The verified, plain-language guide to affordable housing in New York City β all major programs, how to apply, income limits, senior resources, and who to call. Every contact verified April 2026 from official NYC, NYS, and federal sources.
New York City has the largest affordable housing system in the United States β but navigating it requires knowing which programs exist, what the income thresholds are, and where to apply. The NYC Department of Housing Preservation and Development (HPD) has produced approximately 86,000 affordable homes since the start of the Adams administration, representing the most new affordable units ever created in any three-year stretch in city history (NYC Mayor’s Office, 2025). Yet demand far exceeds supply. Knowing every available pathway β lotteries, re-rentals, public housing, vouchers, senior rent freezes, and legal protections β dramatically improves your chances of finding and keeping affordable housing.
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What is the cheapest housing in NYC? NYCHA public housing is the cheapest: rent = 30% of your income, regardless of how low that income is. NYCHA operates 334 developments with 180,000+ units across all five boroughs. Tenants earning very low incomes may pay as little as a few hundred dollars per month. The next cheapest options are Housing Choice Vouchers (Section 8) β which also cap rent at 30β40% of income β and apartments won through the NYC Housing Connect lottery at 30% AMI income band.NYCHA (nyc.gov/nycha) is the public housing authority managing the largest public housing portfolio in the U.S. Rent in NYCHA housing is set at 30% of a household’s adjusted monthly income β meaning if you earn $12,000 a year, your maximum rent is $300/month. NYCHA also covers most utilities. Most buildings include electricity and gas in the rent. You do not need to be a U.S. citizen to apply β at least one person in the household must be a citizen or have legal immigration status. Apply online through ApplyNYCHA at selfserve.nycha.info or call 718-707-7771 to request a paper application (MonβFri 8amβ5pm). After applying, you receive a case number and are placed on a waitlist for an eligibility interview. Applications are active for two years and must be renewed via the Self-Service Portal to retain your filing date.
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How to get low cost housing in NYC? Three main pathways: (1) Apply for NYCHA public housing at selfserve.nycha.info β rent is 30% of income. (2) Apply through the NYC Housing Connect lottery at housingconnect.nyc.gov β completely free, new lotteries added almost daily, apartments are rent-stabilized. (3) Check HDC and HPD re-rentals (first-come, no lottery wait) through the same Housing Connect portal. For seniors: also apply for SCRIE rent freeze (929-252-7242) and Mitchell-Lama waitlists (212-863-6500). Always apply to every lottery you qualify for simultaneously.NYC Housing Connect (housingconnect.nyc.gov) is New York City’s official affordable housing lottery portal. Creating an account is free. You can apply to multiple open lotteries simultaneously. Each lottery receives thousands of applicants; selection is random but some lotteries give preference to local community district residents, seniors (62+), and people with disabilities. New lotteries are added almost daily β sign up for email updates. The application process requires no documents upfront; documents are only needed if your application is selected. A complete Housing Connect profile lets you be considered for both lottery apartments and re-rentals (when people move out of existing buildings). Re-rentals are first-come, first-served and don’t require entering a lottery β profile completeness matters here. Always call 311 or reach out to a Housing Ambassador (free, through HPD) if you need help completing your application.
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How much is low-income housing in New York City? It depends on the program and your income band (AMI percentage). In NYCHA public housing: rent = 30% of your income. In Housing Connect lottery apartments: rents are set as a percentage of Area Median Income (AMI). The 2025 AMI for the NYC metro is $145,800 for a family of three (HUD). At 30% AMI (extremely low income), rents are roughly $400β$700/month for a studio or 1BR. At 60% AMI (cap ~$87,480 income for family of 3), rents are approximately $900β$1,400/month. NYC’s definition: housing is “affordable” if it costs one-third or less of your household income.HUD publishes NYC AMI figures annually each spring. The 2025 figures (HUD): $145,800 for a family of three; $162,000 for a family of four. Affordable housing lotteries offer units at specific AMI percentages: 30% AMI (extremely low income), 50% AMI, 60% AMI, 80% AMI, 100% AMI, 120% AMI, 130% AMI, and 165% AMI (middle income). Each lottery listing on Housing Connect shows the specific income range required β both a minimum and maximum annual income for your household size. Always check against the current HPD/HCR AMI chart because figures are updated annually in April or May. A unit at 60% AMI for a family of three has a rent and income cap of approximately $87,480 (2025 figures); the exact amounts change annually. For extremely low-income households: some lotteries specifically reserve units at 30% AMI for homeless individuals or those with very limited income. Dial 311 to ask about “extremely low income” housing lottery options in your borough.
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Does NYC offer $100,000 to buy a house or apartment? Not through a standard program. NYC does not offer $100,000 grants to individual homebuyers as a routine program in 2026. However, NYC and NYS do offer significant homebuyer assistance: the HPD HomeFirst Down Payment Assistance Program (up to $100,000 for eligible first-time buyers in NYC), SONYMA low-interest mortgages, and various neighborhood-specific grants. The figure of $100,000 is associated with HPD’s HomeFirst program which was expanded β but eligibility is strict and requires income qualification, homebuyer education, and the property being your primary residence.HPD’s HomeFirst Down Payment Assistance Program provides up to $100,000 toward the down payment or closing costs for eligible first-time homebuyers in New York City. Requirements include: completion of a homebuyer education course; household income at or below 80% AMI; the property must be a 1β4 unit home, condo, or cooperative in NYC; and you must intend to occupy it as your primary residence for at least 10 years (forgiven after 10 years). Contact HPD at nyc.gov/hpd or call 212-863-6500 for current program availability and eligibility. Additionally, the NYS Mortgage Agency (SONYMA through HCR) offers below-market-rate mortgages for low and moderate-income first-time buyers statewide. Contact HCR at 866-275-3427 or hcr.ny.gov. Both programs have waiting periods and eligibility windows β do not rely on informal descriptions online; always verify current program terms directly with HPD.
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What is the NYC Housing Lottery and how does it work? The NYC Housing Connect lottery is the official free portal for applying to income-restricted apartments. You create a free account at housingconnect.nyc.gov, complete your household profile, and apply to any lottery you qualify for. After the lottery closes, all applications are randomly assigned log numbers. Applicants are contacted in log number order to verify eligibility. Getting a low log number does not guarantee an apartment β it means you may be called faster for an income interview. Apply to every lottery you qualify for and keep your profile current.NYC Housing Connect was created in 2013 by HPD and HDC to centralize and standardize the affordable housing lottery process across all five boroughs. The application is completely free β there is no application fee, no broker involved, and no paid service can improve your chances of selection. Submitting multiple applications for the same lottery results in disqualification. Common mistakes to avoid: submitting multiple entries; not responding promptly when contacted (you’ll lose your spot); applying for units where your household size doesn’t qualify; or failing to update your profile when income or household size changes. After approximately two weeks from lottery closing, you receive a log number. If selected, you will need proof of income (paystubs, W-2, benefits statements), photo ID, tax returns, bank statements, and rental history. The full document list is on Housing Connect. For free one-on-one help, contact a Housing Ambassador (free, through HPD) or call Ready to Rent for financial counseling assistance with applications. Paper applications are available β call NYCHA’s Customer Contact Center at 718-707-7771 to request one.
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What is low-income apartments no waiting list NYC β is it real? Yes β partially. HPD and HDC re-rentals on Housing Connect are first-come, first-served β no lottery, no waiting list. When a tenant moves out of a Housing Connect-registered building, the unit appears on the portal and is offered to the next qualifying applicant in the system. To be considered for re-rentals, complete your Housing Connect profile and opt in to the “re-rentals” section. First-come advantage is real here β a complete, up-to-date profile improves your odds. Check housingconnect.nyc.gov daily or sign up for email alerts.As ACCESS NYC (access.nyc.gov) confirms: “Check out Housing Development Corporation (HDC) re-rentals and the Department of Housing Preservation and Development (HPD) re-rentals to apply directly to first-come, first-serve apartments without a Housing Connect lottery application.” This is an underutilized pathway that many applicants overlook because they focus exclusively on lotteries. The re-rental process works differently from the lottery: your Housing Connect profile is matched against available units, and applicants are contacted in order of profile completeness and eligibility match. Keeping your profile complete and accurate is more important for re-rentals than for lottery applications. The re-rentals section is within the Housing Connect portal β there is no separate application. Also important: HDC-financed apartments have no broker fees, per official HDC policy. If anyone asks you to pay a fee for a Housing Connect application or a re-rental, it is a fraud β report it to the NYC Department of Consumer and Worker Protection or call 311.
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What is Section 8 / Housing Choice Voucher in NYC β can I still apply? NYCHA Section 8 waitlist is CLOSED as of August 1, 2025. NYCHA paused outreach and is not issuing new vouchers. If you are already on the NYCHA Section 8 waitlist, check your status at selfserve.nycha.info β your position was not removed. Emergency Housing Vouchers (EHV) are ending β federal funding runs out by late 2026. The EHV program for the ~5,200 current NYC EHV participants is winding down; NYCHA is reaching out to EHV households with alternative options starting spring 2026. HPD and HCR also operate limited Section 8 programs β contact HPD at 212-863-6500 or HCR at 833-791-2748 to check their current availability.NYCHA (nyc.gov/nycha) confirms: “The New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA) Housing Choice Voucher (Section 8) waitlist is currently closed to new applicants. Effective August 1, 2025, NYCHA paused active outreach, including activities related to the application process and voucher issuance for applicants on the general HCV waitlist.” NYCHA administers approximately 85,000 Section 8 vouchers β the largest Section 8 program in the country β with 25,000+ property owners participating. The EHV (Emergency Housing Voucher) program: HUD announced on March 6, 2025 that federal funding will run out by end of 2026. There are approximately 5,200 EHV participants as of March 2026. NYCHA is reaching out to EHV households on a rolling basis starting spring 2026, offering alternative subsidized housing options. EHV participants must complete a NYCHA public housing application at selfserve.nycha.info to be eligible for alternative options. Important: it is illegal for a landlord to refuse a voucher in NYC in buildings with 6+ units. Discrimination hotline: 718-722-3131.
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What affordable housing is available for seniors in NYC? Five main programs for seniors: (1) NYCHA senior public housing β for households where all members are 62+; apply at selfserve.nycha.info or call 718-707-7771. (2) SCRIE (Senior Citizen Rent Increase Exemption) β freezes rent for seniors 62+ with income under $50,000 in rent-stabilized, rent-controlled, or Mitchell-Lama units; call 929-252-7242. (3) Housing Connect senior-preference lotteries β some buildings are exclusively for 62+ residents. (4) Mitchell-Lama senior developments β middle-income housing with senior-only options; call 212-863-6500. (5) NYC Aging Connect β 212-244-6469 for senior housing referrals and borough-specific guides.SCRIE (Senior Citizen Rent Increase Exemption) is one of the most underutilized senior programs in NYC. To qualify: you must be 62 or older; live in a rent-stabilized, rent-controlled, or Mitchell-Lama unit; have household income under $50,000; and pay more than one-third of your income toward rent. When approved, a property tax credit covers the difference between your frozen rent and the actual current rent β your landlord is compensated by the city, and you never pay more than your frozen amount. Apply through the NYC Department of Finance at nyc.gov/finance or call 311. For HPD-supervised SCRIE (Mitchell-Lama), call 212-863-8494 or email [email protected]. The Mayor’s Public Engagement Unit provides one-on-one help at 929-252-7242. DRIE provides identical protections for disabled persons under 62. NYC Aging Connect (212-244-6469) provides borough-specific senior housing guides and can connect seniors to local programs not easily found online.
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What is Mitchell-Lama housing in NYC? Mitchell-Lama is a state-created affordable housing program (1955) providing middle-income rentals and cooperatives across NYC and NYS. Buildings are privately owned and managed but regulated by either NYC HPD or NYS HCR. To apply for NYC HPD-supervised Mitchell-Lama: go to Mitchell-Lama Connect at nyc.gov/hpd or call 212-863-6500. For NYS HCR-supervised: visit hcr.ny.gov/ml or call the Mitchell-Lama Hotline at 866-463-7753. Application fee: $75 (non-refundable). Veterans get preference. SCRIE and DRIE apply to Mitchell-Lama tenants.Mitchell-Lama developments vary widely by building and location. NYC HPD supervises the city’s Mitchell-Lama portfolio; NYS HCR supervises state-supervised Mitchell-Lama (particularly in outer boroughs, Westchester, and Long Island). Each building maintains its own waiting list β wait times range from months to years depending on demand. Income limits for Mitchell-Lama differ from Housing Connect limits: they are set per development, with separate thresholds for federally-assisted and non-federally-assisted buildings. Residents earning over the applicable limit are required to pay a surcharge in addition to their scheduled rent. Mitchell-Lama cooperative buildings operate as limited-equity cooperatives β residents own their units but are limited in how much profit they can make if they sell. Tenants must verify household income annually via an income affidavit. SCRIE applies to Mitchell-Lama tenants 62+ with income under $50,000 who pay more than 1/3 of income for rent β contact HPD at 212-863-8494.
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What is rent stabilization in NYC and how does it help? Approximately one million rent-stabilized apartments exist in NYC β generally in buildings with 6 or more units built before 1974. Landlords can only raise rents at levels set by the NYC Rent Guidelines Board each year (not unlimited increases). Tenants have automatic lease renewal rights and cannot be evicted except for non-payment, serious lease violations, or nuisance. Winning a Housing Connect lottery apartment gives you a rent-stabilized lease β protecting you from large rent increases for as long as you remain eligible. Contact the NYC Rent Guidelines Board (rentguidelinesboard.cityofnewyork.us) or Met Council on Housing (212-979-0611) for more information.Rent stabilization is the most widespread affordability protection in NYC β but being rent-stabilized does not mean an apartment is affordable, just protected from runaway increases. The NYC Rent Guidelines Board (RGB) sets maximum allowable rent increases each year; in rent-stabilized apartments, your landlord cannot charge more than the RGB-approved increase. Apartments won through the Housing Connect lottery are rent-stabilized as a condition of the affordable housing program, providing long-term affordability protection beyond just the initial below-market rent. If you believe your landlord is overcharging or violating your rent-stabilized lease rights, contact: Met Council on Housing (212-979-0611), Legal Services NYC (212-348-7449), the NYC Tenant Protection Corps through 311 (ask for the Tenant Helpline), or the NYC Department of Buildings Tenant Advocate (OTA) at 212-393-2949. HCR handles rent regulation complaints at 718-739-6400. Discrimination based on lawful source of income (Section 8 vouchers, rental assistance) is illegal in NYC in buildings with 6+ units β call 311 or the NYC Commission on Human Rights hotline at 718-722-3131.
Sources: NYC HPD nyc.gov/hpd (affordable = β€1/3 income; must be 18+; 212-863-6500; 212-863-5610; ~86,000 affordable homes Adams admin NYC Mayor’s Office 2025); NYC Housing Connect housingconnect.nyc.gov / ACCESS NYC access.nyc.gov (free; no fee; new lotteries daily; random log; re-rentals first-come; HDC no broker fees; paper apps call 718-707-7771; priorities: local/seniors/disabled); HUD 2025 AMI via Metricus Apr 2026 ($145,800 family 3; $162,000 family 4; 30%-165% AMI bands; 60% AMI family 3 cap ~$87,480); NYCHA nyc.gov/nycha (334 developments; 180,000+ units; 30% income; selfserve.nycha.info; 718-707-7771 MβF 8amβ5pm; no citizenship required; 1 person legal status; 2yr application; senior = all 62+); NYCHA Section 8 nyc.gov/nycha (closed Aug 1 2025; ~85,000 vouchers 25,000+ owners; EHV ending HUD Mar 6 2025; ~5,200 EHV participants; NYCHA outreach spring 2026; selfserve.nycha.info; discrimination hotline 718-722-3131); SCRIE ACCESS NYC access.nyc.gov (62+; income <$50K; >1/3 rent; 929-252-7242; HPD SCRIE 212-863-8494; [email protected]; 100 Gold St 7th fl; DOF 311; hearing impaired 212-639-9675); Mitchell-Lama HPD/HCR (nyc.gov/hpd; 212-863-6500; $75 app fee; hcr.ny.gov/ml; 866-463-7753; veterans preference; SCRIE applies); Met Council on Housing 212-979-0611; Legal Services NYC 212-348-7449; Rent Guidelines Board rentguidelinesboard.cityofnewyork.us (~1M rent-stabilized; 6+ units pre-1974; auto lease renewal; RGB sets annual increases); HCR rent regulation hotline 718-739-6400; NYC Commission on Human Rights 718-722-3131
Sources: NYCHA nyc.gov/nycha (334 developments; 180,000+ units; 30% income); HUD 2025 AMI via Metricus Apr 2026 ($145,800 fam 3; $162,000 fam 4); Met Council on Housing (212-979-0611; ~1M rent-stabilized; 6+ units pre-1974); NYC Mayor’s Office 2025 via Metricus Apr 2026 (~86,000 affordable homes Adams admin)
All NYC affordable housing applications are free of charge. There is no application fee for Housing Connect lotteries or NYCHA public housing. HDC-financed apartments have no broker fees. No third-party service can improve your chances β paid services that claim to expedite applications are fraud. Report suspected fraud to 311 or the NYC Department of Consumer and Worker Protection. Always apply directly through official government websites listed below.
All program contacts verified April 2026 from official NYC, NYS, and federal sources. Housing Connect lotteries, NYCHA waitlists, and Section 8 status change rapidly β always verify current program availability directly at the official websites listed. There is no application fee for any NYC housing lottery or NYCHA public housing application. Paid third-party services do not improve your chances of selection and may constitute fraud β report to 311.
NYC Housing Connect (housingconnect.nyc.gov) is New York City’s official, free affordable housing lottery portal. Create a free account, complete your household profile (income, household size, disability status), and apply to any open lottery you qualify for. The process is completely free β there is no application fee, no broker involved, and no paid service can improve your odds. When a lottery closes, all applications are randomly assigned log numbers. Applicants are contacted in log number order to verify eligibility. If selected, you will need: proof of income (paystubs, W-2, benefits statements), photo ID, tax returns, bank statements, and rental history. The most important advice: apply to every single lottery you qualify for simultaneously. Don’t wait for one result before applying to others. New lotteries are added almost daily, so check frequently or sign up for email alerts. If you need free help completing an application, contact a Housing Ambassador through HPD (call 311) or use Ready to Rent for free financial counseling and application assistance. For paper applications, call NYCHA at 718-707-7771.
NYC’s definition: housing is “affordable” when it costs one-third or less of your household income (HPD). Income eligibility uses the Area Median Income (AMI) set by HUD annually. The 2025 NYC metro AMI is $145,800 for a family of three and $162,000 for a family of four. Lotteries offer units at specific AMI percentages: 30% (extremely low income), 50%, 60%, 80%, 100%, 120%, 130%, and up to 165% (middle income). At 30% AMI, extremely low-income households may find studios for as little as $400β$700/month with very low income requirements. At 60% AMI β roughly $87,480 annual income cap for a family of three β rents are approximately $900β$1,400/month. Each lottery listing on Housing Connect shows the exact income range (both minimum and maximum) for every unit size and AMI band. You must fall within the stated range β both too low and too high can disqualify you from a specific unit. Always verify current income limits against the HPD/HCR AMI chart published each April β call HPD at 212-863-6500 or 311 to get the current year’s chart.
Seniors in NYC have several powerful housing protections and pathways not available to younger renters: (1) NYCHA Senior Public Housing β for households where all members are 62+. Rent = 30% of income. Apply at selfserve.nycha.info or call 718-707-7771. (2) SCRIE Rent Freeze β if you are 62+ in a rent-stabilized, rent-controlled, or Mitchell-Lama apartment with income under $50,000 and paying more than 1/3 of income for rent, SCRIE freezes your rent permanently. Call 929-252-7242 for free one-on-one help or 212-863-8494 for HPD-supervised SCRIE. (3) Housing Connect senior-preference lotteries β some buildings give priority to residents 62+. Some buildings are exclusively for seniors. Filter by “senior” on Housing Connect. (4) Mitchell-Lama senior developments β some Mitchell-Lama buildings are exclusively for seniors. Contact HPD at 212-863-6500 or HCR at 866-463-7753. (5) NYC Aging Connect at 212-244-6469 provides borough-specific housing guides and can connect seniors to programs not easily found through regular searches. (6) DRIE for disabled seniors under 62 β call 311. All of these protections can be combined: a senior in NYCHA housing or a Mitchell-Lama unit who also qualifies for SCRIE can have both the low NYCHA rent AND a rent freeze on future increases.
The phrase “no waiting list” is mostly a myth for true affordable housing β but there are exceptions. HPD and HDC re-rentals on Housing Connect are genuinely first-come, first-served with no lottery wait. When an existing tenant moves out of a Housing Connect-registered affordable building, the unit is offered through the portal based on your Housing Connect profile match. A complete, accurate, up-to-date profile is your best advantage here. Check housingconnect.nyc.gov frequently β or sign up for email alerts. What makes re-rentals important: they can bypass a lottery wait entirely if your profile matches and you are among the first to be identified as eligible. Important warnings: (1) NYCHA public housing has waitlists β there is no shortcut. (2) NYCHA Section 8 waitlist is closed. (3) Any third-party that claims to have access to “no waiting list” apartments for a fee is a scam. Report to 311 or the NYC Department of Consumer and Worker Protection. The fastest legitimate path to low-cost housing in NYC is: complete your Housing Connect profile fully, opt into re-rentals, apply to every open lottery you qualify for, AND apply to NYCHA public housing simultaneously. All these applications are free and independent of each other.
Sources: NYC HPD nyc.gov/hpd (affordable = β€1/3 income; 212-863-6500; housing ambassadors; ready to rent; homeFirst up to $100K down payment 80% AMI 10yr); NYC Housing Connect housingconnect.nyc.gov (free; no fee; no broker; paper apps 718-707-7771; log number random; re-rentals first-come; opt-in required; sign up alerts; document list on portal); ACCESS NYC access.nyc.gov (re-rentals description; HDC re-rentals first-come; screen all benefits; SCRIE/DRIE links); NYCHDC nychdc.com (212-227-5500; no broker fees; re-rentals first-come; lottery new co-ops; resales HDC approval); Metricus Apr 2026 / HUD 2025 AMI ($145,800 fam 3; $162,000 fam 4; 30%-165% AMI; 60% AMI ~$87,480 family 3; verify HPD/HCR charts annually); NYCHA nyc.gov/nycha (334 developments 180,000+ units; 30% income; selfserve.nycha.info; 718-707-7771 M-F 8am-5pm; no citizenship; 1 legal status; 2yr renew; senior all 62+; EHV ending HUD Mar 6 2025; ~5,200 EHV; NYCHA outreach spring 2026; HCV closed Aug 1 2025; discrimination 718-722-3131); SCRIE ACCESS NYC (62+; <$50K; >1/3 rent; 929-252-7242; HPD 212-863-8494; [email protected]; 100 Gold St 7th fl NYC 10038; DOF 311; hearing 212-639-9675); Mitchell-Lama HPD (212-863-6500; $75 fee; veterans; nyc.gov/hpd; [email protected]); HCR hcr.ny.gov (866-275-3427; ML hotline 866-463-7753; HCV call 833-791-2748; rent regulation 718-739-6400); HUD hud.gov/states/new-york (212-264-8000; complaint 800-685-8470; veterans 1-877-424-3838); Met Council 212-979-0611; Legal Services NYC 212-348-7449; CSS 212-614-5552; NYC Aging Connect 212-244-6469; NYC Commission on Human Rights 718-722-3131; Rent Guidelines Board rentguidelinesboard.cityofnewyork.us (~1M rent-stabilized; pre-1974 6+ units; auto renewal); NYC Mayor’s Office 2025 via Metricus (~86,000 homes Adams admin)
Use these buttons to find NYCHA offices, affordable housing programs, legal aid, or senior housing resources near your location in New York City.
- Step 1 β Create your NYC Housing Connect profile TODAY at housingconnect.nyc.gov. It is free, takes about 30 minutes, and immediately opens access to all open lotteries plus re-rental opportunities. Complete every section of the profile β incomplete profiles are skipped for re-rentals. Opt into the re-rental section. Sign up for email alerts so you are notified when new lotteries open. Apply to every qualifying lottery simultaneously β there is no limit on how many lotteries you can enter.
- Step 2 β Apply for NYCHA public housing at selfserve.nycha.info. NYCHA is the cheapest housing option in NYC β rent is 30% of income regardless of how low your income is. No citizenship is required; one legal resident per household qualifies your application. Call 718-707-7771 (MonβFri 8amβ5pm) if you need paper application assistance. After applying, renew your application every two years to keep your position on the waitlist. NYCHA and Housing Connect are independent applications β apply to both simultaneously.
- Step 3 β If you are a senior or disabled β apply for SCRIE or DRIE immediately. If you are 62+ in a rent-stabilized, rent-controlled, or Mitchell-Lama apartment with income under $50,000 and paying more than 1/3 of income for rent β SCRIE freezes your rent for as long as you remain eligible. Call 929-252-7242 for free one-on-one help from the Mayor’s Public Engagement Unit. For HPD-supervised SCRIE (Mitchell-Lama), call 212-863-8494. DRIE provides identical protections for disabled persons under 62 β call 311. These protections are permanent as long as you remain eligible and file required annual renewals.
- Step 4 β Get free help. Contact a Housing Ambassador (through HPD β call 311 to be connected to one near you) for free one-on-one application assistance. Use Ready to Rent (also through HPD) for free financial counseling that prepares your documentation and credit for the eligibility interview. Met Council on Housing (212-979-0611) offers free tenant rights advice. Community Service Society (212-614-5552) has updated NYC housing resource guides. Legal Services NYC (212-348-7449) provides free legal representation for qualifying low-income New Yorkers facing housing legal issues.
- Step 5 β Know your rights as a tenant. Approximately one million apartments in NYC are rent-stabilized β if you live in a building with 6+ units built before 1974, your apartment may already be rent-stabilized. Landlords must renew your lease and can only raise rent by NYC Rent Guidelines Board-approved amounts. If you have a Housing Choice Voucher, it is illegal for any landlord with 6+ units to refuse it β call 718-722-3131 (NYC Commission on Human Rights) if you face source-of-income discrimination. If you receive a housing lottery apartment, your new lease is also rent-stabilized, giving you long-term affordability protection beyond just the initial below-market rent.
This guide is independently researched and written for informational purposes only. We are not affiliated with or compensated by any government agency, housing program, or nonprofit listed. Program availability, income limits, and waitlist status change frequently β always verify directly with the official agency before applying. NYC affordable housing applications are always free β never pay a third party to submit a Housing Connect application or obtain a NYCHA application. Report suspected housing fraud to 311 or the NYC Department of Consumer and Worker Protection. This page does not constitute legal or housing advice.
Primary sources: NYC HPD nyc.gov/hpd (affordable β€1/3 income; 212-863-6500/5610/5620; [email protected]; housing ambassadors; ready to rent; HomeFirst up to $100K 80% AMI 10yr; Mitchell-Lama Connect; SCRIE 212-863-8494; [email protected]; 100 Gold St 7th fl); NYC Housing Connect housingconnect.nyc.gov / ACCESS NYC access.nyc.gov (free; no fee; no broker; random log; re-rentals first-come HDC/HPD; sign up alerts; paper apps 718-707-7771; document list on portal); NYCHDC nychdc.com (212-227-5500; no broker fees; re-rentals first-come; new co-ops lottery; resales HDC approval); HUD 2025 AMI Metricus Apr 2026 ($145,800 fam 3; $162,000 fam 4; 30%-165% bands; 60% AMI ~$87,480 fam 3); NYCHA nyc.gov/nycha (334 developments 180,000+ units; 30% income; selfserve.nycha.info; 718-707-7771 M-F 8am-5pm; no citizenship 1 legal status; 2yr renew; senior all 62+); NYCHA Section 8 updates nyc.gov/nycha (closed Aug 1 2025; 85,000 vouchers; 25,000+ owners; EHV HUD Mar 6 2025 ending late 2026; ~5,200 EHV Mar 2026; outreach spring 2026; non-emergency transfer cost-neutral May 1 2026); ACCESS NYC SCRIE (62+; <$50K; >1/3 rent; 929-252-7242; 212-863-8494 HPD SCRIE; [email protected]; 100 Gold St 7th fl; DOF 311 nyc.gov/finance; hearing 212-639-9675); Mitchell-Lama HPD (212-863-6500; $75 non-refundable; veterans preference; SCRIE/DRIE apply; income surcharge; annual affidavit); HCR hcr.ny.gov (866-275-3427; ML hotline 866-463-7753; HCV call 833-791-2748; rent regulation 718-739-6400); HUD hud.gov/states/new-york (212-264-8000; complaint 800-685-8470; veterans 1-877-424-3838; NYC Aging 212-244-6469); Rent Guidelines Board rentguidelinesboard.cityofnewyork.us (~1M rent-stabilized; 6+ units pre-1974; auto renewal; 929-252-7242 rent freeze; SCRIE/DRIE reference); Met Council on Housing 212-979-0611 metcouncilonhousing.org; Legal Services NYC 212-348-7449 legalservicesnyc.org; CSS 212-614-5552 cssny.org (Jan 2026 housing resources guide); Coalition for the Homeless coalitionforthehomeless.org; NYC Aging Connect 212-244-6469 nyc.gov/aging; NYC Commission on Human Rights 718-722-3131; Tenants and Neighbors 212-608-4320; NYC Buildings OTA 212-393-2949 [email protected]; Homey NYC myhomey.io (2025 AMI bands); Skybriz skybriz.com Jan 2026 (Housing Connect guide); NYC Mayor’s Office 2025 via Metricus Apr 2026 (~86,000 homes Adams admin 3-yr record)