CoverageForm 410-K10-Q8-K13D13G13F

BHM Bluerock Homes Trust, Inc. - 8-K

Filed Mar 25, 2026. See issuer overview · financials · original on SEC.gov ↗
Accession
0001104659-26-034276
8.01

Item 8.01 - Other Events

15,170 words

ITEM 8.01

OTHER EVENTS

On October 8, 2025,
Bluerock Homes Trust, Inc., a Maryland corporation (the “Company”) filed a registration statement on Form S-11 (Registration
No. 333-290772), which was subsequently declared effective by the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) on December 10,
2025 (the “Registration Statement”). On March 12, 2026, the Company filed Post-Effective Amendment No. 1 on Form S-11
to the Registration Statement pursuant to Section 10(a)(3) of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “Securities
Act”), to update the Registration Statement to include the audited combined consolidated financial statements and the notes thereto
included in the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2025, and certain other information
in such Registration Statement.

The Company is filing this
Current Report on Form 8-K to provide the following information for incorporation by reference into the Registration Statement. The
following information will also be included in the Company’s 2026 Proxy Statement to be filed with the SEC within 120 days of the
fiscal year ended December 31, 2025, and will thereby be incorporated by reference into Part III, Items 10 through 14 of
the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2025.

PART III

Item 10.

Directors, Executive Officers and Corporate Governance .

Our Executive Officers

The individuals
listed as our executive officers below also serve as officers of our Manager. As executive officers of our Manager, they manage our day-to-day
affairs and carry out the directives of our board of directors in the review, selection and recommendation of investment opportunities
and operating acquired investments and monitoring the performance of those investments to ensure that they are consistent with our investment
objectives.

The following
table sets forth our executive officers, followed by biographical information regarding each executive officer who is not also a director.

Name

Age*

Position

R. Ramin Kamfar

62

Chief Executive Officer

Jordan Ruddy

63

President

Ryan S. MacDonald

43

Chief Investment Officer

Christopher J. Vohs

49

Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer

Michael DiFranco

61

Executive Vice President, Operations

Jason Emala

47

Chief Legal Officer and Secretary

*As of April 1, 2026

R. Ramin
Kamfar. Chief Executive Officer. The background and experience of Mr. Kamfar is described below in “Our Board of Directors.”

Jordan
B. Ruddy, President. Mr. Ruddy serves as President of our Manager, and as our President. Mr. Ruddy served as Chief Operating
Officer and President of Bluerock Residential Growth REIT, Inc. from August 2008 to October 2022. In addition, Mr. Ruddy
has served as President of Bluerock Private Real Estate Fund (formerly Bluerock Total Income + Real Estate Fund), as well as co-portfolio
manager of its adviser Bluerock Fund Advisor since October 2013, as President of Bluerock High Income Institutional Credit Fund,
since 2022, and as President of Bluerock Industrial Growth REIT, Inc. and its external manager, Bluerock Industrial Manager, LLC
since 2021. Mr. Ruddy joined Bluerock in 2002 and has continuously served in various senior management capacities for it and its
affiliates. Mr. Ruddy has approximately 30 years of experience in real estate acquisitions, financings, management and dispositions.
Prior to joining Bluerock, Mr. Ruddy served as a real estate investment banker at Banc of America Securities LLC and Smith Barney
Inc., as well as Vice President of Amerimar Enterprises, a real estate company specializing in value-added investments nationwide, where
he managed acquisitions, financings, leasing, asset management and disposition involving over 1.5 million square feet of commercial and
multifamily real estate. Mr. Ruddy received an M.B.A. degree in Finance and Real Estate from The Wharton School of the University
of Pennsylvania, and a B.S. degree with high honors in Economics from the London School of Economics.

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Ryan S.
MacDonald, Chief Investment Officer. Mr. MacDonald serves as Chief Investment Officer of our Manager, and as our Chief Investment
Officer. Mr. MacDonald also currently serves as Co-Chairman of IQHQ, Inc. and on the board of directors for the Townsend Group.
Mr. MacDonald served as the Chief Investment Officer of Bluerock Residential Growth REIT, Inc. from January 2021 to October 2022,
and as its Chief Acquisitions Officer from October 2017 until January 2021. In addition, Mr. MacDonald has served as Chief
Investment Officer of the external manager of Bluerock Industrial Growth REIT, Inc., Bluerock Industrial Manager, LLC, since 2021, and as Portfolio Manager of Bluerock Private Real Estate Fund since August 2025.
Mr. MacDonald joined Bluerock in 2008 and has continuously served in various senior investment capacities. To date with Bluerock,
Mr. MacDonald has been involved with real estate transactions with an aggregate value of approximately $11 billion. Prior to joining
Bluerock, Mr. MacDonald was an Investment Analyst for PNC Realty Investors. Mr. MacDonald received a B.A.in Economics from the
University of Maryland, College Park.

Christopher
J. Vohs, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer. Mr. Vohs serves as Chief Financial Officer of our Manager, and as our Chief Financial
Officer. Mr. Vohs served as Chief Financial Officer of Bluerock Residential Growth REIT, Inc. from October 2017 to October 2022.
In addition, Mr. Vohs has served as Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer of Bluerock Industrial Growth REIT, Inc. and its external
manager, Bluerock Industrial Manager, LLC, since 2021. Mr. Vohs joined Bluerock in July 2010 and has continuously served in
various senior accounting and financial capacities for it and its affiliates. Prior to joining Bluerock, Mr. Vohs served as Corporate
Controller for Roberts Realty Investors, Inc., a public multifamily REIT based in Atlanta, Georgia, from March 2009 to July 2010.
From October 2004 to March 2009, Mr. Vohs worked at Pulte Homes, a nationwide builder of single-family homes, in various
financial roles, including as Internal Audit Manager & Asset Manager and later as Vice President of Finance for Pulte’s
Orlando and Southeast Florida operations. From January 1999 to October 2004, Mr. Vohs worked as an Audit Manager for Deloitte &
Touche, an international professional services firm, where he earned his CPA certification. Mr. Vohs received his B.A. degree in
Accounting from Michigan State University.

Michael
DiFranco, Executive Vice President, Operations. Mr. DiFranco serves as Executive Vice President, Operations of our Manager, and
as our Executive Vice President, Operations. Mr. DiFranco served as Executive Vice President, Operations of Bluerock Residential
Growth REIT, Inc. from November 2018 to October 2022, with responsibility for the operational and financial performance of its
multi- family housing portfolio. Previously, from 2005 to 2016, Mr. DiFranco held several roles of increasing responsibilities with
Apartment & Investment Management Company (NYSE: AIV), including serving four years as Senior Vice President of Financial Operations.
From 2016 to 2018, Mr. DiFranco served as Senior Vice President of Financial Operations with The Irvine Company Apartment Communities,
overseeing Revenue Management, Business Intelligence and Portfolio Management. Mr. DiFranco received a B.A. in Business from Texas
A&M University, College Station, an M.B.A. from The University of Texas at Austin, and an M.S. in Information Systems from The University
of Colorado, Denver.

Jason
Emala, Chief Legal Officer and Secretary. Mr. Emala serves as Chief Legal Officer and Secretary of our Manager, and as our Chief
Legal Officer and Secretary. Mr. Emala has served as Secretary of Bluerock Private Real Estate Fund (formerly Bluerock Total Income
+ Real Estate Fund), as well as General Counsel of both Bluerock Capital Markets and Bluerock Asset Management since May 2018. In
addition, Mr. Emala has served as Secretary of Bluerock High Income Institutional Credit Fund since 2022, and as Secretary of Bluerock
Industrial Growth REIT, Inc. and its external manager, Bluerock Industrial Manager, LLC and as Chief Legal Officer of its external
manager, Bluerock Industrial Manager, LLC, since 2021. Mr. Emala has served as General Counsel of Bluerock since October 2022.
Prior to joining Bluerock in May 2018, Mr. Emala held senior legal positions at a number of sponsors/broker-dealers in the alternative
investment space, including Cantor Fitzgerald from June 2016 to May 2018. Prior to these roles. Emala was an associate at international
law firms White & Case, LLP and Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson LLP. Mr. Emala earned a B.S. in Finance
from the University of Maryland, College Park, a J.D., with honors, from the George Washington University Law School, and an L.L.M. in
Securities and Financial Regulation from the Georgetown University Law Center.

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Our Board of Directors

We operate
under the direction of our board of directors. The board of directors oversees our operations and makes all major decisions concerning
our business. We have provided below certain information with respect to the individuals who currently serve as our director:

Name

Age*

Position

Year

First

Became a

Director

R. Ramin Kamfar

62

Chairman of the Board, Chief Executive Officer

2022

I. Bobby Majumder

57

Lead Independent Director

2022

Elizabeth Harrison

61

Independent Director

2022

Kamal Jafarnia

59

Independent Director

2022

Romano Tio

66

Independent Director

2022

*As
of April 1, 2026.

R. Ramin
Kamfar. Mr. Kamfar has served as a member of our board of directors, including as Chairman of the Board, since October 2022.
Mr. Kamfar serves as Chief Executive Officer of our Manager, and as the Chairman of our board of directors and as our Chief Executive
Officer. Mr. Kamfar served as Chairman of the board of directors and Chief Executive Officer of Bluerock Residential Growth REIT, Inc.
from August 2008 to October 2022. In addition, Mr. Kamfar has served as Chairman of the board of trustees of Bluerock Private
Real Estate Fund (formerly Bluerock Total Income + Real Estate Fund), a closed-end interval fund organized by Bluerock, since 2012, and
as Chairman of the board of trustees of Bluerock High Income Institutional Credit Fund, a closed-end interval fund organized by Bluerock,
since 2022. Mr. Kamfar has also served as Chairman of the board of directors of Bluerock Industrial Growth REIT, Inc. and Chief
Executive Officer of its external manager, Bluerock Industrial Manager, LLC, since 2021. Mr. Kamfar is the Founder and has also served
as the Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Bluerock since 2002. Mr. Kamfar has approximately 30 years of experience in various
aspects of real estate, private equity, and investment banking. From 1988 to 1993, Mr. Kamfar worked as an investment banker at Lehman
Brothers, New York, New York, where he specialized in mergers and acquisitions and corporate finance. From 1993 to 2002, Mr. Kamfar
built a startup into a leading public company in the “fast casual” market now known as Einstein Noah Restaurant Group, Inc.
Mr. Kamfar received an M.B.A. degree with distinction in Finance from The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, and a
B.S. degree with distinction in Finance from the University of Maryland, College Park.

Mr. Kamfar’s
knowledge of the Company based on his years of service, as well as the experience noted above, led the nominating and corporate governance
committee to conclude Mr. Kamfar should continue to serve as a member of our board of directors.

I. Bobby
Majumder, NACD. DC . Mr. Majumder has served as an independent member of our board of directors since October 2022.
In addition, Mr. Majumder served as an independent member of the board of directors of Bluerock Residential from January 2009
to October 2022. Mr. Majumder is a partner at the law firm of FBT Gibbons LLP f/k/a Frost Brown Todd, where he is the Co-Chairman
of the Energy Industry Group and serves on the firm’s board of directors. Mr. Majumder specializes in corporate and securities
transactions with an emphasis on the representation of underwriters, placement agents and issuers in both public and private offerings,
private investment in public equity (PIPE) transactions and venture capital and private equity funds. Prior to Frost Brown Todd, Mr. Majumder
was a partner at the law firm of Reed Smith from May 2019 to September 2021, where he served as the Managing Partner of the
firm’s Dallas office and firmwide Co-Chair of the firm’s India practice. Prior to Reed Smith, Mr. Majumder was a partner
at the law firm of Perkins Coie from March 2013 to May 2019. Prior to Perkins Coie, Mr. Majumder was a partner in the law
firm of K&L Gates LLP from May 2005 to March 2013. From January 2000 to April 2005, Mr. Majumder was a partner
at the firm of Gardere Wynne Sewell LLP. Through his law practice, Mr. Majumder has gained significant experience relating to the
acquisition of a number of types of real property assets including raw land, improved real estate and oil and gas interests. Mr. Majumder
also has served as an independent Trustee on the Board of Trustees of Bluerock Private Real Estate Fund (formerly Bluerock Total Income
+ Real Estate Fund) since 2012 and as an independent Trustee on the Board of Trustees of Bluerock High Income Institutional Credit Fund
since 2022. He is an active member of the Park Cities Rotary Club, a charter member of the Dallas Chapter of The Indus Entrepreneurs and
an Associate Board member of the Cox School of Business at Southern Methodist University. Mr. Majumder is NACD Directorship Certified®.
Mr. Majumder received a J.D. degree in 1993 from Washington and Lee University School of Law and a B.A. degree in 1990 from Trinity
University.

Mr. Majumder’s
experience as a partner at Frost Brown Todd and his legal education, as well as the experience noted above, led the nominating and corporate
governance committee to conclude Mr. Majumder should continue to serve as a member of our board of directors.

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Elizabeth
Harrison. Ms. Harrison has served as an independent member of our board of directors since October 2022. In addition, Ms. Harrison
served as an independent member of the board of directors of Bluerock Residential from July 2018 to October 2022. Ms. Harrison
has over 23 years of branding and marketing experience. Ms. Harrison serves as the CEO and Principal of H&S Communications (“H&S”),
a full-service marketing, branding and public relations agency with offices in New York, Miami and Los Angeles, which she co-founded in
1995. Having organized the sale of H&S to Omnicom Group (NYSE: OMC), a leading global marketing and corporate communications company,
in 2003, where she continued to serve as CEO, Ms. Harrison reacquired H&S from Omnicom Group in 2020. As CEO of H&S, Ms. Harrison
is responsible for the company’s operations and strategic development, while overseeing communications, partnerships and marketing
for clients that include real estate developers, luxury hotel properties and travel technology companies on a global level. In 2011, H&S
became the complementary sister-agency of Ketchum, a leading global communications consultancy. Ms. Harrison is the co-author of
several books and is frequently invited to share her luxury branding expertise at high-profile conferences and summits, most recently
including Harvard’s 5 th Annual CEO Roundtable: Building Leading Brands and Driving Growth. Ms. Harrison has also
served as a panelist for Step Up Women’s Network’s “View from the Top” seminar. Ms. Harrison has served on
the boards of Love Heals and the Alison Gertz Foundation for AIDS Education, and also works closely with the Ars Nova Theater Group. Ms. Harrison
received a B.A. degree in 1986 from Sarah Lawrence College.

Ms. Harrison’s
extensive leadership and entrepreneurial experience, background in luxury branding and marketing, and additional experience noted above
led the nominating and corporate governance committee to conclude Ms. Harrison should continue to serve as a member of our board
of directors.

Kamal
Jafarnia. Mr. Jafarnia has served as an independent member of our board of directors since October 2022. Additionally, Mr. Jafarnia
served as an independent member of the board of directors of Bluerock Residential from June 2019 to October 2022. Mr. Jafarnia
currently serves as Chief Legal Officer and Secretary of Vise Technologies, Inc. (“Vise”). Prior to Vise, Mr. Jafarnia
worked as General Counsel, Executive Vice President and Secretary of Opto Investments, Inc. (formerly
named Lonsdale Digital Management, Inc.), and currently serves as a member of its external advisory board .
Previously, Mr. Jafarnia served as General Counsel and Chief Compliance Officer at Artivest Holdings, Inc., which position he
held from October 2018 until February 2021, and as Chief Compliance Officer of Altegris Advisors LLC, which was the advisor
to the Altegris KKR Commitments Fund. Prior to Artivest, Mr. Jafarnia served as Managing Director for Legal and Business Development
at Provasi Capital Partners LP. Prior to that, from October 2014 to December 2017, he served as Senior Vice President of W.P.
Carey Inc. (NYSE: WPC), as well as Senior Vice President and Chief Compliance Officer of Carey Credit Advisors, Inc. and as Chief
Compliance Officer and General Counsel of Carey Financial, LLC. Prior to joining W. P. Carey Inc., Mr. Jafarnia served as Counsel
to two American Lawyer Global 100 law firms in New York. From March 2014 to October 2014, Mr. Jafarnia served as Counsel
in the REIT practice group at the law firm of Greenberg Traurig, LLP. From August 2012 to March 2014, Mr. Jafarnia served
as Counsel in the Financial Services & Products Group and was a member of the REIT practice group of Alston & Bird,
LLP. Between 2006 and 2012, Mr. Jafarnia served as a senior executive, in-house counsel, and Chief Compliance Officer for several
alternative investment program sponsors, including, among others, American Realty Capital, a real estate investment program sponsor, and
its affiliated broker-dealer, Realty Capital Securities, LLC. In addition, Mr. Jafarnia has served as a non-executive independent
member of the board of directors of Ashford Hospitality Trust, Inc. (NYSE: AHT) since January 2013. Mr. Jafarnia also has
served as an independent Trustee on the Board of Trustees of Bluerock Private Real Estate Fund (formerly Bluerock Total Income + Real
Estate Fund) since 2021 and as an independent Trustee on the Board of Trustees of Bluerock High Income Institutional Credit Fund since
2022. Mr. Jafarnia received an L.L.M. in Securities and Financial Regulation in 2011 from Georgetown University Law Center, a J.D.
degree in 1992 from Temple University and a B.A. degree in economics and government in 1988 from the University of Texas at Austin.

Mr. Jafarnia’s
legal background and public company experience, as well as the additional experience described above, led the nominating and corporate
governance committee to conclude Mr. Jafarnia should continue to serve as a member of our board of directors.

Romano
Tio . Mr. Tio has served as an independent member of our board of directors since October 2022. Additionally, Mr. Tio
served as an independent member of the board of directors of Bluerock Residential from January 2009 to October 2022. Mr. Tio
served as Senior Managing Director of Greystone, a commercial real estate finance and investment firm, from March 2021 to
March 2023 . From June 2017 to March 2021, Mr. Tio served as Senior Managing Director
at Ackman- Ziff, an institutional real estate capital advisory firm. From May 2009 to June 2017, Mr. Tio served as Managing
Director of RM Capital Management LLC, a boutique real estate investment and advisory firm. From January 2008 to May 2009, Mr. Tio
served as a Managing Director and co-head of the commercial real estate efforts of HCP Real Estate Investors, LLC, an affiliate of Harbinger
Capital Partners Funds, a $10+ billion private investment firm specializing in event/distressed strategies. From August 2003 until
December 2007, Mr. Tio was a Managing Director at Carlton Group Ltd., a boutique real estate investment banking firm where he
was involved in over $2.5 billion worth of commercial real estate transactions. Earlier in his career, Mr. Tio was involved in real
estate sales and brokerage for 25 years. Mr. Tio also has served as an independent Trustee of the Board of Trustees of Bluerock Private
Real Estate Fund (formerly Bluerock Total Income + Real Estate Fund) since 2012 and as an independent Trustee on the Board of Trustees
of Bluerock High Income Institutional Credit Fund since 2022. Mr. Tio received a B.S. degree in biochemistry in 1982 from Hofstra
University.

5

Mr. Tio’s
knowledge of the real estate industry, as well as the experience noted above, led the nominating and corporate governance committee to
conclude Mr. Tio should continue to serve as a member of our board of directors.

Nomination of Directors

Our nominating
and corporate governance committee, which consists of three of our independent directors, has adopted a nominating and corporate governance
committee charter that details the committee’s principal functions. These functions include identifying and recommending to our
full board of directors qualified candidates for election as directors, and recommending nominees for election as directors at the annual
meeting of stockholders. Our bylaws provide that nominations of individuals for election to the board of directors at an annual meeting
of stockholders may be made only (1) pursuant to our notice of the meeting, (2) by or at the direction of the board of directors
or (3) by a stockholder who is a stockholder of record at the record date set by the board of directors for the purpose of determining
stockholders entitled to vote at the meeting, at time of giving the advance notice required by our bylaws and at the time of the meeting
(and any postponement or adjournment thereof), who is entitled to vote at the meeting in the election of each individual so nominated
and who has complied with the advance notice procedures of our bylaws.

Nominations
of individuals for election to the board of directors at a special meeting may be made only (1) by or at the direction of the board
of directors or (2) provided that the board of directors has determined that directors will be elected at the meeting, by a stockholder
who is a stockholder of record at the record date set by the board of directors for the purpose of determining stockholders entitled to
vote at the meeting, at the time of giving the advance notice required by our bylaws and at the time of the special meeting (and any postponement
or adjournment thereof), who is entitled to vote at the meeting in the election of each individual so nominated and who has complied with
the advance notice provisions of our bylaws.

Board Membership Criteria

Our business
involves a wide range of real estate, financing, accounting, management and financial reporting issues. In light of our business and structure,
the full board of directors annually reviews the appropriate experience, skills and characteristics required of directors in the context
of the then-current membership of the board of directors, and the nominating and corporate governance committee considers the experience,
mix of skills, and other qualities of the directors and nominees with respect to all director nominations to ensure appropriate board
composition. This assessment includes, in the context of the perceived needs of the board of directors at that time, issues of knowledge,
experience, judgment and skills, such as an understanding of the real estate and real estate finance industries, accounting or financial
management expertise, or marketing and branding experience. Our nominating and corporate governance committee and board of directors seeks
to nominate directors with diverse backgrounds, experiences and skill sets that complement each other so as to maximize the collective
knowledge, experience, judgment and skills of the entire board of directors. In particular, the nominating and corporate governance committee
and board of directors believe that directors and nominees with the following qualities and experiences can assist in meeting this goal:

·

Senior Leadership Experience. Directors with experience in significant leadership positions provide
the Company with perspective in analyzing, shaping and overseeing the execution of operational, organizational and strategic issues at
a senior level. Further, such persons have a practical understanding of balancing operational and strategic goals and risk management.

·

Business Entrepreneurship and Transactional Experience. Directors who have a background in entrepreneurial
businesses and growth transactions can provide insight into developing and implementing strategies for partnering in joint ventures and/or
growing via mergers and acquisitions. Further, such directors have a practical understanding of the valuation of transactions and business
opportunities and management’s plans for integration with existing operations.

·

Financial and Accounting Experience. An understanding of the financial markets, corporate finance,
accounting requirements and regulations and accounting and financial reporting processes allows directors to understand, oversee and advise
management with respect to the Company’s operating and strategic performance, capital structure, financing and investing activities,
financial reporting and internal control of such activities. The Company seeks to have a number of directors who qualify as audit committee
financial experts and expects all of its directors to be financially knowledgeable.

6

·

Real Estate Experience. An understanding of real estate issues, particularly with respect to real
estate investment trusts, real estate development and apartment communities, brings critical industry- specific knowledge and experience
to our board of directors. Education and experience in the real estate industry is useful in understanding the Company’s acquisition
and development of apartment communities and the competitive landscape of our industry.

·

Marketing and Branding Experience. Directors with extensive marketing,
branding and communications experience can offer advice and insights with regard to strategic, operational and financial aspects of the
Company’s integrated and digital marketing. A background in brand management, customer engagement and e-commerce is valuable to
the Company’s development and implementation of strategies to strengthen our branding and marketing initiatives and build
our overall brand position.

The composition
of our board of directors also reflects our commitment to diversity. We believe that multiple and varied points of view facilitate more
balanced, wide-ranging discussion in the boardroom, and contribute to a more effective decision-making process. Of the five incumbent
members of our board of directors, one (1) is female, and four (4) self-identify as ethnic minorities:

Gender Diversity

Women:

1

20%

Men:

4

80%

Ethnic Diversity

Minority:

4

80%

Non-minority:

1

20%

Other considerations
in director nominations include the ability of the candidate to attend board meetings regularly and to devote an appropriate amount of
time in preparation for those meetings. It also is expected that those nominated to serve as independent directors will be individuals
who possess a reputation and hold positions or affiliations befitting a director of a publicly held company and who are actively engaged
in their occupations or professions. The board of directors reviewed these criteria in connection with director nominations for the Annual
Meeting, and determined that each of the nominees for election to our board of directors satisfies these criteria.

A vacancy
in our board of directors may be filled only by the vote of a majority of the remaining directors, even if the remaining directors do
not constitute a quorum, and any director elected to fill a vacancy will serve for the remainder of the full term of the directorship
in which the vacancy occurred and until a successor is elected and qualifies or until his or her earlier death, resignation or removal.
Any director may resign at any time. Our charter further provides that any or all of our directors may be removed from office for cause,
and then only by the affirmative vote of at least a majority of the votes entitled to be cast generally in the election of directors.
For these purposes, “cause” means, with respect to any particular director, conviction of a felony or final judgment of a
court of competent jurisdiction holding that such director caused demonstrable material harm to us through bad faith or active and deliberate
dishonesty.

Each director
will serve a term beginning on the date of his or her election and ending on the next annual meeting of the stockholders and when his
or her successor is duly elected and qualifies. Under our bylaws, in order to be elected as a director, a director nominee must receive
the affirmative vote of a plurality of all votes cast at a meeting at which a quorum is present. However, because holders of Common Stock
have no right to cumulative voting for the election of directors, at each annual meeting of stockholders, the holders of a majority of
the outstanding shares of Common Stock will be able to elect all of the directors.

Committees of the Board
of Directors

The board
of directors has established three committees: an audit committee, a compensation committee and a nominating and corporate governance
committee. All of our committees consist solely of independent directors. The principal functions of these committees are briefly described
below. Our board of directors may from time to time establish other committees to facilitate our management. The committee charters are
available on our website at www.bluerock.com/bluerock-homes-trust/governance-documents .

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Audit Committee

Our board
of directors has established an audit committee, which is comprised of three of our independent directors: I. Bobby Majumder, Kamal Jafarnia,
and Romano Tio. Mr. Majumder is the chairman of our audit committee, and is designated as the audit committee financial expert as
defined by the applicable rules promulgated by the SEC and the NYSE American corporate governance listing standards.

The audit
committee meets on a regular basis, at least quarterly and more frequently as necessary. The audit committee’s primary functions
are:

·

to evaluate and approve the audit and non-audit services and fees of our independent registered public accounting firm;

·

to periodically review the auditors’ independence; and

·

to assist our board of directors in fulfilling its oversight responsibilities by reviewing the financial information to be provided
to the stockholders and others, management’s system of internal controls and procedures, and the audit and financial reporting process.

The audit
committee also reviews and approves certain related party transactions, as described under “Certain Relationships and Related Party
Transactions — Related Party Transaction Policy.” The audit committee fulfills these responsibilities primarily by carrying
out the activities enumerated in the audit committee charter, as updated and revised by the audit committee, dated as of September 27,
2022.

The audit
committee charter is available on our website at www.bluerock.com/bluerock-homes-trust/ governance-documents.

Compensation Committee

Our board
of directors has established a compensation committee, which is comprised of three of our independent directors: Romano Tio, Elizabeth
Harrison, and I. Bobby Majumder. Mr. Tio is the chairman of our compensation committee. Our compensation committee charter details
the principal functions of the compensation committee. These functions include:

·

reviewing and approving on an annual basis the corporate goals and objectives relevant to our Chief Executive Officer’s compensation,
if any;

·

evaluating our Chief Executive Officer’s performance in light of such goals and objectives, and
determining and approving the remuneration of our Chief Executive Officer, if any, based on such evaluation;

·

reviewing and approving the compensation, if any, of all of our other executive officers;

·

reviewing our executive compensation policies and plans;

·

overseeing plans and programs related to the compensation of our Manager, including fees payable to our
Manager pursuant to the Management Agreement;

·

implementing and administering our incentive compensation equity-based remuneration plans, if any;

·

assisting management in complying with our proxy statement and annual report disclosure requirements;

·

producing a report on executive compensation to be included in our annual proxy statement; and reviewing,
evaluating and recommending changes, if appropriate, to the remuneration for our independent directors.

The compensation
committee charter is available on our website at www.bluerock.com/bluerock-homes- trust/governance-documents.

Compensation Committee Interlocks
and Insider Participation

Our compensation
committee is comprised of three of our independent directors. None of these individuals has at any time served as an officer or employee
of the Company. None of our executive officers has served as a director or member of the compensation committee of any entity that has
one or more of its executive officers serving as a member of our board of directors or compensation committee.

8

Nominating and Corporate Governance
Committee

Our board
of directors has established a nominating and corporate governance committee, which is comprised of three of our independent directors:
I. Bobby Majumder, Kamal Jafarnia, and Romano Tio. Mr. Majumder is the chairman of our nominating and corporate governance committee.
Our nominating and corporate governance committee charter details the principal functions of the nominating and corporate governance committee.
These functions include:

·

identifying and recommending qualified candidates to our full board of directors for election as directors,
and recommending nominees for election as directors at the annual meeting of stockholders;

·

developing and recommending corporate governance guidelines to our board of directors, and implementing
and monitoring such guidelines;

·

reviewing and making recommendations on matters involving the general operation of our board of directors,
including board size and composition, and committee composition and structure;

·

recommending nominees for each committee of our board of directors to our board of directors;

·

annually facilitating the assessment of our board of directors’ performance as a whole and of the
individual directors, as required by applicable law, regulations and the NYSE American corporate governance listing standards; and

·

overseeing our board of directors’ evaluation of management.

The nominating
and corporate governance committee may form and delegate authority to subcommittees in its discretion, provided that such subcommittees
must be composed entirely of independent directors, and each such subcommittee must have its own charter setting forth its purpose and
responsibilities. The nominating and corporate governance committee charter is available on our website at www.bluerock.com/bluerock-homes-trust/governance-documents .

Compensation of Directors

Each of our
independent directors is entitled to annual cash and equity retainers of $50,000 and $75,000, respectively. In addition, the lead independent
director, the audit committee chairman, the compensation committee chairman, and the nominating and corporate governance chairman are
entitled to annual retainers of $15,000, $15,000, $10,000, and $10,000, respectively. Each member of the audit committee, the compensation
committee, and the nominating and corporate governance committee are further entitled to annual retainers of $7,500, $5,000, and $5,000,
respectively. In addition, all directors receive reimbursement of reasonable out-of-pocket expenses incurred in connection with attendance
at meetings of our board of directors.

We have provided
below certain information regarding compensation earned by and paid to our directors during fiscal year 2025 (amounts in thousands).

Name

Fees Paid in

Cash in 2025

LTIP

Unit

Awards (1)

Total

Elizabeth Harrison

$

55,000

(2)

$

75,000

$

130,000

Kamal Jafarnia

62,500

(3)

75,000

137,500

I. Bobby Majumder

95,000

(4)

75,000

170,000

Romano Tio

72,500

(5)

75,000

147,500

R. Ramin Kamfar

—

—

—

(1)

Includes 5,405 LTIP Units granted under the 2022 Individuals Plan to each of Ms. Harrison, Mr. Jafarnia,
Mr. Majumder and Mr. Tio in payment of the equity portion of their respective annual retainers for fiscal year 2025. The amounts
reported for each non-employee director reflect the grant date fair value of the award based on the volume weighted average price of the
Company’s Class A common stock on the NYSE American on the twenty (20) trading days prior to the grant date (i.e., $13.876).

(2)

Includes (i) cash portion of annual retainer for fiscal year 2025 of $50,000 and (ii) compensation
committee member retainer for fiscal year 2025 of $5,000.

(3)

Includes (i) cash portion of annual retainer for fiscal year 2025 of $50,000, (ii) audit committee
member retainer for fiscal year 2025 of $7,500, and (iii) nominating and corporate governance committee member retainer for fiscal
year 2025 of $5,000.

9

(4)

Includes (i) cash portion of annual retainer for fiscal year 2025 of $50,000, (ii) lead independent
director retainer for fiscal year 2025 of $15,000, (iii) audit committee chairman retainer for fiscal year 2025 of $15,000, (iv) compensation
committee member retainer for fiscal year 2025 of $5,000, and (v) nominating and corporate governance committee chairman retainer
for fiscal year 2025 of $10,000.

(5)

Includes (i) cash portion of annual retainer for fiscal year 2025 of $50,000, (ii) audit committee
member retainer for fiscal year 2025 of $7,500, (iii) compensation committee chairman retainer for fiscal year 2025 of $10,000, and
(iv) nominating and corporate governance committee member retainer for fiscal year 2025 of $5,000.

Delinquent Section 16(a) Reports

Section 16(a) of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the “Exchange Act”) requires our directors and executive officers, and any persons beneficially
owning more than 10% of our outstanding shares of Common Stock, to file with the SEC reports with respect to their initial ownership of
our Common Stock and reports of changes in their ownership of our Common Stock. As a matter of practice, our administrative staff and
outside counsel assists our directors and executive officers in preparing these reports, and typically file those reports on behalf of
our directors and executive officers. Based solely on a review of the copies of such forms filed with the SEC during fiscal year 2025
and on written representations from our directors and executive officers, we believe that during fiscal year 2025, all of our directors
and executive officers filed the required reports on a timely basis under Section 16(a), and all persons beneficially owning more
than 10% of our outstanding shares of Common Stock filed the required reports on a timely basis under Section 16(a).

Insider Trading Policy

Our Insider
Trading Policy governs the purchase, sale, and/or other transactions of our securities by our directors, officers, employees, and all
officers and other employees of the Manager or its affiliate, BREH, who provide services to the Company (collectively, “Covered
Persons”).

We believe our Insider Trading
Policy is reasonably designed to promote compliance with insider trading laws, rules and regulations and applicable NYSE American
listing standards. Our Insider Trading Policy prohibits Covered Persons from trading (or tipping others to trade) in Company securities
on the basis of material, non-public information and during blackout periods, and provides for pre-clearance procedures for transactions
involving Company securities by Covered Persons . Our Insider Trading Policy also prohibits Covered
Persons from engaging in certain transactions, including “short” sales, sales “against the box,” buying or selling
puts or calls, buying financial instruments designed to hedge or offset any decrease in the market value of Company securities owned by
the Covered Person directly or indirectly, and frequent trading to take advantage of fluctuations in share price.

Item 11.     Executive
Compensation

Emerging Growth Company Status

We are an
emerging growth company, as defined in the JOBS Act. Under this Act, we are permitted to and have elected to rely on exemptions from certain
disclosure requirements that are applicable to other companies that are not emerging growth companies. Accordingly, we have not included
a compensation discussion and analysis of our executive compensation programs or tabular compensation information. In addition, for so
long as we are an emerging growth company, we will not be required to submit certain executive compensation matters to our stockholders
for advisory votes, such as “say-on-pay” and “say-on- frequency” of say-on-pay votes.

Overview of Compensation Program and Philosophy

Bluerock
Homes Trust, Inc. has no employees. We are externally managed by our Manager, Bluerock Homes Manager, LLC, pursuant to the Management
Agreement. As our Chief Executive Officer, R. Ramin Kamfar is our sole Named Executive Officer (our “NEO”). However, all of
our executive officers, including our NEO, are employees of our Manager. Our Manager is responsible, and we do not reimburse our Manager
or its affiliates, for the cash compensation or benefits awarded to personnel of our Manager who serve as our NEO or as our other executive
officers. We have not paid, and do not expect to pay in 2025, any cash or other compensation to our NEO or to our other executive officers.

10

Incentive Plans

Prior to the annual meeting
of the Company’s stockholders held on June 11, 2025 (the “2025 Annual Meeting”), the Company had in effect the
Bluerock Homes Trust, Inc. 2022 Equity Incentive Plan for Individuals (the “2022 Individuals Plan”) and the Bluerock
Homes Trust, Inc. 2022 Equity Incentive Plan for Entities (the “2022 Entities Plan,”) and together with the 2022 Individuals
Plan, the “ 2022 Incentive Plans” ). On April 15, 2025, our board of directors
approved the amendment and restatement of each of the 2022 Individuals Plan (as so amended and restated, the “Amended Individuals
Plan”) and the 2022 Entities Plan (as so amended and restated, the “Amended Entities Plan,” and together with the Amended
Individuals Plan, the “Amended Incentive Plans,” and collectively with the 2022 Incentive Plans, the “BHM Incentive
Plans”), subject to the approval of the Company's stockholders at the 2025 Annual Meeting, and the Amended Incentive Plans became
effective upon such stockholder approval.

The
BHM Incentive Plans provide for the grant of options to purchase shares of our common stock, stock awards, stock appreciation rights,
performance units, incentive awards and other equity-based awards, , to assist the Company in attracting and retaining independent directors,
executive officers and other key employees, including officers and employees of our Manager and Operating Partnership and their affiliates
and other service providers, including our Manager and its affiliates. The BHM Incentive Plans are
generally administered by the compensation committee of our board of directors.

The
aggregate number of shares of our Class A Common Stock authorized for issuance under the BHM
Incentive Plans is 4,022,109, with (i) 1,625,000 shares available for issuance under the BHM Incentive Plans, and (ii) 2,397,109
shares subject to awards granted under the Bluerock Residential Growth REIT, Inc. Amended and Restated 2014 Equity Incentive Plan
for Individuals and the Bluerock Residential Growth REIT, Inc. Amended and Restated 2014 Equity Incentive Plan for Entities (together,
the “Prior Plans”) that may become available for issuance or reissuance, as applicable, under the BHM Incentive Plans if such
awards are forfeited, canceled or otherwise terminated (other than by exercise).

2025 Equity Incentive Compensation Grants to
Executive Officers Under BHM Incentive Plans

During 2025, our
Chief Executive Officer did not receive any equity incentive compensation grants under the BHM Incentive
Plans . All equity incentive compensation grants under the BHM Incentive Plans to our other
executive officers d uring 2025 were time-based and vest ratably over a three year period.

Equity Award Grant Practices

Equity awards under our BHM
Incentive Plans, including those made to our executive officers, must be approved by the Compensation Committee. No stock option awards
were granted to any of our executive officers in fiscal year 2025. During fiscal year 2025, we did not grant equity awards to our executive
officers during the four business days prior to or the one business day following the filing of our periodic reports or the filing or
furnishing of a Form 8-K that discloses material nonpublic information. The Compensation Committee did not take material nonpublic
information into account when determining the timing and terms of equity awards during fiscal year 2025, and we do not time the disclosure
of material nonpublic information for the purpose of affecting the value of equity award grants to our executive officers.

Stock Ownership Guidelines

To further
align the interests of our executive officers and directors with the interests of our stockholders, and to promote our commitment to sound
corporate governance, our board of directors has implemented stock ownership guidelines for our executive officers and our independent
directors.

The Stock
Ownership Guidelines provide that, within five years of the later date of adoption of the guidelines or the date an individual first becomes
subject to the guidelines upon becoming a director or executive officer:

·

our Chief Executive Officer is required to own shares of our common stock, including restricted stock, valued at a minimum of $2.5
million;

·

all other executive officers are required to own shares of our common stock, including restricted stock, valued at a minimum of $750,000;
and

·

independent directors are required to own shares of our common stock valued at a minimum of three times their annual cash retainer
for service on the board of directors.

11

Any shares
owned directly or indirectly (including shares owned in trust and including restricted stock) by the executive officer or director, or
his or her spouse or minor children, will constitute qualifying shares that count toward satisfaction of the Stock Ownership Guidelines,
and that any deferred or restricted stock units, OP units and LTIP units (with each such OP unit and LTIP unit counting as, and having
a value equivalent to, one share of our common stock) owned by the executive officer or director will also constitute qualifying shares
that count toward satisfaction of the Stock Ownership Guidelines. Any shares underlying stock options will not count toward satisfaction
of the Stock Ownership Guidelines.

As of December 31,
2025, all of our directors and executive officers were in compliance with our Stock Ownership Guidelines or on track to be compliant within
the five-year period specified by the guidelines.

Pledging Policy

Our board
of directors has adopted a Pledging Policy Regarding Company Securities (the “Pledging Policy”). The Pledging Policy is designed
to achieve the following goals:

·

prohibit any pledging by executive officers or directors for the purpose of hedging the pledgor’s
exposure to fluctuations in the Company’s stock price;

·

strictly limit the amount of leverage allowed on executive officer or director loans from third parties
for which a portion of their holdings of Company equity securities have been pledged as collateral, to protect the Company and its stockholders
from potential risks associated with a forced sale by the lender;

·

require audit committee pre-certification and pre-approval prior to the entry by any executive officer
or director into any proposed loan or other arrangement requiring the pledging of Company securities; and

·

foster and encourage our executive officers and directors to maintain and increase their equity ownership
levels well above the levels mandated by the Company’s Stock Ownership Guidelines, thereby strengthening the alignment of their
economic interests in the Company with those of stockholders, in part by permitting them, subject to the strict leverage restrictions,
pre-approval and ongoing audit committee monitoring and oversight addressed above, to pledge a limited amount of their Company equity
to secure loans. Such limited pledging will offer them access to liquidity, for purposes other than to serve as a hedge, and provide them
with an alternative to the sale of such Company equity and the resulting, undesirable reduction in equity ownership and dilution of alignment
of interests with stockholders.

Our board
of directors will foster and encourage high levels of equity ownership of the Company’s equity securities by our executive officers
and directors in the interest of providing the strongest-possible incentive to align the interests of our executive officers and directors
with those of our stockholders. Our board of directors believes that an absolute prohibition on pledging would run counter to these objectives,
with the unintended and undesirable consequence of leaving our executive officers and directors with no means of accessing legitimate
liquidity needs, other than by the sale of their Company securities holdings.

The Pledging
Policy entirely prohibits the Company’s executive officers and directors from pledging, or otherwise using as collateral to secure
any loan or other obligation, any Company securities that such executive officer or director is required to hold pursuant to the Company’s
Stock Ownership Guidelines.

The Pledging
Policy prohibits any pledging by executive officers or directors for the purpose of hedging the pledgor’s exposure to fluctuations
in the Company’s stock price.

The Pledging
Policy strictly limits pledges by our executive officers and directors, subject to audit committee oversight, to only those Company securities
they hold in excess of the Stock Ownership Guidelines applicable to them (such excess, to the extent pledged, the “Pledged Shares”).
The Pledging Policy requires executive officers and directors to pre-certify and obtain pre-approval from the audit committee for any
such new pledging arrangement, and requires re-certification to the audit committee of compliance with the Pledging Policy with respect
to existing pledging arrangements. In addition, the Pledging Policy requires all pledgors to annually certify to the audit committee his
or her ongoing compliance therewith.

The Pledging
Policy further limits the number of permitted Pledged Shares by setting a maximum leverage rate of thirty percent (30%), such that the
number of Pledged Shares cannot exceed, on an annual basis, thirty percent (30%) of the time-weighted value of the lender’s entire
collateral package, inclusive of the Pledged Shares.

12

The audit
committee monitors compliance with the Pledging Policy by requiring certain certifications from each executive officer or director with
a new or existing loan secured in part by Pledged Shares. Prior to entering into any such new pledge, an executive officer or director
must certify to the audit committee that the pledge is limited to only such Company securities held in excess of the applicable Stock
Ownership Guidelines, and that its sole purpose is not to serve as a hedging arrangement. With respect to previously existing pledge arrangements,
promptly following adoption of the Pledging Policy, each executive officer or director must certify to the audit committee that its existing
pledge arrangement is not for the sole purpose of serving as a hedging arrangement. In addition, within ten (10) days following each
annual meeting of the Company’s stockholders, each pledgor must certify to the audit committee that its Pledged Shares comprised
thirty percent (30%) or less of the time-weighted value of the creditor’s collateral package, inclusive of the Pledged Shares.

The Pledging
Policy’s restrictions, structuring and certification obligations are intended to mitigate the risks from a forced sale due to a
default under the subject loan or as a result of a decline in the market price of our Class A common stock, should such market price
be the valuation parameter applicable to the lender’s collateral package. First, even if an event occurred that would enable a lender
to exercise forced sale rights, the fact that the Pledged Shares are limited to thirty percent (30%) of the time-weighted collateral package
means that the lender should have other sources of collateral with which to cover its loan, and thus may not pursue a forced sale, even
if authorized to do so. Further, to the extent that the subject loan has covenants tied to the value of its overall collateral package,
valuing the Pledged Shares according to the market price of our Class A common stock mitigates the risk related to even a precipitous
drop in such market price, as such a drop might not result in a significant reduction in the value of the lender’s overall collateral
package to the point of causing a default, in which case, all else being equal, the lender would not have a forced sale right at all.

The Pledging
Policy simultaneously fulfills the objectives and strategy of the board of directors to further the alignment of stockholder interests
by heavily weighting the compensation of our executive officers and directors in Company equity, while recognizing their legitimate need
to access liquidity from their earned equity if desired, providing them with a method to do so without having to sell their equity to
access that liquidity, thereby reducing their ownership and diluting their alignment with stockholder interests.

Anti-Hedging Policy

Our Insider
Trading Policy expressly prohibits our directors, officers and employees from engaging in any of the following hedging transactions with
respect to any Company securities at any time: short sales (including short sales “against the box”); buying or selling puts
or calls; buying financial instruments designed to hedge or offset any decrease in the market value of Company securities owned by the
individual directly or indirectly, including prepaid variable forward contracts, equity swaps, collars and exchange funds; and frequent
trading to take advantage of fluctuations in share price.

Clawback Policy

Our compensation
committee has adopted a policy on the possible recoupment, or “clawback,” of Incentive Fees from our Manager. The policy will
be invoked in the event that (a) the Company is required to restate its financial statements due to material noncompliance with any
financial reporting requirement under U.S. federal securities laws (whether or not based on fraud or misconduct) and the board of directors
or the compensation committee has not determined that such restatement (i) is required or permitted under GAAP in connection with
the adoption or implementation of a new accounting standard, or (ii) was caused by the Company’s decision to change its accounting
practice, as permitted by applicable law, and (b) the performance measurement period with respect to such Incentive Fees includes
one or more fiscal periods affected by such restatement.

In such event,
under the terms of the policy, our board of directors or the compensation committee will determine whether, within three (3) completed
fiscal years preceding the restatement date and any interim period, our Manager received Incentive Fees in excess of the amount to which
it would otherwise have been entitled based on the restated financial statements (such excess amount, “Excess Compensation”).
If the board of directors or the compensation committee determines that our Manager received Excess Compensation, the Company will be
entitled to recover such Excess Compensation from the Manager, and our board of directors or the compensation committee, in its sole discretion
and subject to applicable law, will take such action as it deems necessary to recover such Excess Compensation. Such actions may include
requiring repayment or return of prior Incentive Fees paid to our Manager, including Incentive Fees not affected by the accounting restatement,
or adjusting the amounts of future fees payable to our Manager.

Our board
of directors and compensation committee recognize that the Dodd-Frank legislation enacted in 2010 may, following rulemaking, require some
modification of these policies. Our board of directors and compensation committee intend to review any rules adopted as a result
of that legislation and to adopt any modifications to these policies that become required by applicable law

13

Item 12.     Security
Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management and Related Stockholder Matters

The table below sets forth,
as of March 6, 2026, certain information regarding the beneficial ownership of shares of our Class A common stock, shares of
our Class C common stock, and shares of common stock issuable upon redemption of OP Units and LTIP Units, for (1) each person
known to be the beneficial owner of 5% or more of our outstanding shares of common stock, (2) each of our directors and named executive
officers, and (3) all of our directors and named executive officers as a group. Each person named in the table has sole voting and
investment power with respect to all of the shares of common stock shown as beneficially owned by such person, except as otherwise set
forth in the notes to the table.

The SEC has defined “beneficial
ownership” of a security to mean the possession, directly or indirectly, of voting power and/or investment power over such security.
A stockholder is also deemed to be, as of any date, the beneficial owner of all securities that such stockholder has the right to acquire
within 60 days after that date through (1) the exercise of any option, warrant or right, (2) the conversion of a security, (3) the
power to revoke a trust, discretionary account or similar arrangement or (4) the automatic termination of a trust, discretionary
account or similar arrangement. In computing the number of shares beneficially owned by a person and the percentage ownership of that
person, our shares of common stock subject to options, vesting, or other rights (as set forth above) held by that person that are exercisable
or will become exercisable within 60 days thereafter, are deemed outstanding, while such shares are not deemed outstanding for purposes
of computing percentage ownership of any other person.

14

Name of Beneficial Owner

Title of Class of

Securities Owned

Amount and

Nature of

Beneficial

Ownership

Percent of

Class (2)

Amount of

Beneficial

Ownership

Percent of

Common

Stock (3)

Directors and Named Executive Officers (1)

Named Executive Officers

R. Ramin Kamfar

Class A Common Stock

27,719

*

1,341,907

10.41

%

Class C Common Stock

5,247

61.81

%

OP Units (4)

156,214

2.12

%

LTIP Units (5)(6)

1,152,727

74.17

%

Jordan Ruddy

Class A Common Stock

1,820

*

665,100

5.16

%

Class C Common Stock

1,083

12.76

%

OP Units (7)

507,057

6.88

%

LTIP Units (8)

155,140

9.76

%

Ryan S. MacDonald

Class C Common Stock

341

4.02

%

544,441

4.22

%

OP Units

481,085

6.53

%

LTIP Units (9)

63,015

4.03

%

Christopher J. Vohs

Class A Common Stock

1,821

*

107,562

*

OP Units

84,412

1.15

%

LTIP Units (10)

21,329

1.37

%

Michael DiFranco

Class A Common Stock

419

*

84,036

*

OP Units

55,881

*

LTIP Units (11)

27,736

1.78

%

Jason Emala

Class A Common Stock

596

*

19,867

*

LTIP Units (12)

19,271

1.24

%

Independent Directors

I. Bobby Majumder

Class A Common Stock

1,778

*

52,954

*

OP Units

23,356

*

LTIP Units

27,820

1.79

%

Elizabeth Harrison

OP Units

19,470

*

47,290

*

LTIP Units

27,820

1.79

%

Kamal Jafarnia

OP Units

14,562

*

42,382

*

LTIP Units

27,820

1.79

%

Romano Tio

Class A Common Stock

3,211

*

54,387

*

OP Units

23,356

*

LTIP Units

27,820

1.79

%

All directors and named executive officers as a group (10 persons) (2)

2,959,926

22.95

%

2,959,926

22.95

%

5% Stockholders:

Par Sanda

501 N. Birch Rd, Unit 3

Fort Lauderdale, FL 33304 (13)

Class A Common Stock

570,749

14.67

%

570,749

4.43

%

The Radoff Family Foundation

2727 Kirby Drive, Unit 29L

Houston, TX 77098 (14)

Class A Common Stock

344,800

8.86

%

344,800

2.67

%

Hedgehog Capital LLC

1117 E. Putnam Ave #320

Riverside, CT 06878 (15)

Class A Common Stock

337,952

8.69

%

337,952

2.62

%

Quinn Opportunity Partners LLC

2 Boars Head Place, Suite 250

Charlottesville, VA 22903 (16)

Class A Common Stock

228,282

5.87

%

228,282

1.77

%

15

*   Less than 1%.

(1)       The
address of each beneficial owner listed is 919 Third Avenue, 40th Floor, New York, New York 10022.

(2)       Numbers
and percentages in the table are based on 3,889,613 vested shares of Class A common stock outstanding, 8,489 shares of Class C
common stock outstanding, 7,365,404 OP Units outstanding, and 1,554,185 vested LTIP Units outstanding, in each case as of March 6,
2026, and 78,677 unvested LTIP Units outstanding that will vest within 60 days of March 6, 2026, for a total of 12,896,368 shares
of vested Class A Common Stock, Class C Common Stock, OP Units and LTIP Units outstanding. However, numbers and percentages
do not include 234,350 remaining unvested LTIP Units outstanding as of March 6, 2026, comprised of (i) 205,818 remaining unvested
LTIP Units outstanding as of March 6, 2026 as addressed in footnotes (5) through (13) below, and (ii) 28,532 remaining
unvested LTIP Units outstanding as of March 6, 2026 owned by parties other than our directors and named executive officers. Percentages
for all named executive officers and directors as a group is based on the combined total of all 12,896,368 shares of vested Class A
Common Stock, Class C Common Stock, OP Units and LTIP Units outstanding as of March 6, 2026, as each is an equivalent unit of
ownership.

(3)       Percent
of Common Stock for each executive officer, director, and 5% stockholder is calculated using the combined total of all shares of vested
Class A common stock, Class C common stock, OP Units, and LTIP Units, as each is an equivalent unit of ownership, relative to
the combined total of 12,896,368 shares of vested Class A common stock, Class C common stock, OP Units and LTIP Units outstanding
as of March 6, 2026.

(4)       In
addition, for estate planning purposes, certain irrevocable trusts associated with Mr. Kamfar, of which members of Mr. Kamfar’s
immediate family are the beneficiaries and of which Mr. Kamfar is neither a trustee nor a beneficiary, hold an aggregate of 4,753,551
OP Units.

16

(5)       Total
includes 23,064 LTIP Units issued to the Manager as part of an initial staking grant on November 3, 2022 (the “Initial Staking
Grant”), of which 7,688 vested on each of November 3, 2023, November 3, 2024, and November 3, 2025. Total does not
include (i) 15,375 remaining unvested LTIP Units issued to the Manager in connection with the Initial Staking Grant, which will vest
ratably on an annual basis on each of November 3, 2026 and November 3, 2027 (collectively, the “Remaining Initial Staking
Grant Vesting Dates”). As the indirect controlling person of the Manager, Mr. Kamfar possesses sole voting and investment power
over LTIP Units that are currently held by the Manager and its affiliates under common control.

(6)       Total
includes 75,607 LTIP Units issued to Mr. Kamfar as part of the Initial Staking Grant, of which 25,203 vested on November 3,
2023, 25,202 vested on November 3, 2024, and 25,202 vested on November 3, 2025. Total does not include 50,404 remaining unvested
LTIP Units issued to Mr. Kamfar in connection with the Initial Staking Grant, which will vest ratably on an annual basis over the
Remaining Initial Staking Grant Vesting Dates.

(7)      Total
includes an aggregate of 380,390 OP Units held, for estate planning purposes, by irrevocable trusts associated with Mr. Ruddy and
for which beneficial ownership is allocable to Mr. Ruddy. Total does not include an aggregate of 266,546 OP Units held, for estate
planning purposes, by irrevocable trusts associated with Mr. Ruddy and for which beneficial ownership is not allocable to Mr. Ruddy.

(8)       Total
includes (i) 25,630 LTIP Units issued to Mr. Ruddy as part of the Initial Staking Grant, of which 8,544 vested on November 3,
2023, 8,543 vested on November 3, 2024, and 8,543 vested on November 3, 2025, (ii) 34,585 LTIP Units issued to Mr. Ruddy
as part of the annual long term equity incentive grant on May 25, 2023 (the “2023 Annual Incentive Grant”), of which
11,529 vested on May 25, 2024, 11,528 vested on April 1, 2025, and 11,528 will vest on April 1, 2026, (iii) 29,702
LTIP Units issued to Mr. Ruddy as part of the 2024 annual long term equity incentive grant on April 30, 2024 (the “2024
Annual Incentive Grant”), of which 14,851 vested on April 30, 2025 and 14,851 will vest on April 30, 2026, and (iv) 9,788
LTIP Units issued to Mr. Ruddy as part of the annual long term equity incentive grant on April 23, 2025 (the “April 23,
2025 Annual Incentive Grant”) which will vest on April 23, 2026. Total does not include (i) 17,086 remaining unvested
LTIP Units issued to Mr. Ruddy in connection with the Initial Staking Grant, which will vest ratably over the Remaining Initial Staking
Grant Vesting Dates, (ii) 14,850 unvested LTIP Units issued to Mr. Ruddy as part of the 2024 Annual Incentive Grant, which will
vest on April 30, 2027 (the “Remaining 2024 Annual Incentive Grant Vesting Date”), or (iii) 19,576 unvested LTIP
Units issued to Mr. Ruddy as part of the annual long term equity incentive grant on April 23, 2025 (the “April 23,
2025 Annual Incentive Grant”), which will vest ratably on each of April 1, 2027 and April 1, 2028 (collectively, the “Remaining
April 23, 2025 Annual Incentive Grant Vesting Dates”).

(9)       Total
includes (i) 48,696 LTIP Units issued to Mr. MacDonald as part of the Initial Staking Grant, of which 16,232 vested on each
of November 3, 2023, November 3, 2024, and November 3, 2025, (ii) 11,424 LTIP Units issued to Mr. MacDonald as
part of the 2024 Annual Incentive Grant, of which 5,712 vested on April 30, 2025 and 5,712 will vest on April 30, 2026, and
(iii) 2,895 LTIP Units issued to Mr. MacDonald as part of the April 23, 2025 Annual Incentive Grant, which will vest on
April 23, 2026. Total does not include (i) 32,464 remaining unvested LTIP Units issued to Mr. MacDonald in connection with
the Initial Staking Grant, which will vest ratably over the Remaining Initial Staking Grant Vesting Dates, (ii) 5,712 unvested LTIP
Units issued to Mr. MacDonald as part of the 2024 Annual Incentive Grant, which will vest on the Remaining 2024 Annual Incentive
Grant Vesting Date, or (iii) 5,790 unvested LTIP Units issued to Mr. MacDonald as part of the April 23, 2025 Annual Incentive
Grant, which will vest ratably over the Remaining April 23, 2025 Annual Incentive Grant Vesting Dates.

(10)     Total
includes (i) 12,816 LTIP Units issued to Mr. Vohs as part of the Initial Staking Grant, of which 4,272 vested on each of November 3,
2023, November 3, 2024, and November 3, 2025, (ii) 3,706 LTIP Units issued to Mr. Vohs as part of the 2023 Annual
Incentive Grant, of which 1,236 vested on May 25, 2024, 1,235 vested on April 1, 2025, and 1,235 will vest on April 1,
2026, (iii) 3,428 LTIP Units issued to Mr. Vohs as part of the 2024 Annual Incentive Grant, of which 1,714 vested on April 30,
2025 and 1,714 will vest on April 30, 2026, and (iv) 1,379 LTIP Units issued to Mr. Vohs as part of the annual long term
equity incentive grant on April 1, 2025 (the “April 1, 2025 Annual Incentive Grant”), which will vest on April 1,
2026. Total does not include (i) 8,542 remaining unvested LTIP Units issued to Mr. Vohs in connection with the Initial Staking
Grant, which will vest ratably over the Remaining Initial Staking Grant Vesting Dates, (ii) 1,713 unvested LTIP Units issued to Mr. Vohs
as part of the 2024 Annual Incentive Grant, which will vest on the Remaining 2024 Annual Incentive Grant Vesting Date, or (iii) 2,757
unvested LTIP Units issued to Mr. Vohs as part of the April 1, 2025 Annual Incentive Grant, which will vest ratably on each
of April 1, 2027 and April 1, 2028 (collectively, the “Remaining April 1, 2025 Annual Incentive Grant Vesting Dates”).

17

(11)     Total
includes (i) 19,223 LTIP Units issued to Mr. DiFranco as part of the Initial Staking Grant, of which 6,408 vested on each of
November 3, 2023 and November 3, 2024, and 6,407 vested on November 3, 2025, (ii) 3,706 LTIP Units issued to Mr. DiFranco
as part of the 2023 Annual Incentive Grant, of which 1,236 vested on May 25, 2024 and 1,235 vested on April 1, 2025, and 1,235
which will vest on April 1, 2026, (iii) 3,428 LTIP Units issued to Mr. DiFranco as part of the 2024 Annual Incentive Grant,
of which 1,714 vested on April 30, 2025 and 1,714 will vest on April 30, 2026, and (iv) 1,379 LTIP Units issued to Mr. DiFranco
as part of the April 1, 2025 Annual Incentive Grant, which will vest on April 1, 2026. Total does not include (i) 12,814
remaining unvested LTIP Units issued to Mr. DiFranco in connection with the Initial Staking Grant, which will vest ratably over the
Remaining Initial Staking Grant Vesting Dates, (ii) 1,713 unvested LTIP Units issued to Mr. DiFranco as part of the 2024 Annual
Incentive Grant, which will vest on the Remaining 2024 Annual Incentive Grant Vesting Date, or (iii) 2,757 unvested LTIP Units issued
to Mr. DiFranco as part of the April 1, 2025 Annual Incentive Grant, which will vest ratably over the Remaining April 1,
2025 Annual Incentive Grant Vesting Dates.

(12)     Total
includes (i) 15,378 LTIP Units issued to Mr. Emala as part of the Initial Staking Grant, of which 5,126 vested on each of November 3,
2023, November 3, 2024, and November 3, 2025, (ii) 2,514 LTIP Units issued to Mr. Emala as part of the 2024 Annual
Incentive Grant, of which 1,257 vested on April 30, 2025 and 1,257 will vest on April 30, 2026, and (iii) 1,379 LTIP Units
issued to Mr. Emala as part of the April 1, 2025 Annual Incentive Grant, which will vest on April 1, 2026. Total does not
include (i) 10,252 remaining unvested LTIP Units issued to Mr. Emala in connection with the Initial Staking Grant, which will
vest ratably over the Remaining Initial Staking Grant Vesting Dates, (ii) 1,256 unvested LTIP Units issued to Mr. Emala as part
of the 2024 Annual Incentive Grant, which will vest on the Remaining 2024 Annual Incentive Grant Vesting Date, or (iii) 2,757 unvested
LTIP Units issued to Mr. Emala as part of the April 1, 2025 Annual Incentive Grant, which will vest ratably over the Remaining
April 1, 2025 Annual Incentive Grant Vesting Dates.

(13)     Based
on the Schedule 13G filed with the SEC on February 10, 2026. Includes holdings of a limited liability company of which Par Sanda
is Managing Member and through which Par Sanda may be deemed beneficial owner of 570,749 shares of our Class A common stock. Par
Sanda has sole voting power with respect to 570,749 shares and sole dispositive power with respect to 570,749 shares, and shared voting
and/or dispositive power with respect to no shares, in each case, of our Class A common stock. The percentage of beneficial ownership
has been adjusted to reflect our actual shares of Class A common stock outstanding as of the close of business on March 6, 2026.

(14)     Based
on the Schedule 13G filed with the SEC on February 13, 2025. The Radoff Family Foundation has sole voting power with respect to 344,800
shares, sole dispositive power with respect to 344,800 shares, and shared voting and/or dispositive power with respect to no shares, in
each case, of our Class A common stock. The percentage of beneficial ownership has been adjusted to reflect our actual shares of
Class A common stock outstanding as of the close of business on March 6, 2026.

(15)     Based
on the Ownership Statement reflecting beneficial ownership information as of December 31, 2025 as provided to the company by Hedgehog
Capital LLC in February 2026. Hedgehog Capital LLC has sole voting power with respect to 337,952 shares, sole dispositive power with
respect to 337,952 shares, and shared voting and/or dispositive power with respect to no shares, in each case, of our Class A common
stock. The percentage of beneficial ownership has been adjusted to reflect our actual shares of Class A common stock outstanding
as of the close of business on March 6, 2026.

(16)     Based on
the Schedule 13F filed with the SEC on February 13, 2026. Quinn Opportunity Partners LLC has shared voting power with respect to
228,282 shares, shared dispositive power with respect to 228,282 shares, and sole voting and/or dispositive power with respect to no shares,
in each case, of our Class A common stock. The percentage of beneficial ownership has been adjusted to reflect our actual shares
of Class A common stock outstanding as of the close of business on March 6, 2026.

18

Securities Authorized for Issuance under
Equity Compensation Plans

The following
table provides information about the amount of securities available under the BHM Incentive Plans, as of December 31, 2025:

Plan Category

Number of Securities to be

Issued Upon Exercise of

Outstanding Options,

Warrants and Rights

Weighted-Average

Exercise Price of

Outstanding Options,

Warrants and Rights

Number of Securities

Remaining Available

for Future Issuance

Equity compensation plans approved by security holders

—

—

694,800

(1)

Equity compensation plans not approved by security holders

—

—

—

Total:

—

—

694,800

(1)

(1)

Total does not include the 2,397,109 shares subject to awards granted under the Prior Plans that may become
available for issuance or reissuance, as applicable, under the BHM Incentive Plans if such awards are forfeited, canceled or otherwise
terminated (other than by exercise).

Item 13.     Certain
Relationships and Related Transactions and Director Independence

Certain Relationships and Related Party Transactions

Management Agreement

We, the Operating Partnership
and our Manager are parties to the Management Agreement. The Management Agreement requires our Manager to manage our business affairs
in conformity with our investment guidelines and other policies that are approved and monitored by our board of directors. Our Manager’s
role as Manager will be under the supervision and direction of our board of directors. For more information regarding the Management Agreement,
please refer to the discussion under “Our Manager and Related Agreements—Management Agreement.”

For the year ended December 31,
2025, the company recorded an aggregate base management fee of $10.5 million, of which $0.8 million was, or shall be, paid in C-LTIP Units,
with the remainder of the fee paid in cash. For the year ended December 31, 2024, the company recorded an aggregate base management
fee of $9.1 million, of which $3.6 million was paid in C-LTIP Units, with the remainder of the fee paid in cash. There have been no incentive
fee expenses incurred during the years ended December 31, 2025 and 2024.

For the years ended December 31,
2025 and 2024, the company recorded operating expense reimbursements of $4.0 million and $4.4 million, respectively. Commencing with operating
expense reimbursements for the first quarter 2024, the company paid the operating expense reimbursement to the Manager entirely in cash.
In addition, for the years ended December 31, 2025 and 2024, the company recorded direct expense reimbursements of $0.6 million and
$0.4 million, respectively, which were, or shall be, paid to the Manager in cash. Both the operating and direct expense reimbursements
were recorded as part of general and administrative expenses on the company’s consolidated statements of operations and comprehensive
income (loss).

The table below presents
the related party amounts payable to the Manager at December 31, 2025 and 2024 pursuant to the terms of the Management Agreement
(amounts in thousands). The company records these payables in due to affiliates on its consolidated balance sheets.

Amounts payable to the Manager under the Management Agreement

2025

2024

Base management fee

$

2,682

$

2,490

Operating and direct expense reimbursements

1,206

1,224

Offering expense reimbursements

97

148

Total amounts payable to the Manager

$

3,985

$

3,862

DST Program

Acquisition Fees

The company, through consolidated
subsidiaries associated with its DST Program, incurs a one-time acquisition fee for each DST private placement offering. During the years
ended December 31, 2025 and 2024, the company incurred one-time acquisition fees of $5.3 million and $2.1 million, respectively.
Refer to Note 9 to the Consolidated Financial Statements appearing in the company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year
ended December 31, 2025, which is incorporated herein by reference, for further information on the company’s DST Program.

19

Asset Management Fees

The company engaged a related
party as the DST asset manager to provide certain management services and oversee the performance of the property manager. The company
has agreed to pay an asset management fee equal to a stated percentage per annum of the purchase price of each property in the DST Program.
During the years ended December 31, 2025 and 2024, the company incurred asset management fees related to the DST Program of $0.3
million and $0.04 million, respectively, which are recorded within property management and asset management fees on the company’s
consolidated statements of operations and comprehensive income (loss).

The table below presents
amounts payable to related parties at December 31, 2025 and 2024 (amounts in thousands) related to the company’s DST Program.
The company records these payables in due to affiliates on its consolidated balance sheets.

Amounts payable to related parties – DST Program

2025

2024

One-time acquisition fees

$

5,293

$

2,060

Asset management fees

317

35

Other

—

23

Total amounts payable to related parties – DST Program

$

5,610

$

2,118

District at Parkview DST

In December 2025, the
company, through a DST, acquired District at Parkview to be included in its DST Program. The purchase price of District at Parkview, inclusive
of certain adjustments typical in such real estate transactions, was funded by (i) a senior loan secured by the property, (ii) cash
funded by the company, and (iii) cash funded by Bluerock Real Estate Holdings, LLC, an affiliate of the Manager. Refer to Note 3
to the Consolidated Financial Statements appearing in the company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31,
2025, which is incorporated herein by reference, for further information.

Unconsolidated Real Estate Fund

The company’s investment
in the Marble Fund, which is an unconsolidated real estate fund (refer to Note 7 to the Consolidated Financial Statements appearing in
the company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2025, which is incorporated herein by reference,
for further information), is accounted for under the equity method as the company considers its degree of influence to be significant.
As such, the company’s investment in the Marble Fund is considered a related party investment. The company earns a return on its
investment which is recognized on a one-quarter lag and is recorded in share of net earnings of equity method investment on its consolidated
statements of operations and comprehensive income (loss). At December 31, 2025, the company had $0.2 million of related party amounts
payable to the Marble Fund pertaining to carried interest. The company records these payables in due to affiliates on its consolidated
balance sheets. The company held no investments in unconsolidated real estate funds at December 31, 2024.

Leasehold Cost-Sharing Agreement with Bluerock
Real Estate Holdings, LLC

In connection with a new
lease on the company’s New York (Manhattan) headquarters, effective May 2024, the company and an unaffiliated third-party landlord
entered into a lease for separate corporate space (the “NY Premises Lease”) located at 919 Third Avenue, New York, New York
(the “NY Premises”). The NY Premises Lease commenced in November 2024 when the landlord made the NY Premises available
to the Company to begin its own alterations and improvements. With respect to the NY Premises, the company and Bluerock Real Estate Holdings,
LLC (“BREH”), which is an affiliate of the Manager, entered into a leasehold cost-sharing agreement (the “Leasehold
Cost-Sharing Agreement”) to provide for the allocation and sharing between BREH and the company of the costs thereunder, including
costs associated with tenant improvements. BREH and certain of its respective subsidiaries and/or affiliates will share occupancy of the
NY Premises. Under the Leasehold Cost-Sharing Agreement, if there is a change in control of either BREH or the company, the allocation
of costs under the Leasehold Cost-Sharing Agreement shall be modified to thereafter allocate such costs based on the average of the cost-sharing percentages
between BREH and the company over the four most recently-completed calendar quarters immediately preceding the change in control date
(or shall be the average cost-sharing percentages over such shorter period, if the change in control occurs earlier than the completion
of four calendar quarters). Under the NY Premises Lease, the company, through its Operating Partnership, issued a payment of approximately
$450,000 as a security deposit. Payment by BREH of any amounts payable under the Leasehold Cost-Sharing Agreement to the company will
be made in cash.

20

The table below presents
the related party amounts receivable from BREH at December 31, 2025 and 2024 pursuant to the terms of the Leasehold Cost-Sharing
Agreement (amounts in thousands). The company records these receivables in due from affiliates on its consolidated balance sheets.

Amounts receivable from BREH under the Leasehold Cost-Sharing Agreement

2025

2024

Capital improvement cost reimbursements

$

621

$

925

Operating and direct expense reimbursements

32

124

Total amounts receivable from BREH

$

653

$

1,049

At December 31, 2025
and 2024, the company had no other receivables due from related parties.

Harmony at Clear Creek Development

In connection with the Harmony
at Clear Creek land acquisition that occurred on September 30, 2025 (refer to Note 3 to the Consolidated Financial Statements appearing
in the company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2025, which is incorporated herein by reference,
for further information), the Harmony JV entered into a joint venture agreement with BTR Preferred Investments, LLC (“BTR Preferred”),
an entity that includes an affiliate of the Manager, in which BTR Preferred committed to fund up to $16.8 million of preferred equity
interests in the Harmony at Clear Creek development. At December 31, 2025, BTR Preferred had not funded any of the committed amount.

Archer at RiverBlue

In December 2025, the
company entered into a joint venture agreement with two unaffiliated third parties to develop Archer at RiverBlue (refer to Note 8 to
the Consolidated Financial Statements appearing in the company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31,
2025, which is incorporated herein by reference, for further information). The company and one joint venture partner will each hold preferred
equity interests in Archer at RiverBlue, and the remaining joint venture partner will hold the common equity interests. Per the terms
of the joint venture agreement, the common equity partner is obligated to pay a facilitation fee in an amount equal to $570K to Bluerock
Enterprise Holdings, LP, an affiliate of the Manager, for consulting services to be provided to the common equity partner.

Preferred Equity Investments

During 2025, the company
sold its preferred equity interests in Indigo Cove and Wayford at Pringle to a joint venture, with such joint venture including an affiliate
of the Manager. Refer to Note 8 to the Consolidated Financial Statements appearing in the company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K
for the year ended December 31, 2025, which is incorporated herein by reference, for further information.

Selling Commissions and Dealer Manager Fees

The company engaged Bluerock
Capital Markets, LLC, an affiliate of the Manager, as dealer manager for offerings in its DST Program, the offering of its Series A
Redeemable Preferred Stock, and the offering of its Series B Redeemable Preferred Stock. For offerings in its DST Program, the company
pays up to 8.65% of the gross offering proceeds from the offerings as selling commissions and dealer manager fees. The dealer manager
re-allows the substantial majority of the selling commissions and dealer manager fees to participating broker-dealers. For its offerings
of Series A Redeemable Preferred Stock and Series B Redeemable Preferred Stock, the company pays up to 10% of the gross offering
proceeds from each such offering as selling commissions and dealer manager fees. The dealer manager re-allows the substantial majority
of the selling commissions and dealer manager fees to participating broker-dealers and incurs costs in excess of the 10%, which costs
are borne by the dealer manager without reimbursement by the company. For the year ended December 31, 2025, the company incurred
$3.0 million in selling commissions and discounts and $1.3 million in dealer manager fees and discounts related to its offering
of Series A Redeemable Preferred Stock. In addition, the Manager was, or shall be, reimbursed for offering costs of $1.2 million
in conjunction with the offering of Series A Redeemable Preferred Stock during the year ended December 31, 2025. The selling
commissions, dealer manager fees, discounts and reimbursements for offering costs were recorded as a reduction to the proceeds of the
offering.

21

Related Person Transaction Policy

Our board of directors has
adopted a written Related Person Transaction Policy, for which the audit committee oversees compliance. The purpose of this policy is
to describe the procedures used to identify, review and approve any existing or proposed transaction, arrangement, relationship (or series
of similar transactions, arrangements or relationships) in which (a) we, our Operating Partnership or any of our subsidiaries were,
are or will be a participant, (b) the aggregate amount involved exceeds $120,000, and (c) a related person has or will
have a direct or indirect interest. For purposes of this policy, a related person will be (i) any person who is, or at any time since
the beginning of the current fiscal year was, a director, director nominee, or executive officer of the company, (ii) any beneficial
owner of more than 5% of our stock, or (iii) any immediate family member of any of the foregoing persons.

Under this policy, our audit
committee is responsible for reviewing and approving or ratifying each related person transaction or proposed related person transaction.
In determining whether to approve or ratify a related person transaction, the audit committee is required to consider all relevant facts
and circumstances of the related person transaction available to the audit committee and to approve only those related person transactions
that are in the best interests of the company, as the audit committee determines in good faith. No member of the audit committee will
be permitted to participate in any consideration of a related person transaction with respect to which that member or any of his or her
immediate family is a related person. A copy of the Related Person Transaction Policy is available at www.bluerock.com/bluerock-homes-trust/governance-documents .

Director Independence and Independence Determinations

Under our
Corporate Governance Guidelines, a majority of the members of our board of directors, and all of the members of our audit committee, compensation
committee, and nominating and corporate governance committee, must be “independent.” Our Corporate Governance Guidelines define
an “independent” director in accordance with the NYSE American Company Guide and under applicable law. In addition, audit
and compensation committee members are subject to the additional independence requirements of applicable SEC rules and NYSE listing
standards. Our Corporate Governance Guidelines require our board of directors to review the independence of all directors at least annually.
A director is not independent unless our board of directors affirmatively determines that he or she does not have a material relationship
with us (either directly or as a partner, director, member, stockholder or officer of an organization that has a relationship with us).

Our Chief
Executive Officer and Chairman of our board of directors, R. Ramin Kamfar, is affiliated with us and we do not consider Mr. Kamfar
to be an independent director. In making its independence determination with respect to our other current directors, our board of directors
considered the following:

·

Messrs. Jafarnia, Majumder and Tio each serve as an independent Trustee of the Board of Trustees
of Bluerock Private Real Estate Fund (formerly Bluerock Total Income + Real Estate Fund), a closed-end interval fund organized by Bluerock
(the “Real Estate Fund”), and each also serves as an independent Trustee of the Board of Bluerock High Income Institutional
Credit Fund, a registered interval fund organized by Bluerock (the “Credit Fund”). Serving as a director or trustee of, or
having an ownership interest in, another program sponsored by Bluerock will not, by itself, preclude independent director status. None
of these directors has ever served as (or is related to) an employee of ours or any of our predecessors or acquired companies or received
or earned any compensation from us or any such other entities except for compensation directly related to service as a director of us,
the Real Estate Fund or the Credit Fund.

·

Mr. Tio previously served as Senior Managing Director with Greystone, a commercial real estate finance
and investment firm. Prior to Mr. Tio’s employment with Greystone, in January 2021, Greystone provided a bridge loan to
one of the development projects of Bluerock Residential, and Greystone may provide financing on Company projects in the future. Mr. Tio
is no longer an employee with Greystone, and does not have a role as an officer, partner or shareholder with Greystone. As an employee
with Greystone, Mr. Tio was screened from and was not personally involved in any transactions with the Company. In addition, Mr. Tio’s
compensation was not affected by the amount of interest, fees or other income earned by Greystone from any such transaction with the Company.
The amounts involved in any such transactions are not expected to represent a material percentage of the Company’s, or Greystone’s,
revenues, nor should any such transaction constitute a related-party transaction because Mr. Tio will not have a direct or indirect
material interest therein.

Having considered
these and other relevant factors, our board of directors, on recommendation of the nominating and corporate governance committee, affirmatively
determined that each of Elizabeth Harrison, Kamal Jafarnia, I. Bobby Majumder and Romano Tio has no material relationship with us
that would impair his or her independent judgment as a director, and qualifies as independent under the standards of the NYSE American,
the SEC and our Corporate Governance Guidelines, including with respect to committee membership on the committees on which they serve.

22

Item 14.     Principal
Accountant Fees and Services

Independent Registered Public
Accounting Firm

Grant Thornton
LLP (“Grant Thornton”) has served as our independent registered public accounting firm since December 8, 2021. The appointment
of Grant Thornton as our independent registered public accountants was unanimously approved by the audit committee of our board of directors.
We expect that a representative of Grant Thornton will be present at the Annual Meeting. The representative of Grant Thornton will have
the opportunity to make a statement if they desire to do so and will be available to respond to appropriate questions.

Pre-Approval Policies and
Procedures

In order
to ensure that the provision of the auditing services, and all permitted non-audit services, performed for us by our independent auditors
(including the fees and terms thereof) do not impair the auditors’ independence, the board of directors approved, on September 19,
2022, the Audit Committee Charter, which includes an Audit Committee Pre-Approval Policy for Audit and Non-audit Services. The Audit Committee
Pre-Approval Policy for Audit and Non-audit Services requires the audit committee to pre-approve, to the extent required by applicable
law, all audit and non-audit engagements and the related fees and terms with the independent auditors. In determining whether or not to
pre-approve services, the audit committee considers whether the service is a permissible service under the rules and regulations
promulgated by the SEC. In addition, the audit committee may, in its discretion, delegate one or more of its members the authority to
pre-approve any audit or non-audit services to be performed by the independent auditors, provided any such approval is presented to and
approved by the full audit committee at its next scheduled meeting.

Since October 6,
2022, when we became a reporting company under Section 15(d) of the Exchange Act, all services rendered by our independent auditors
have been pre-approved in accordance with the policies and procedures described above.

Principal Auditor Fees and
Services

The aggregate
fees billed to us for professional accounting services, including the audit of our annual financial statements by Grant Thornton for the
years ended December 31, 2025 and December 31, 2024 are set forth in the table below (amounts in thousands):

2025

2024

Audit fees

$

674

$

597

Audit-related fees

—

—

Tax fees

—

—

All other fees

—

—

Total

$

674

$

597

For purposes of the preceding
table, professional fees are classified as follows:

·

Audit fees — These are fees for professional services performed for the audit of our annual financial
statements and the required review of quarterly financial statements and other procedures performed by the independent auditors in order
for them to be able to form an opinion on our consolidated financial statements. These fees also cover services that are normally provided
by independent auditors in connection with statutory and regulatory filings or engagements.

·

Audit-related fees — These are fees for assurance and related services that traditionally are performed
by independent auditors that are reasonably related to the performance of the audit or review of the financial statements, such as due
diligence related to acquisitions and dispositions, attestation services that are not required by statute or regulation, internal control
reviews and consultation concerning financial accounting and reporting standards.

·

Tax fees — These are fees for all professional services performed by professional staff in our independent
auditor’s tax division, except those services related to the audit of our financial statements. These include fees for tax compliance,
tax planning and tax advice, including federal, state and local issues. Services may also include assistance with tax audits and appeals
before the IRS and similar state and local agencies, as well as federal, state and local tax issues related to due diligence.

·

All other fees — These are fees for any services not included in the above-described categories.

23