What it is
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 the local PHA pays the difference up to a payment standard set near the area's Fair Market Rent.
Who funds and runs it: Funded by HUD; administered locally by roughly 2,200 PHAs across the country.
Who qualifies
To be eligible for the Section 8 HCV program, your household income generally cannot exceed 50% of the Area Median Income (AMI) for the metro or county where you live. AMI is set by HUD each year and varies enormously across the country — what counts as "very low income" in San Francisco is not the same as in Mississippi. See the income limits explainer for the actual dollar figures, and look up your specific state on the states page.
Most federal rental assistance programs also require that you:
- Be a U.S. citizen or have eligible immigration status (mixed-status families can still qualify, with subsidy prorated for eligible members).
- Pass a basic background check; serious criminal history involving violence, drug manufacturing, or sex offenses can be disqualifying. Most other criminal history does not disqualify you under current HUD guidance.
- Not owe money to the same PHA from a previous tenancy.
How to apply
You apply directly to a local Public Housing Agency. Almost all PHAs use a written or online waiting-list application. Many open and close their waiting lists on irregular schedules — when funding allows, the PHA opens the list for a few days or weeks, accepts applications, then closes it again. Browse the state pages to find PHAs near you and check whether their list is currently open. The waiting lists explainer covers what to expect.
Almost every application requires the same documents: government-issued photo ID for every household member 18 or older, Social Security cards or ITINs, birth certificates for minors, the last 60 days of pay stubs, the most recent federal tax return, current bank statements, proof of any other income (Social Security, SSI, SSDI, TANF, child support, unemployment), and a written verification of any disability that would qualify you for a disability-priority preference.
Where it's available
The Section 8 HCV program is available nationwide, but the funded capacity per PHA — and therefore your real-world chance of getting help — varies widely by state. Browse by state to see how many PHAs operate the program in your area:
- Alabama
- Alaska
- Arizona
- Arkansas
- California
- Colorado
- Connecticut
- Delaware
- Florida
- Georgia
- Hawaii
- Idaho
- Illinois
- Indiana
- Iowa
- Kansas
- Kentucky
- Louisiana
- Maine
- Maryland
- Massachusetts
- Michigan
- Minnesota
- Mississippi
- Missouri
- Montana
- Nebraska
- Nevada
- New Hampshire
- New Jersey
- New Mexico
- New York
- North Carolina
- North Dakota
- Ohio
- Oklahoma
- Oregon
- Pennsylvania
- Rhode Island
- South Carolina
- South Dakota
- Tennessee
- Texas
- Utah
- Vermont
- Virginia
- Washington
- West Virginia
- Wisconsin
- Wyoming
Common misconceptions
"Section 8 means the projects." The Housing Choice Voucher (Section 8) is tenant-based — you find a private rental and the voucher pays part of the rent. Public Housing is the buildings owned and operated by the PHA. They are different programs, with different applications and waiting lists.
"You have to be on welfare to qualify." Cash welfare (TANF) is unrelated to rental assistance eligibility. Working households make up the majority of voucher holders. The qualifier is income relative to the area median, not the source of that income.
"If I get a raise I'll lose my voucher." Section 8 rent rises with your income (you pay 30% of adjusted income), but the voucher itself is not lost until your income exceeds the program's continuing-eligibility ceiling for several months in a row. The Family Self-Sufficiency program even lets you bank the rent increases tied to earnings as savings.