Proteins of the HD-domain superfamily employ a conserved histidine-aspartate (HD) dyad to coordinate diverse metallocofactors. While most known HD-domain proteins are phosphohydrolases, new additions to this superfamily have emerged such as oxygenases and lyases, expanding their functional repertoire. To date, three HD-domain oxygenases have been identified, all of which employ a mixed-valent FeIIFeIII cofactor to activate their substrates and utilize molecular oxygen to afford cleavage of C-C or C-P bonds via a diferric superoxo intermediate. Phylogenetic analysis reveals an uncharacterized multidomain protein in the pathogenic soil fungus Fonsecaea multimorphosa, herein designated PhoF. PhoF consists of an N-terminal FeII/α-ketoglutarate-dependent domain resembling that of PhnY and a C-terminal HD-domain like that of PhnZ. PhnY and PhnZ are part of an organophosphonate degradation pathway in which PhnY hydroxylates 2-aminoethylphosphonic acid, and PhnZ cleaves the C-P bond of the hydroxylated product yielding phosphate and glycine. Employing electron paramagnetic resonance and Mössbauer spectroscopies in tandem with activity assays, we determined that PhoF carries out the O2-dependent degradation of two aminophosphonates, demonstrating an expanded catalytic efficiency with respect to the individual, but mechanistically coupled PhnY and PhnZ. Our results recognize PhoF as a new example of an HD-domain oxygenase and show that domain fusion of an organophosphonate degradation pathway may be a strategy for disease-causing fungi to acquire increased functional versatility, potentially important for their survival.