Where is the the FBI’s “New” Headquarters in Washington
After more than 50 years on Pennsylvania Avenue, the FBI is preparing to shut the doors on one of Washington’s most recognizable federal buildings: the J. Edgar Hoover Building, the bureau’s headquarters since 1975.
In late December 2025, FBI Director Kash Patel said the Hoover Building will be permanently closed, and the bureau will remain in Washington, D.C.—but at a different address.
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| Ronald Reagan Building - 1300 Pennsylvania Ave NW |
Where is the FBI’s “new” headquarters?
The bureau’s next headquarters location is the Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center, a massive federal complex at 1300 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Washington, DC.
In other words, the FBI isn’t moving to the suburbs right now. It’s moving down the street—staying close to the Justice Department, the White House corridor, federal courts, and major transit lines. Several outlets reporting the announcement describe this as the bureau’s plan to shift personnel into existing office space rather than wait years for a brand-new campus to be built.
Why close the Hoover Building?
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| The J Edgar Hoover building, in 2024 in Washington DC |
The short answer is that the Hoover Building is old, inefficient, and expensive to maintain. The longer answer is that it has been the center of a two-decade tug-of-war over what a modern FBI headquarters should look like—secure setbacks, modern mechanical systems, room for labs and cyber teams, and space that supports today’s mission.
Patel’s framing is blunt: after years of failed attempts to rebuild or relocate, the FBI is choosing a faster, cheaper solution by moving into a different building that already exists.
The twist: What happened to the Greenbelt, Maryland plan?
If you’ve heard that the FBI was headed to Greenbelt, Maryland, you weren’t imagining it. In November 2023, the U.S. General Services Administration (GSA) publicly selected a 61-acre site in Greenbelt as the location for a future FBI headquarters campus.
But in 2025, that long-running plan ran into a major reversal. Reports and official filings describe a shift away from Greenbelt in favor of the Reagan Building in D.C., triggering sharp backlash from Maryland leaders who saw Greenbelt as a once-in-a-generation economic anchor.
Maryland’s attorney general and Prince George’s County later filed suit challenging the decision to abandon the Greenbelt project and redirect resources elsewhere, underscoring how politically and financially consequential the headquarters choice has become.
So… is this a “new headquarters” or a temporary fix?
Right now, the most accurate way to describe it is: a headquarters move without new construction. Patel’s plan is to close Hoover and relocate headquarters functions to the Reagan Building—keeping the FBI in D.C. while sidestepping a timeline that, critics argued, could push a purpose-built campus well into the 2030s.
What remains less clear is the long-term endpoint: whether the Reagan Building becomes the FBI’s durable home for decades, or whether it’s a bridge to a future campus if legal, budget, or political conditions change. Some coverage emphasizes that details like exact space allocation and a firm move schedule have not been fully spelled out publicly.
What happens to the Hoover Building now?
That question is already drawing attention in D.C. real estate and federal planning circles. The Hoover Building sits on some of the most valuable federal land in the city, and any next step—redevelopment, major renovation, or demolition—will be debated loudly.
For now, the only definitive statement is the most newsworthy one: the Hoover headquarters is set to close permanently as the FBI shifts its center of gravity to the Reagan Building.
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