Family of 6 Income Limits in Nevada

For a family of six in Nevada, the standard Section 8 voucher ceiling is $52,900 in annual gross income (50% AMI). Below is the full eligibility detail, the rent share you'd actually pay, the right bedroom size, and where to apply.

30% AMI · Extremely Low
$31,750
Priority programs
50% AMI · Very Low
$52,900
Section 8 ceiling
80% AMI · Low
$84,650
Public Housing ceiling
Tenant share at 30% AMI
$794/mo
≈ 30% of adjusted income

What a family of 6 needs to earn (or earn less than) in Nevada

The three numbers above are the maximum annual gross income at the three AMI tiers HUD uses for federal rental assistance, calculated from Nevada's 4-person Area Median Income of $91,200 and HUD's standard family-size adjustment factor of 116% for a 6-person household. If your annual gross income is at or below $52,900, you fall within the standard Section 8 voucher window. If it's at or below $31,750, you also qualify for the highest-priority programs — Emergency Housing Vouchers, Continuum of Care permanent supportive housing, and the 75% set-aside HUD requires for new Section 8 admissions.

One easy way to read these numbers: divide the 50% AMI ceiling by 12 to see the monthly figure. For a family of six in Nevada, that's about $4,408 per month in gross income. If you're a single earner taking home roughly 80% of gross after taxes, that's a take-home of around $3,527 per month and still keeps you under the Section 8 ceiling.

What you'd actually pay in rent

The federal rule for both Section 8 and Public Housing is that the household pays roughly 30% of adjusted income toward rent and utilities. "Adjusted income" is your gross income minus a $480 deduction per dependent, a $525 deduction if any household member is elderly or disabled, and actual childcare or unreimbursed medical expenses (for elderly/disabled households) above 3% of income.

For a family of six at the very top of the 50% AMI tier in Nevada, the tenant share works out to roughly $1,323 per month in rent and utilities combined; at the 30% AMI tier, it's about $794 per month. The voucher pays the difference up to the local Payment Standard.

Heads-up. If your income drops to or near zero (you're temporarily homeless, between jobs, on partial unemployment), the Section 8 minimum rent is just $50/month — and HUD's hardship exemption can waive even that. The voucher does not get yanked because your income temporarily dropped.

Bedroom size for a family of six

HUD's occupancy guideline is roughly two persons per bedroom (with one person of any age permitted in the living room), so a family of six in Nevada typically receives a voucher sized for a 3-bedroom. The voucher size determines the maximum rent the PHA will pay (the Payment Standard), and the Payment Standard is set between 90% and 110% of the local Fair Market Rent for that bedroom count.

3-bedroom Fair Market Rent in major Nevada metros
Metro3-bedroom FMRStudio1BR2BR3BR
Las Vegas $2,093 $998 $1,256 $1,610 $2,093
Henderson $2,191 $1,045 $1,314 $1,685 $2,191
Reno $2,191 $1,045 $1,314 $1,685 $2,191
North Las Vegas $2,009 $958 $1,205 $1,545 $2,009

Compare to all 8 family sizes in Nevada

The table below shows the income ceiling at each AMI tier for every household size in Nevada. Your row is highlighted.

Household size30% AMI50% AMI80% AMIFamily-size factor
1-person $19,150 $31,900 $51,050 70%
2-person $21,900 $36,500 $58,350 80%
3-person $24,600 $41,050 $65,650 90%
4-person $27,350 $45,600 $72,950 100%
5-person $29,550 $49,250 $78,800 108%
6-person (you) $31,750 $52,900 $84,650 116%
7-person $33,950 $56,550 $90,450 124%
8-person $36,100 $60,200 $96,300 132%

Where to apply in Nevada

The application is run at the local Public Housing Agency level — there is no statewide application portal. Nevada has 12 PHAs, each with its own waiting list, application window, and local preferences. The largest in the state is the Housing Authority of North Las Vegas in North Las Vegas; its current waiting list status is Open with preferences. See the Nevada page for the full agency directory and a step-by-step walkthrough of the application process.

Programs a family of six in Nevada typically qualifies for

  • Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher (HCV) — income cap ≤ 50% AMI. Tenant-based federal rental subsidy that lets eligible households rent privately-owned housing of their choice. The household pays roughly 30% of adjusted income toward rent, and t…
  • Public Housing — income cap ≤ 80% AMI. Government-owned rental housing operated by local PHAs. About 970,000 units nationwide. Households pay roughly 30% of adjusted income; the PHA owns and maintains the building.…
  • Project-Based Rental Assistance (PBRA) — income cap ≤ 50% AMI. Subsidy attached to a specific apartment building rather than the household. Tenants apply directly to the property, pay roughly 30% of income, and lose the subsidy if they move.…
  • Low-Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC) — income cap ≤ 60% AMI. The largest source of new affordable rental housing in the U.S. Owners receive federal tax credits in exchange for capping rents and reserving units for households at or below 50–6…
  • HOME Investment Partnerships Program — income cap ≤ 80% AMI. Federal block grant to state and local governments to fund affordable rental construction, rehabilitation, and tenant-based rental assistance. Programs vary by jurisdiction.…
  • USDA Rural Development Section 521 — income cap ≤ 80% AMI. Rental assistance for tenants in USDA-financed (Section 515) rural rental properties. Households in eligible rural areas pay roughly 30% of income toward rent.…
  • Emergency Housing Vouchers (EHV) — income cap ≤ 50% AMI. Created by the American Rescue Plan Act (2021) to help households fleeing domestic violence, experiencing homelessness, or at imminent risk of homelessness. Functions like a Sectio…
  • Section 202 Supportive Housing for the Elderly — income cap ≤ 50% AMI. Subsidized housing for very-low-income households where at least one member is 62+. Properties combine affordable rents with supportive services such as transportation and case man…
  • HUD-VASH (Veterans Affairs Supportive Housing) — income cap ≤ 50% AMI. Section 8 vouchers paired with VA case management for homeless veterans. Referrals come through the local VA Medical Center.…
  • Family Unification Program (FUP) — income cap ≤ 50% AMI. Section 8 vouchers for families where the lack of adequate housing is a primary factor in foster care placement, and for youth aging out of foster care between 18 and 24.…

Same family size, other states

If you're considering a move, or supporting a family member elsewhere, here's how the income ceiling for a family of six compares in nearby and similarly-sized states. Click through to see the same detail for that state.