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Low-Income Senior Housing Near Me โ€” 20 Programs, Real Phone Numbers, and How to Get Help Fast

Budget Seniors, June 20, 2026June 20, 2026
๐Ÿ ๐Ÿ”‘
20 National & Regional Programs ยท HUD Section 202 ยท Section 8 ยท How to Apply ยท Waitlist Tips

Finding affordable senior housing is harder than it used to be โ€” but real options do exist. This guide explains the major programs, gives you 20 legitimate organizations with contact information, and tells you exactly what to do first when you’re ready to apply.

๐Ÿ”ฅ
Urgent โ€” Affordable Senior Housing Supply Is Shrinking

A major housing research center reported that the number of units renting for under $1,000 per month fell by more than 7 million between 2014 and 2024, while asking rents for managed apartments have risen 29% since 2020. The federal asset limit for HUD housing programs is currently $105,574 โ€” meaning seniors with modest savings can still qualify. The elderly household income deduction is $550/year in 2026, reducing your adjusted income and your rent. If a program waitlist near you opens, apply the same day โ€” lists frequently close within days of opening.

๐Ÿ  How Low-Income Senior Housing Actually Works โ€” Plain English

There are three main types of subsidized senior housing in the United States. Understanding them helps you know which door to knock on first.

Section 202 (HUD Supportive Housing for the Elderly): Federal program specifically for seniors 62 and older with household income at or below 50% of your area’s median income. You pay 30% of your adjusted monthly income as rent โ€” the government covers the rest directly to the property. Nearly 350,000 units exist nationwide. Apply directly to each property, not to HUD itself.

Section 8 / Housing Choice Voucher: A voucher you can use at participating private landlords, not just specific buildings. Income limits vary by county. Waitlists can run years long in metro areas โ€” apply everywhere you might realistically live, not just near your current address.

LIHTC (Low-Income Housing Tax Credit) Properties: Privately owned apartments that received tax credits in exchange for keeping rents below market rate. Rent is a fixed below-market amount, not a percentage of your income. These often have shorter waits than Section 202 or Section 8 because they are funded differently.

You can qualify for more than one program simultaneously. Never pay anyone to get on a waitlist โ€” there is no such thing as a legitimate “priority placement fee.”

๐Ÿ“‹ Key Takeaways โ€” Straight Answers First

The questions people search most about low-income senior housing โ€” answered clearly before the full details below.

  • 1
    What is the maximum income for low-income senior apartments? Section 202 (HUD): income must be at or below 50% of Area Median Income for your county ยท Section 8 vouchers: generally 80% of AMI or below ยท LIHTC properties: 60% of AMI or below for most units ยท AMI varies dramatically by city โ€” a number that disqualifies you in Des Moines may qualify you in San Francisco
    There is no single national income number because “low income” is always defined relative to your local area’s median. A senior living alone in rural Mississippi with $14,000 per year in Social Security income may earn too much for some programs in that county while the same income in Manhattan would qualify for the deepest subsidy level. HUD updates Area Median Income figures every April. Your local housing authority can tell you the current income limits for your county. As a rough national reference: a single senior earning under $25,000โ€“$35,000 per year typically qualifies for Section 202 in most parts of the country, but verify your specific county.
  • 2
    Is there really low-income senior housing for $300 a month? Yes โ€” under Section 202 and Section 8, you pay 30% of your adjusted monthly income, not a fixed dollar amount ยท A senior with $800/month in income pays about $240/month in rent ยท Seniors receiving Supplemental Security Income (SSI) of ~$943/month would pay roughly $283/month
    Section 202 and project-based Section 8 housing charge tenants 30% of their adjusted monthly income โ€” not a fixed rent. For a senior whose only income is Social Security of $1,200 per month after HUD’s deductions, 30% equals $360 per month. For someone on SSI alone, the payment would be even lower. These numbers are real, but the apartments are genuinely hard to get. Waitlists at Section 202 properties in most cities run from one to five years. The most important thing: apply now, even if you are not ready to move immediately. You cannot get to the front of a list without first getting on it.
  • 3
    Is there low-income senior housing with no waiting list? Rarely in cities โ€” but genuinely possible in rural areas, smaller towns, and newer LIHTC developments ยท Strategy: apply to multiple properties simultaneously across a wider geographic area ยท Check affordablehousinghub.org regularly โ€” some lists open briefly then close within days
    The honest answer is that waitlist-free senior housing is uncommon in most metropolitan areas, where demand far exceeds supply. However, several situations produce shorter or no waits: newly opened LIHTC properties often have units available immediately at opening (before the waitlist builds); rural and small-town locations have lower competition; and some states with active affordable housing programs have more recent inventory. The strategy that works: apply to every property within a reasonable geographic range, not just the one closest to you. Applying to five properties costs you nothing extra but multiplies your chances substantially. Check HUD’s resource locator at hud.gov and your state housing finance agency’s website for newly opened applications.
  • 4
    What is considered low income for seniors in Florida? Florida varies by county ยท Example: in Miami-Dade, 50% AMI for a single person is approximately $33,450/year ยท In rural North Florida counties, 50% AMI for a single person may be around $23,000โ€“$27,000/year ยท Seniors on Social Security alone (~$1,907/month average) typically qualify statewide
    Florida’s housing assistance income limits vary dramatically between its 67 counties. Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach counties have higher Area Median Incomes and therefore higher qualifying thresholds, while rural north and panhandle counties have lower AMIs and stricter limits. Florida seniors are advised to check their specific county’s limits at the Florida Housing Finance Corporation (floridahousing.org) or by calling their local public housing authority. The good news for Florida: Florida recently passed legislation curbing frivolous insurance lawsuits, which has begun stabilizing housing costs broadly โ€” and Citizens Insurance cut rates by 8.7% in spring 2026, which indirectly helps seniors who rent in private market buildings.
  • 5
    Where is the best place for low-income seniors to live? States with the most affordable senior housing availability: Iowa, Kansas, Nebraska, Missouri, South Dakota (lowest costs) ยท Best combination of cost + senior services: Pennsylvania, Ohio, North Carolina ยท Avoid if on tight budget: California, New York, Massachusetts, Hawaii (housing most expensive, waitlists longest)
    The states with the most accessible low-income senior housing relative to typical senior incomes tend to be in the Midwest and parts of the South, where rents are lower and Section 202 properties face less competition. Pennsylvania and Ohio have strong nonprofit senior housing networks (National Church Residences is headquartered in Ohio and operates extensively in Pennsylvania). If relocation is an option โ€” and for some seniors it genuinely is โ€” a modest move 50 to 100 miles from a major metro area to a smaller city can reduce both the waitlist length and the out-of-pocket cost significantly. Call 211 from wherever you are considering moving for a local rundown of available programs.
  • 6
    What is the cheapest way for a senior to live? Section 202 subsidized housing (pay 30% of income) ยท Section 8 voucher with a private landlord ยท LIHTC/tax-credit apartments (fixed below-market rent) ยท Rural USDA Section 515 housing ยท Shared housing / home-sharing programs ยท Staying in your own home with SNAP, utility assistance, and property tax freeze programs
    The cheapest route for most low-income seniors is Section 202 where available, because rent is literally tied to income โ€” there is no fixed floor. But the cheapest option you can actually access today may be different from the cheapest in theory. A practical, less-known option: home-sharing programs, where two or more seniors share a house or apartment and split costs. Programs like Silvernest, Home Match, and some local Area Agency on Aging programs facilitate these arrangements and can slash housing costs by 40โ€“60% compared to renting alone. Many states also offer property tax freeze or deferral programs for seniors that can significantly reduce monthly costs for those who own their homes.
  • 7
    How do I apply for Mercy Housing as a senior? Call the specific Mercy Housing property you’re interested in directly โ€” not the corporate office ยท Find properties at mercyhousing.org/find-housing ยท Corporate line for general questions: 866-338-0557 ยท Each property has its own income requirements, application, and waitlist โ€” expect long waits at most locations
    Mercy Housing is one of the largest nonprofit affordable housing organizations in the United States, with over 171 properties in more than 20 states. Their senior housing (for residents 65 and older) is concentrated in the West, Midwest, and Southeast. The critical thing to understand is that Mercy Housing does not have a central application โ€” each property is managed independently with its own eligibility criteria, income limits, and waitlist. To apply, find properties near you at mercyhousing.org/find-housing, then call each property’s office directly. The corporate office at 866-338-0557 can help you identify which properties are in your state but cannot process your application or check waitlist status for individual buildings.
  • 8
    What documents do I need to apply for low-income senior housing? Photo ID (driver’s license or state ID) ยท Social Security card ยท Proof of income for all household members (Social Security award letter, pension statements, bank statements) ยท Birth certificate(s) ยท If applicable: VA benefit letters, disability documentation, divorce decree
    Getting your documents together before you call is one of the most practical things you can do to speed up the process. When a waitlist opens, properties sometimes fill slots quickly โ€” and applicants who already have their paperwork ready move through income verification faster than those who do not. Your Social Security benefit verification letter (the annual letter SSA mails showing your benefit amount) is the key income document for most seniors. If you have lost yours, call SSA at 1-800-772-1213 to request a new benefit verification letter โ€” you can also download it from ssa.gov if you have a My Social Security account. If you have medical expenses that exceed 3% of your annual income, gather receipts or statements โ€” HUD allows those to be deducted from your income calculation, which can meaningfully lower your rent.
๐Ÿ“‹ 20 Low-Income Senior Housing Programs & Organizations

These are the major national and widely available organizations that operate or connect seniors to affordable housing. For each one, we’ve included the best contact method to use and what to ask for when you call.

1
HUD Section 202 โ€” Supportive Housing for the Elderly
The largest federal housing program specifically for seniors 62+. You pay 30% of adjusted income as rent โ€” the government pays the rest directly to the property. Nearly 350,000 units nationwide. Apply to each property individually, not to HUD.
๐Ÿ“ž HUD General Info: 1-800-955-2232 ๐ŸŒ Find properties: hud.gov/apps/section8/index ๐Ÿ‘ค Age: 62+ ยท Income: โ‰ค50% Area Median Income โš ๏ธ Apply directly to each property, not to HUD
2
National Church Residences
Largest nonprofit provider of affordable senior housing in the United States. Over 350 communities in 23 states, serving 70,000+ seniors annually. Specializes in Section 8 senior housing and income-based apartments for those with limited means.
๐Ÿ“ž Main: 1-800-994-9197 ๐ŸŒ nationalchurchresidences.org ๐Ÿ“ 23 states + Puerto Rico ๐Ÿ‘ค Age: 62+ ยท Accepts Section 8 vouchers at many properties
3
Mercy Housing
Major national nonprofit with 171+ properties across 20+ states. Offers senior housing (65+), family, and special needs housing. Each property has its own application, income requirements, and waitlist. Strong presence in the West, Midwest, and Southeast.
๐Ÿ“ž Corporate: 1-866-338-0557 ๐ŸŒ mercyhousing.org/find-housing โš ๏ธ Call each property directly โ€” not the corporate line โ€” to apply ๐Ÿ“ 20+ states including CA, CO, TX, GA, OH, WA
4
Eldercare Locator โ€” Area Agency on Aging (AAA)
Free federally funded service connecting seniors to local housing resources, including subsidized apartments, Section 202 properties, and emergency rental help. Your local AAA knows what is open in your specific community right now โ€” more up-to-date than any national list.
๐Ÿ“ž National: 1-800-677-1116 (Mโ€“F, 9amโ€“8pm ET) ๐ŸŒ eldercare.acl.gov ๐Ÿ†“ Free service ยท Available in all 50 states ๐Ÿ’ก Ask: “Can you connect me to housing options in [your county]?”
5
211 โ€” United Way’s National Help Line
Dial or text 211 from anywhere in the U.S. to be connected to local housing coordinators who know which senior housing waitlists are open in your area right now. This is often faster than searching online because 211 specialists have current waitlist status information.
๐Ÿ“ž Dial or text: 2-1-1 ๐ŸŒ 211.org ๐Ÿ†“ Free ยท Available 24/7 in most states ๐Ÿ’ก Ask: “What senior housing waitlists are open in [your city or county] right now?”
6
Volunteers of America (VOA)
Nonprofit operating senior housing in 30+ states with a particular emphasis on veterans and low-income older adults. Many VOA senior communities are Section 8 or income-restricted. Also offers supportive services like meals, transportation, and case management.
๐Ÿ“ž National: 1-800-899-0089 ๐ŸŒ voa.org/senior-services ๐Ÿ“ 30+ states ๐Ÿ‘ค Strong veteran senior housing programs โ€” mention VA status when calling
7
USDA Section 515 โ€” Rural Rental Housing
Federal program specifically for low-income seniors and families in rural areas and small towns (population under 35,000). Often shorter waitlists than urban Section 202 properties. Rent is subsidized based on income. Strong presence in the South, Midwest, and Appalachia.
๐Ÿ“ž USDA Rural Development: 1-800-670-6553 ๐ŸŒ rd.usda.gov โ€” search “Multi-Family Housing” ๐Ÿ“ Rural communities across all 50 states ๐Ÿ˜๏ธ If you’d consider a small town, waitlists here are often shorter
8
Local Public Housing Authority (PHA)
Every city and county has a Public Housing Authority that manages Section 8 vouchers and public housing waitlists for your specific area. PHAs control when waitlists open and close. Finding and contacting your local PHA is the most important call a senior can make about housing assistance.
๐Ÿ” Find yours: hud.gov/program_offices/public_indian_housing/pha/contacts ๐Ÿ“ž Search “Housing Authority [your city name]” to find direct number ๐Ÿ’ก Ask: “Is your Section 8 waitlist open? When does it next open?” โš ๏ธ Lists open briefly โ€” call monthly to check status
9
HUD Resource Locator (Online Search Tool)
HUD’s free online tool that lets you search for subsidized senior housing, public housing, and HUD-approved housing counselors in any ZIP code. The most comprehensive searchable database of affordable housing for seniors in the U.S.
๐ŸŒ resources.hud.gov ๐Ÿ“ž HUD housing counseling: 1-800-569-4287 ๐Ÿ†“ Free to use โ€” no account needed ๐Ÿ’ก Select “Multifamily Housing” and filter for “Elderly”
10
BenefitsCheckUp (NCOA)
Free online tool from the National Council on Aging that screens seniors for every federal and state benefit they may qualify for โ€” including housing assistance, SNAP, utility help, Medicare savings programs, and more. Over 2,500 programs in its database.
๐ŸŒ benefitscheckup.org ๐Ÿ“ž NCOA: 1-571-527-3900 ๐Ÿ†“ Free ยท Available in all 50 states ๐Ÿ’ก Complete the full screening โ€” housing is one of 30+ benefit categories
11
Catholic Charities USA
Present in every U.S. diocese with local offices that help seniors navigate housing applications, emergency rental assistance, utility help, and waitlist processes. Catholic Charities also owns and manages some affordable senior housing properties directly and can provide one-on-one case management.
๐Ÿ“ž National: 1-703-549-1390 ๐ŸŒ catholiccharitiesusa.org โ€” find local office ๐Ÿ“ All 50 states ยท Available regardless of religion ๐Ÿ’ก Ask about emergency rental help AND housing navigation services
12
Affordable Housing Hub
Tracks open and upcoming Section 8 and public housing waitlists in real time across the country. Free online database that updates as lists open and close. Particularly useful because it catches lottery-style waitlist openings that seniors can easily miss.
๐ŸŒ affordablehousinghub.org/open-waiting-lists ๐Ÿ”” Set up email alerts for your county ๐Ÿ†“ Free ยท No account required to browse โšก When a list opens near you, apply the same day
13
AARP Foundation โ€” Housing Help
AARP Foundation provides free legal assistance, housing counseling, and referrals for seniors facing eviction, foreclosure, or housing insecurity. Also runs the Back to Work 50+ program and connects seniors to local emergency housing resources when crisis strikes.
๐Ÿ“ž AARP Foundation: 1-855-227-3640 ๐ŸŒ aarp.org/aarp-foundation/housing ๐Ÿ†“ Free assistance ยท No AARP membership required for Foundation programs ๐Ÿ’ก Mention housing โ€” they will connect you to a housing specialist
14
Senior Housing Net / A Place for Mom (Senior Advisor)
Free online search tools that let you filter for income-based and subsidized senior housing by ZIP code. Advisors available by phone can help explain the difference between affordable and market-rate communities and connect you with properties accepting applications.
๐Ÿ“ž A Place for Mom: 1-866-333-3032 ๐ŸŒ aplaceformom.com ๐Ÿ†“ Free for families โ€” funded by communities ๐Ÿ’ก Filter specifically for “income-based” or “subsidized” when searching
15
Salvation Army โ€” Housing & Rental Assistance
Local Salvation Army offices throughout the U.S. provide emergency rental assistance, utility help, and referrals to subsidized housing programs for low-income seniors. Some locations also operate transitional housing and senior residences directly. Programs vary by local office.
๐Ÿ“ž National: 1-800-728-7825 ๐ŸŒ salvationarmyusa.org โ€” find local corps ๐Ÿ“ All 50 states ๐Ÿ’ก Ask for “housing assistance” or “rental emergency help” when calling your local office
16
National Housing Trust
National nonprofit preserving and improving affordable rental housing across the U.S., with a focus on existing subsidized properties at risk of losing their affordable status. Works directly with Section 8 and Section 202 properties and can help seniors identify preserved affordable communities in their area.
๐Ÿ“ž Main: 1-202-333-8931 ๐ŸŒ nationalhousingtrust.org ๐Ÿ“ Focus on Mid-Atlantic, Southeast, Midwest, and West ๐Ÿ’ก Contact to ask about affordable properties they manage in your state
17
Enterprise Community Partners
Large national nonprofit financing and developing affordable housing. Partners with local nonprofits to create income-restricted senior apartments in underserved communities. Does not operate a direct application line but maintains a resource directory for affordable housing seekers.
๐Ÿ“ž Main: 1-410-772-2600 ๐ŸŒ enterprisecommunity.org/find-housing ๐Ÿ“ Active in 50 states ๐Ÿ’ก Use their housing locator tool to find income-restricted properties near you
18
VA โ€” Veterans Affairs Senior Housing Programs
Veterans and surviving spouses of veterans have special access to VA-backed housing programs, including HUD-VASH (vouchers for veteran seniors), VA-funded assisted living grants, and state veterans homes. Some are income-based with priority access compared to non-veteran programs.
๐Ÿ“ž VA Main: 1-800-827-1000 ๐Ÿ“ž Veteran Housing Crisis: 1-877-424-3838 ๐ŸŒ va.gov/housing-assistance ๐Ÿ’ก Ask specifically about HUD-VASH vouchers if you are a veteran 62+
19
HUD-Approved Housing Counselors
HUD funds certified housing counselors who help seniors apply for subsidized housing, navigate waitlists, understand lease rights, and avoid scams. Sessions are low-cost or free for income-qualifying seniors. Recommended before making any major housing decision.
๐Ÿ“ž Find a counselor: 1-800-569-4287 ๐ŸŒ hud.gov/housingcounseling ๐Ÿ†“ Low-cost or free for income-qualifying seniors ๐Ÿ’ก Ask for “HUD-approved housing counselor” โ€” not all “housing advisors” are HUD-certified
20
Silvernest โ€” Senior Home Sharing
Innovative alternative to traditional senior housing: connects seniors who have extra space in their homes with other seniors looking for affordable living arrangements. Many participants cut their housing costs by 40โ€“60%. Particularly useful in cities where subsidized housing waitlists are years long.
๐Ÿ“ž Support: 1-888-404-6432 ๐ŸŒ silvernest.com ๐Ÿ“ Available in all 50 states ๐Ÿ’ก Background checks available ยท Good option while waiting for subsidized housing to open
๐Ÿ” Your Situation โ€” What to Do Right Now
I need housing help urgently โ€” what do I do today, this hour?
URGENT NEED
Call 211 first. Dial 2-1-1 from any phone, any time. Tell them: “I am a senior and I need emergency housing help.” They can connect you to local emergency shelter, rental assistance, and eviction prevention programs that are active right now in your area โ€” information that no national website can match for currency.

Simultaneously, call your Eldercare Locator at 1-800-677-1116 during business hours and tell them you are in a housing crisis. They connect to Area Agencies on Aging in every county, which often have emergency housing funds, rapid rehousing programs, or can fast-track a housing counselor to help you.

If you are a veteran, call 1-877-424-3838 (National Call Center for Homeless Veterans) โ€” veteran seniors have priority access to HUD-VASH vouchers and emergency housing resources.
๐Ÿ“ž Call NOW: 2-1-1 (free, any phone) ๐Ÿ“ž Eldercare: 1-800-677-1116 ๐Ÿ“ž Veterans crisis housing: 1-877-424-3838 โš ๏ธ Do not wait โ€” same-day help exists but only if you call
I’m not in crisis but need to plan ahead โ€” how do I get on waitlists now?
PLANNING AHEAD
Start applying to multiple programs simultaneously โ€” today, even if you’re not ready to move. This is the most important piece of advice for anyone planning ahead: waitlists for Section 202 properties in most cities run one to five years. The only way to reach the front is to get on them now.

Step 1: Call your local Public Housing Authority (find it at hud.gov) and ask whether their Section 8 voucher waitlist is open and when it next opens. Ask to be put on a notification list if it’s closed.

Step 2: Go to resources.hud.gov and search for Section 202 properties within 25 miles of where you would consider living. Call each one and ask whether their waitlist is open. Apply to every one that is.

Step 3: Call your Area Agency on Aging (1-800-677-1116) and ask what income-restricted senior housing exists locally that is not in the HUD database โ€” LIHTC properties and nonprofit-operated buildings often maintain their own lists separately.
๐Ÿ“‹ Apply to multiple waitlists today โ€” not just the closest one ๐Ÿ” Search: resources.hud.gov (Section 202 finder) ๐Ÿ“ž Local PHA: search “Housing Authority [your city]” ๐Ÿ“… Update your contact info on every waitlist every 6 months
I got a notice that I’m being removed from a waitlist โ€” what do I do?
WAITLIST REMOVAL NOTICE
Respond immediately โ€” the same day you receive the notice if possible. Housing authorities and property managers are required to send an annual “purge letter” to verify you still want to be on the waitlist. If you do not respond, your name is removed. This removes thousands of seniors from waitlists every year โ€” not because they no longer need housing, but because mail was not forwarded after a move, the letter was missed as junk mail, or a health issue prevented a timely response.

If you have already been removed: call the property manager or housing authority immediately, explain what happened, and ask about a hardship reinstatement. Many will reinstate you at your original place on the list if you contact them quickly and explain circumstances. Get a HUD-approved housing counselor (1-800-569-4287) to help you write a reinstatement request letter if you face pushback.

Going forward: when you give any housing program your contact information, also provide the name and phone number of a trusted family member or friend as a secondary contact. This ensures someone can respond on your behalf if you are unable to.
๐Ÿ“ž Call property manager TODAY if you receive a removal notice ๐Ÿ“ Ask about hardship reinstatement at your original list position ๐Ÿ‘ค Add a trusted family member as secondary contact on all applications ๐Ÿ“ฌ Make sure all waitlists have your current mailing address
I saw an ad for “low-income senior housing โ€” apply today, guaranteed placement” โ€” is it a scam?
HOUSING SCAM ALERT
Yes, almost certainly. There is no such thing as a guaranteed placement in government housing, and no legitimate program charges a fee to apply to a waitlist or to move up on one.

Red flags to watch for: any person or company that charges you money to apply to a government housing program (applications are always free), anyone who promises to get you to the “top of the list” for a fee, websites that look like HUD but have slightly different URLs, and anyone who asks for your Social Security number, bank account, or Medicare number before you have ever spoken with an official property manager.

The Fair Housing Act also protects you: housing programs cannot discriminate based on race, religion, gender, national origin, disability, or familial status. If you believe you were passed over for housing due to discrimination, contact the HUD Fair Housing Hotline at 1-800-669-9777. During the 2025 federal government restructuring, HUD’s fair housing staff was significantly reduced โ€” if you experience discrimination, file a complaint promptly because response times may be longer than in prior years.
โš ๏ธ Never pay to apply to a government housing waitlist โ€” it is always free ๐Ÿšจ HUD Fair Housing Hotline: 1-800-669-9777 ๐Ÿ” Verify any program at hud.gov before sharing personal information ๐Ÿ‘ฎ Report housing scams: FTC at reportfraud.ftc.gov
๐Ÿ“ Find Low-Income Senior Housing Near You

Use the buttons below to find HUD senior housing, local housing authorities, senior centers, and Area Agency on Aging offices near you.

Searching near you…
๐Ÿ”‘ Quick Reference โ€” Key Contacts
๐Ÿ“ž Emergency housing help: 2-1-1 (dial free, any phone) ๐Ÿ“ž Eldercare Locator: 1-800-677-1116 ๐ŸŒ Find HUD senior housing: resources.hud.gov ๐Ÿ“ž HUD housing counselors: 1-800-569-4287 ๐Ÿ“ž National Church Residences: 1-800-994-9197 ๐Ÿ“ž Mercy Housing corporate: 1-866-338-0557 ๐ŸŒ Open waitlist tracker: affordablehousinghub.org ๐ŸŒ Benefit screening: benefitscheckup.org (NCOA โ€” free) ๐Ÿ“ž Veterans housing crisis: 1-877-424-3838 ๐Ÿ“ž HUD Fair Housing: 1-800-669-9777
โœ… 5-Step Action Plan โ€” Start Today
  • Step 1 โ€” Call 211 or the Eldercare Locator today. These free services know what is currently open in your specific community โ€” information that national websites cannot match for currency. Tell them your situation, income level, and where you can realistically live.
  • Step 2 โ€” Gather your documents before applying. Social Security award letter, photo ID, Social Security card, and three months of bank statements. Having these ready means you can submit an application the same day a waitlist opens.
  • Step 3 โ€” Apply to multiple waitlists simultaneously. Apply to every Section 202, Section 8, and LIHTC property within a geographic area you would genuinely consider living. Each application is free. The more lists you are on, the sooner you will reach the front of at least one.
  • Step 4 โ€” Update every waitlist every six months. Confirm your current address, phone number, and income level with each program. A single missed “purge letter” can remove years of waitlist position. Add a trusted contact person to every application.
  • Step 5 โ€” While you wait, reduce current costs. Screen for all benefits you qualify for at benefitscheckup.org. Apply for SNAP food assistance, Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) for utility bills, and your state’s property tax relief programs if you own your home. These programs together can free up $200โ€“$500 per month while you wait for subsidized housing to become available.

Housing program availability, income limits, waitlist status, and application procedures change frequently. Phone numbers and websites listed reflect publicly available contact information as of mid-2026. Always verify current availability directly with the organization or program before applying. Income limits for all HUD programs are updated annually in April โ€” confirm current limits for your specific county before assuming you qualify. This guide is for informational purposes and does not guarantee housing placement. This page has no financial affiliation with any organization listed.

Recommended Reads

  1. Senior Apartments for $300 a Month: 30 Programs & Resources Near Me
  2. 30 Low-Income Senior Housing With No Waiting List Near Me
  3. Handicap Apartments for Seniors: Finding Accessible, Affordable Housing That Actually Fits Your Needs
  4. Low Income Housing for Rent Near Me โ€” 20 Real Resources, Websites, and Phone Numbers
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    ๐ŸŽ‰ Great news โ€” at 56, you qualify right now. Sam's Club lowered its senior discount age from 55 to…

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    Samโ€™s Club Discounted Membership for Seniors. Your idme app is not working. I'm 56 and want to join go get…

  3. Budget Seniors on How Do I Get Ozempic for $25 a Month?May 28, 2026

    ๐Ÿ’Š Here's the real story on your $199 Ozempic bill โ€” and you have more options than you think. That…

  4. Sharon Hohler on How Do I Get Ozempic for $25 a Month?May 27, 2026

    I'm on Medicare and they still want 199.00 for my ozempic, this is to much ,how can I get a…

  5. Linda Miller on Starlink Cost Per Month: Every Plan, Fee & Hidden ChargeMay 18, 2026

    Your info and layout are equally wonderful. Extremely comprehensive yet understandable. You explain and show all very well. Not only…

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