gov were likely legitimate businesses that mistakenly did not follow federal procedure, not organized criminals intentionally breaking the law. Contrary to viral claims on social media, the payments are not all known to be fraudulent.
Still, HUD would have been able to better screen applicants if it was using the Treasuryās Do Not Pay list, which tracks entities with missing paperwork, debt to the government, a history of fraud and more.
The software agreement that gave HUD access to the list expired in 2019, during President Donald Trumpās first term. It remained inactive throughout Joe Bidenās time as president and was not renewed until May 2025, according to HUDās inspector general, who blamed both presidents for āweak governance around Do Not Pay implementationā in a May 2025 report.
In 2024, HUD sent $212 million to 11 entities on the Do Not Pay list, the inspector general found.
Search all federal, state and local salaries and vendor spending with the worldās largest government spending database at OpenTheBooks.com.Ā
Background: In its latest financial report, HUD relied on what it called āinnovative methods and advanced analyticsā to analyze millions of payment records, unlike past audits that use a sample of a few hundred records.
HUD also announced it will publish full estimates of improper payments from its two largest rental assistance programs, as required by the Payment Integrity Information Act of 2019. The estimates have never been completed because of āa lack of necessary data, no effective technology platform for collecting supporting documentation, and unsuccessful attempts to manually review information,ā according to the financial report.
Limited estimates released in 2024 identified just $45 million in unknown payments from HUDās rental assistance programs.
Summary: Every oversight gap in safety net programs makes it more difficult to ensure public funds are reaching the people who are legally entitled to them.Ā
The #WasteOfTheDay is brought to you by the forensic auditors at OpenTheBooks.com
Tyler Durden
Tue, 01/13/2026 – 21:25






