Change description : 2025-08-06 00:05:00: Details of additional funding into the Affordable Homes Programme 2021 to 2026 have been added. Made it clear that additional bridge funding is for bids starting on site in 2026 / 2027 and completed by 31 March 2029. [Guidance and regulation]
Affordable Homes Programme 2021 to 2026: bid for funding
Information for housing providers about funding for the development of affordable housing through the Affordable Homes Programme (AHP) 2021 to 2026.
What the funding is for
The Affordable Homes Programme (AHP)2021 to 2026 provides grant funding to support the capital costs of developing affordable housing in England.
The National Planning Policy Framework defines affordable housing as housing for sale or rent for those whose needs are not met by the market.
Homes England has £8.03£9.23 billion of government funding to deliver at least 100,000 affordable homes outside of London by the end of March 2029. This is split between the AHP 2021 to 2026 and the Bridge Fund.
AHP 2021 to 2026
Originally the funding allocated to Homes England to deliver affordable homes via the AHP 2021 to 2026 was £7.39 billion. At the Autumn Statement in October 2024 an additional £400 million was allocated followed by a second top-up of £300 million in February 2025 bringing the total to £8.03 million.
Bridge Fund
On 25 March 2025, the government announced an injection of a further £2 billion additional funding into the AHP 2021 to 2026. Homes England’s share of this bridge fund is £1.2 billion and it is in addition to the 2 earlier top-ups. This bridge funding provides more certainty and confidence for our partners to deliver the existing AHP pipeline and other new business opportunities by acting as a down payment to support the new Social Housing Affordable Homes Programme 2026 to 2036.
We’re committed to working closely with a diverse range of partners – both existing and those we haven’t previously worked with – to maximise the impact of this funding.
funding. This guidance is about bidding for funding on a scheme-by-scheme basis, known as the Continuous Market Engagement (CME) funding route.
In February 2023 and June 2023, the funding parameters of the AHP 2021 to 2026 changed in response to challenges in the economy and housing market, and to support of the government’s affordable housing priorities. This is explained further below.
In addition, between 6 November and 17 November we invited partners to submit proposals for affordable housing grant to support near-term delivery of affordable housing where it meets AHP 2021 to 2026 additionality requirements. This was in response to market sentiment which indicated an increased number of investment opportunities. Individual proposals were required to support the delivery of a minimum of 500 additional affordable homes. Terms were secured through the existing contractual framework in place for current grant recipients and a CME contract for new entrants.
Funding for affordable housing in London
If you want funding to develop affordable housing in London, apply through the Greater London Authority.
Types of housing and tenure supported by the funding
AHP funding is primarily for the supply of new-build affordable housing. It supports:
homes for rent
homes for ownership (we refer to this as ‘routes into home ownership’)
homes in rural settlements and supported housing for older, disabled or vulnerable people
Read the Capital Funding Guide for detailed rules and guidance on each type of housing and tenure (the conditions under which someone can occupy a home).
Homes for rent
AHP funding supports the supply of homes across England (except London) for:
Affordable Rent – where the rent is up to 80% of the current market rate
Social Rent – where the rent is based on a government formula
Social Rent is a priority for the AHP funding and Social Rent-specific grant rates can be accessed in all parts of the country subject to meeting our value-for-money assessments.
Rent to Buy – homes let to working households at a below-market rent level so they can save for a deposit to buy their first home
We recognise that some partners may have a reduced appetite for market-sale risk associated with delivering home ownership tenures. So we’ll be flexible in our assessment of the strategic fit of proposals with routes into home ownership.
Acquisition of homes built for market sale
We expect most schemes to deliver homes through new land-led delivery (building homes on land you’ve acquired for the purpose). However, we’ll consider proposals that include homes that were originally built for market sale where this:
is near-term delivery and will help keep the market moving – for example, through the acquisition of unsold new-build homes or through funding future new-build delivery
will contribute towards the delivery of supported housing, including through remodelling or improving existing housing stock
Other types of development
The funding also supports the development of:
Regeneration – to fund replacement homes where they are being delivered alongside net additional affordable housing. See below for more details.
Proposals to deliver replacement affordable homes will need to:
unlock net additional homes, alongside the replacement homes
start on site by 31 March 2025
complete by the relevant contractual longstop date
minimise the amount of grant requested per home
demonstrate certainty of delivery
align with the priorities of the relevant housing authority
align with the existing strategic objectives of the AHP
All proposals, including those from Strategic Partners, must be submitted through the CME route. Strategic Partners must submit proposals for the scheme specific level of grant required. Approved schemes will then form part of the existing Strategic Partnerships Grant Agreements.
Supporting statements will also be required in a standard template that can be requested from your usual Homes England contact or by emailing AHPFAQ@homesengland.gov.uk .
Funding decisions will be made on a regular basis up until the end of March 2025, subject to availability of resources.
If you have any queries or would like to discuss a potential scheme, contact AHPFAQ@homesengland.gov.uk or speak to your existing contact in the Affordable Housing Grants Team.
The funding’s wider strategic objectives
The funding supports some wider strategic objectives, including:
use of the National Design Guide, which is part of the government’s collection of planning practice guidance within the National Planning Policy Framework
improvement of the energy efficiency and sustainability of new affordable housing
use of small and medium-sized enterprise contractors
We welcome proposals from existing and new partners, including:
charities
community organisations
for-profit housing providers
housing associations
housing developers
local authorities
You can bid for funding as an individual organisation or as part of a partnership or consortium.
Landlords of rented homes built with AHP 2021 to 2026 funding must, by law, be a registered provider. This means you must be registered with the Regulator of Social Housing (RSH), a process which can take at least 6 months. All registered providers are also required to be members of the Housing Ombudsman Service.
If your organisation is an ‘unregistered body’ (not registered with the RSH), you can still bid for funding to develop homes for rent – but once you’ve completed them, you must pass on ownership and management to a registered provider. Unregistered bodies can, however, own and manage Shared Ownership homes. Unregistered bodies can sign up to the Housing Ombudsman Service on a voluntary basis.
When to bid
The Continuous Market Engagement (CME) funding route allows you to bid for funding for one or more development schemes at any time during the programme while funding is available.
SchemesInitially schemes funded through CME must:had to:
start on site byins 302026 September/ 20252027
be complete by 31 March 2026
The additional bridge funding announced in March 2025 is for bids that will achieve
We expect you to take all reasonable measures to minimise the amount of grant you’re requesting (cost minimisation). Our primary assessment metric is grant per home which we benchmark against national, local and scheme-type averages to ensure bids are competitive for costs and outputs.
We need to ensure schemes can be delivered within the funding timeframe. When we assess deliverability, we take into account the progress you’ve made with your scheme (for example, with planning permission and land ownership) at the point of bidding. We also assess past performance where relevant, and how bids support local authorities in meeting local housing needs.
Partner qualification and contract for funding
Once you’ve secured a funding allocation, you must meet certain requirements before you can receive the funding.
Investment partner qualification and due diligence checks
You must be a qualified Investment Partner to receive grant from Homes England, unless you’re in a consortium – in which case, only the lead organisation of the consortium needs to be an Investment Partner.
Investment Partner status confirms you:
are eligible to be a partner (for example, registered providers must be compliant with all standards set by the Regulator of Social Housing)
have the financial and technical capacity to deliver your proposed scheme(s)
have financial and legal ‘good standing’ (for example – you have the full power and authority to enter into an agreement with Homes England)
You can apply for Investment Partner status:
at the same time as you submit a bid for funding under the AHP or;
after your bid has been successful and you’ve secured a funding allocation
However, we’ll only assess your application after you’ve secured a funding allocation.
The Regulator of Social Housing will provide advice to Homes England on whether any proposal to award grant to a registered provider will have an adverse impact on the Regulator’s published judgement on the organisation’s governance and financial viability rating. Registered providers may be asked to provide additional information to the Regulator to inform the assessment as necessary.
Grant agreement
Investment Partners need to enter into a new supply agreement with us. This is known as the grant agreement (or contract). You can read examples of the AHP grant agreement.
If you’re a registered provider, we’ll pay you the grant when you achieve certain delivery milestones. In most cases, we pay:
40% at site acquisition
35% at start on site
25% at practical completion
There may be different payment arrangements in place for some types of scheme. In some instances, you may be able to claim up to 95% of the payment at start on site.
CME payments for unregistered bodies (URBs)
If you’re an URB, we’ll pay you 100% of the funding at practical completion of the scheme.
Alternatively, if you provide satisfactory forms of security you can ask us to pay you:
40% at acquisition
35% at start on site (or 75% if you don’t claim at acquisition)
25% at practical completion
If you choose this option, we’ll also carry out any necessary due diligence checks on any other organisation providing the security.
Reporting on progress
You must report on delivery at regular intervals. This includes providing data and metrics relating to the strategic priorities of the programme.
We also carry out an annual ‘compliance audit’ on a sample of schemes to ensure partners have met our requirements. We’ll let you know if we’ve selected you for an audit.
We publish information relating to the costs and spending of the schemes we fund through the Affordable Homes Programme. As a condition of funding, there are contractual obligations for partners around the sharing and publishing of this information.
You must supply information about development costs and agree we can verify this at any stage (this is known as an ‘open book basis’).
If we award you funding of more than £3 million, you must publish details of spending over £500 relating to your development schemes on a quarterly basis. We may also publish this information.
Contact us
If you have any queries or would like to discuss a potential bid, contact us at AHPFAQ@homesengland.gov.uk or speak to your Homes England contract manager in the Affordable Housing Grants Team.
Updated to show the funding currently allocated to the programme and the latest affordable homes delivery target.
30 April 2024
Full refresh of the Affordable Homes Programme (AHP) 2021 to 2026 guidance.
11 December 2023
Added allocation summary
27 November 2023
Content was updated in the November update to remove EOI contact email and to make the standard contact process clearer,
20 November 2023
Amended the November update to show that the expression of interest has closed.
6 November 2023
November update added to publicise a short-term bid inviting partners to submit proposals for affordable housing grants.
27 June 2023
A June update has been added highlighting changes to the Affordable Homes Programme 2021 to 2026.
15 December 2020
Updated to include information about continuous market engagement (CME) funding applications and links to detailed guidance documents, including assessment process, criteria and terms of agreement.