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Low-Income Senior Apartments: Section 8, HUD & Subsidized Housing Guide

Maria Garcia, Benefits Specialist · Updated March 24, 2026

Most seniors who qualify for subsidized housing never apply - because no one explained the income limits, asset rules, and application steps in plain English. This guide changes that. Whether you are looking at a Housing Choice Voucher, a project-based Section 8 unit, or a Section 202 Supportive Housing property, the eligibility mechanics follow the same logic at every step: your income is measured against your county's Area Median Income (AMI), your assets are reviewed under specific federal rules, and your application lands in a queue that can move slowly - unless you know which pathways can move you to the front.

This page is not a directory of properties. It is the step-by-step eligibility walkthrough that most housing guides skip - covering the income math, asset treatment, waitlist strategy, and your legal right to appeal a denial. By the end, you will know exactly where you stand before you ever call a property manager or a Public Housing Authority (PHA).

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Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher vs. Project-Based Section 8: Why the Difference Matters

Most seniors treat "Section 8" as a single program. It isn't. There are two distinct programs, and the difference between them shapes both your eligibility strategy and how much flexibility you have once you're housed.

Housing Choice Voucher (HCV) - The Portable Option

A Housing Choice Voucher follows you. Once your local PHA issues the voucher, you take it to any private landlord who agrees to participate in the program. The voucher covers the gap between roughly 30% of your adjusted gross income and the fair market rent for your area. If you move to a different city or county after a set residency period (typically 12 months), you can often "port" the voucher to your new location. For seniors who may want to move closer to family, this portability is a significant advantage.

Project-Based Section 8 - Tied to a Specific Building

Project-Based Section 8 assistance is attached to a specific apartment unit, not to the tenant. You apply directly to the property, qualify under that property's rules, and receive the subsidy only as long as you live there. If you move out, the subsidy stays with the unit. Some project-based properties are specifically designated for elderly or disabled residents, which can reduce competition and shorten wait times compared to general Section 8 waitlists.

Eligibility rules overlap heavily between the two programs, but income verification procedures, unit inspection requirements, and lease terms can differ. According to HUD's Office of Housing (hud.gov/program_offices/housing), the Section 202 Supportive Housing for the Elderly program operates as a project-based model, funding non-profit developers to build and operate housing specifically for seniors aged 62 and older - a separate pipeline from general Section 8 entirely.

Income Eligibility: How HUD Sets the Limits by County

One of the most common misconceptions is that HUD income limits are a single national number. They are not. Limits are calculated by county and family size, anchored to each county's Area Median Income (AMI) - the midpoint income for all households in that geographic area. A senior in rural Mississippi and one in San Francisco face entirely different thresholds for the same program category.

The Three Income Tiers

To find the current limits for your specific county and household size, visit the HUD income limits lookup at hud.gov/program_offices/housing. The tables are updated annually, usually in the spring. A single-person senior household will have a lower limit than a two-person household, which is relevant if you have a spouse or live-in caregiver.

What Counts as Income for HUD Purposes?

HUD uses "annual gross income" - all anticipated income from all sources before deductions. For seniors, this typically includes:

Some items are excluded from HUD income calculations: the income of a live-in aide who is not a family member, sporadic gifts, and certain lump-sum inheritances. The rules here are detailed, and a small misstatement on your application can trigger a denial - or an overpayment determination later. When in doubt, ask your PHA to walk through the income worksheet line by line before you submit.

Asset Rules: Where Many Seniors Get Tripped Up

Section 8 at the federal level does not have a hard asset cap - you will not automatically be disqualified because you have $40,000 in a savings account. However, the income generated by those assets is counted toward your annual gross income. This distinction trips up many applicants.

How Net Income from Assets Is Calculated

If your total assets are valued at $5,000 or less, HUD adds the actual interest or income earned from those assets to your gross income. If your total assets exceed $5,000, HUD uses a "passbook rate" - an imputed rate published periodically - and adds either the actual income or the imputed income, whichever is higher. This means a senior with significant savings in a low-yield savings account may have more "income" attributed to them under HUD's formula than they actually receive each month.

What Counts as an Asset?

Items typically not counted as assets include the value of necessary personal property (clothing, furniture, a car), IRAs and 401(k)s that are not accessible without penalty (rules vary - confirm with your PHA), and the value of a burial plot or prepaid funeral arrangements up to certain limits.

State-Level Asset Caps

Some state-funded housing assistance programs impose hard asset limits that federal Section 8 does not. A state-funded rental subsidy in your jurisdiction may cap countable assets at a specific dollar threshold. Run your zip code through the National Council on Aging (NCOA) BenefitsCheckUp tool at BenefitsCheckUp.org - it screens both federal and state programs and flags state-specific rules that differ from federal Section 8. If you have significant assets, doing this before you apply tells you which programs you are realistically competing for.

The Section 8 Waitlist: What to Realistically Expect

Here is the number you need to hear before anything else: most local PHAs have waitlists that run two to seven years. Larger metro PHAs often close their lists entirely, sometimes for years at a stretch. That isn't a reason to give up. It is the exact reason to apply to multiple PHAs at once and to know every pathway that can push you forward.

Applying to Multiple PHAs at Once

There is no rule against applying to multiple PHAs simultaneously. Each PHA operates independently and manages its own waitlist. Some PHAs cover entire counties or metro areas; others are city-specific. A senior living near a county line may be eligible to apply to both the city PHA and the county PHA, doubling their odds of receiving a voucher before a decade passes. PHAs are required to publish their waitlist status publicly, and a list that has been closed for years can open for a lottery-style application window with only a few weeks' notice - sometimes less. According to the Public Housing Authority network administered under HUD's oversight, these windows are occasionally announced with very little advance warning.

Pathways That Can Bypass the Standard Waitlist

How to Check Your Eligibility: A Step-by-Step Process

Step 1 - Look Up the AMI Limits for Your County

Go to HUD's income limits tool at hud.gov/program_offices/housing and look up your state and county. Find the row for your household size (likely "1 person" or "2 persons"). Note the "Very Low Income (50% AMI)" figure - this is the ceiling for most Section 8 programs. Compare it to your total anticipated annual income from all sources listed in the income section above.

Step 2 - Calculate Your Gross Annual Income

Add up every income source: 12 months of Social Security, 12 months of any pension distributions, wages, and the net income from your assets using the formula described above. Use gross figures before deductions. If this total is below the Very Low Income limit for your county and household size, you likely meet the income threshold. If it falls between 50% and 80% AMI, you may still qualify for some project-based programs - check with the specific property.

Step 3 - Screen Through BenefitsCheckUp

Before calling a single PHA, run your zip code through the National Council on Aging's BenefitsCheckUp at BenefitsCheckUp.org. This free tool identifies federal and state housing programs available in your specific area, including programs you may not have known existed. It takes about 10 minutes and can surface state-funded senior housing subsidies, property tax freezes, and utility assistance that does not show up in a standard Section 8 search.

Step 4 - Contact Your Local PHA Directly

Use HUD's PHA contact directory (linked from hud.gov) to find every PHA operating in your county or nearby counties. Call or visit each one and ask: Is your waitlist currently open? What local preferences do you offer for seniors? Are EHVs or HUD-VASH vouchers available? Get the answers in writing if possible - PHA staff turnover means verbal assurances can disappear quickly.

Step 5 - Apply to Multiple Properties and PHAs Simultaneously

Once you have identified open waitlists, submit applications to all of them at the same time. Keep a log of every application: date submitted, waitlist number assigned (if given), and the PHA contact information. Update your contact information with every PHA every six months - waitlists move slowly, and failing to respond to a PHA notice because your address changed is one of the most common reasons seniors lose their place in line.

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What Happens After a Denial: Your Right to an Informal Hearing

A denial letter from a PHA is not the final word. Federal regulations give every applicant the right to request an informal hearing within 14 days of receiving a written denial. This right is explicitly guaranteed under HUD program rules, and exercising it is far more common - and more successful - than most applicants realize.

Common Reasons for Denial - and Why They Are Often Overturned

How to Request an Informal Hearing

Your denial letter must explain the reason for denial and the deadline to request a hearing - federal rules require PHAs to provide this information in writing. Submit your hearing request in writing, not just verbally. Send it via certified mail, or hand-deliver it and ask for a dated receipt. At the hearing, you have the right to bring documents, a family member, an advocate, or an attorney. Many Area Agencies on Aging and legal aid organizations provide free assistance with PHA informal hearings - a service most seniors are not aware of.

After the Hearing

If the informal hearing does not resolve the denial in your favor and you believe the PHA's decision was wrong, you may have additional remedies through HUD's Office of Public and Indian Housing or, in some cases, through your state's fair housing complaint process. Document everything throughout the appeal process - dates, names of staff members you spoke with, and what was said.

Section 202 Supportive Housing for the Elderly: A Separate Track Worth Knowing

Section 8 mechanics dominate most housing conversations, but seniors aged 62 and older have a separate track worth pursuing at the same time: the Section 202 Supportive Housing for the Elderly program, administered by HUD's Office of Housing. Section 202 properties are funded directly by HUD and operated by non-profit organizations. They combine affordable rents with on-site supportive services - meal programs, transportation coordination, and wellness activities - that standard Section 8 units do not provide.

Income eligibility for Section 202 generally follows the same Very Low Income (50% AMI) threshold as Section 8, but you apply directly to each Section 202 property rather than through a PHA. Properties maintain their own waitlists, and because Section 202 is limited to seniors, competition does not include non-elderly households. According to HUD's Office of Housing, Section 202 is specifically designed for seniors who need a supportive living environment - not just an affordable rent - making it a strong option for seniors who anticipate needing some level of assistance in the near future.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does owning a car or having savings in the bank disqualify me from Section 8 senior housing?

Federal Section 8 does not impose a hard asset limit, so a car or savings account will not automatically disqualify you. However, the income generated by your assets - interest from savings, dividends from investments - is counted toward your annual gross income and must stay below the HUD limit for your county and household size. If your total assets exceed $5,000, HUD imputes income at a published passbook rate, which may be higher than the interest you actually earn. Some state-funded housing programs do impose asset caps, which is why you should ask your local PHA about any state-level rules that apply in your area. (Source: HUD's Office of Housing)

Can I apply to multiple PHAs at the same time to improve my chances of getting a voucher faster?

Yes - there is no federal rule against applying to multiple PHAs simultaneously, and doing so is one of the most practical strategies for seniors facing long waitlists. PHAs operate independently, each with its own waitlist, local preferences, and opening schedule. Some cover an entire county or metro area; others serve a single municipality. Seniors near county or city boundaries may be eligible for several PHAs at once. Use HUD's PHA contact directory at hud.gov to identify every PHA operating within a reasonable distance, prioritize those with open waitlists, and track each application carefully. Receiving a voucher from one PHA does not obligate you to reject others - you simply notify the others if you accept a voucher. (Source: Public Housing Authority network via HUD.gov)

My adult child was convicted of a felony years ago - does that affect my eligibility if they are not living with me?

Criminal history screening under Section 8 applies to household members listed on the lease - individuals who will live in the assisted unit with you. An adult child who is not listed as a household member and does not live with you generally does not affect your eligibility as the primary applicant. The key rule is that PHAs screen the people who will occupy the unit. If your adult child is not part of your household, their record is separate from your application. PHAs also have significant discretion to consider the age, nature, and circumstances of an offense, even for household members - older, non-violent convictions are frequently reconsidered, especially with documentation of rehabilitation.

What is the difference between Section 8 and Section 202, and do I have to choose between them?

You do not have to choose - you can and should apply for both simultaneously. Section 8 (Housing Choice Vouchers and project-based units) is administered by local PHAs and is open to low-income households of all ages. Section 202 Supportive Housing for the Elderly is a separate HUD-funded program restricted to seniors aged 62 and older, applied for directly at the property level. Section 202 properties often include on-site supportive services such as meal programs and transportation coordination. Because the applicant pools and administrative processes are entirely separate, being on a Section 8 waitlist does not affect your position on a Section 202 waitlist. Applying to both tracks maximizes your chances of finding affordable housing faster.

My income is slightly above the 50% AMI limit for my county. Are there any programs I might still qualify for?

Possibly - several pathways exist for seniors whose income falls between 50% and 80% of their county's AMI. Some project-based Section 8 properties operate under older contracts that allow tenants with incomes up to 80% AMI. State-funded senior housing programs sometimes use higher income thresholds than federal programs. The Low Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC) program funds privately owned affordable apartments where income limits sometimes reach 60% AMI. The National Council on Aging's BenefitsCheckUp at BenefitsCheckUp.org screens by zip code and will flag programs with higher income thresholds that HUD programs alone would miss. Always verify the specific limit for each program you apply for rather than assuming all programs use the same 50% AMI ceiling.

How do I keep my place on a waitlist once I am on it?

Waitlists for Section 8 can span several years, and losing your place due to a missed notice is more common than applicants expect. To protect your position: update your mailing address and phone number with every PHA in writing every six months; respond to any PHA correspondence within the deadline stated in the letter (missing a 10-day response window can result in removal from the list); keep documentation of your original application date and any confirmation number assigned; and contact each PHA annually to confirm you are still listed as active. If you are removed from a waitlist due to a failure to respond, most PHAs allow you to request reinstatement with documentation that you did not receive the notice - this is another situation where the informal hearing process can protect you. (Source: Public Housing Authority administrative procedures under HUD oversight)

Next Steps: Taking Action Before the Waitlist Opens

The seniors who end up housed faster are the ones who treat subsidized housing as a process to manage, not an application to submit once and forget. Start today by looking up HUD's income limits for your county, running BenefitsCheckUp for your zip code, and identifying every PHA within a reasonable distance. Apply to all open waitlists at once. Note the 14-day hearing deadline on any denial letter. And if Section 202 properties exist in your area, apply directly to each one in addition to your PHA applications.

The system is slow and complex - but it works when you understand exactly how the income math operates, what your assets mean for your eligibility, and what rights you have when the first answer is no. Use this guide as your reference at every step, and explore the state-by-state property listings on the sibling pages of this site to identify specific buildings where these eligibility rules will apply.

For more information on programs in your state, visit our state-by-state senior apartment directory or review our Section 202 program overview for seniors aged 62 and older.

About this article

Researched and written by Maria Garcia at senior apartments near me. Our editorial team reviews senior apartments near me to help readers make informed decisions. About our editorial process.

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