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Renter’s Guide — Section 8 & Housing Vouchers

Section 8 and the Housing Choice Voucher Program: A Complete Renter’s Guide

The Housing Choice Voucher Program — commonly called Section 8 — is the federal government’s largest rental assistance program, serving nearly 2.3 million households nationwide. If you hold a voucher or are on a waitlist, knowing how the program works is essential: how your rent share is calculated, what inspections your landlord must pass, which states protect you from voucher discrimination, what your lease must say, and how to keep your voucher from being terminated. This guide covers every dimension of the program in depth — including a 15-state comparison table, lease clause red flags, and 12 frequently asked questions.

Updated March 2026 30 min read All 50 States

Not legal advice. For educational purposes only.

Educational information only — not legal advice. HCV program rules vary by PHA, and state and local fair housing laws are subject to ongoing change. If you have a specific dispute with your PHA or landlord, contact a HUD-approved housing counselor (1-800-569-4287) or a local legal aid organization.

1. What Is Section 8 / The Housing Choice Voucher Program?

“Section 8” is the colloquial name for the Housing Choice Voucher (HCV) Program, named after Section 8 of the United States Housing Act of 1937. It is administered by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and funded through annual Congressional appropriations. The program provides rental assistance to eligible low-income individuals and families, allowing them to rent privately-owned housing in the open market rather than being restricted to public housing developments.

The program serves approximately 2.3 million households nationwide. Unlike public housing, where the government owns the units, the HCV program gives eligible families a voucher that subsidizes their rent directly in the private market. This gives participants significantly more choice over where they live — neighborhood, school district, proximity to employment — than older forms of housing assistance.

How It Works: The Three Parties

The Section 8 Triangle

HUD (Federal)

Sets program rules, Fair Market Rents, and income limits. Funds the program through annual appropriations. Oversees PHA performance and compliance.

PHA (Local)

Approximately 2,400 Public Housing Authorities administer the program locally. PHAs determine eligibility, maintain waitlists, issue vouchers, set local payment standards, conduct HQS inspections, and make Housing Assistance Payments to landlords.

Landlord

Must agree to rent to a voucher holder, pass an HQS inspection, sign a Housing Assistance Payment (HAP) contract with the PHA, and comply with program rules. In exchange, they receive guaranteed monthly payments from the PHA plus whatever rent the tenant pays.

Tenant-Based vs. Project-Based Vouchers

The HCV program has two main variants:

  • Tenant-based vouchers (the standard HCV): The subsidy follows the tenant. You can use the voucher to rent any qualifying private-market unit, and if you move, you take the voucher with you. This is what most people mean by “Section 8.”
  • Project-based vouchers (PBV): The subsidy is attached to a specific unit in a specific building. If you move out, you lose the subsidy (though you may qualify for a tenant-based voucher after 12 months of occupancy). PBV units are often in affordable housing developments.
The Section 8 program does not cover public housing. Public housing is a separate program in which the government owns and operates apartment developments. HCV / Section 8 covers privately-owned units where you — the tenant — choose the unit and the government pays part of your rent to a private landlord.

2. Eligibility — Income Limits, Waitlists, and Preferences

Eligibility for the Housing Choice Voucher program is determined by your local PHA, which applies HUD’s federal guidelines while also setting some local criteria. There are three main eligibility gates: income, immigration status, and criminal history.

Income Limits: AMI Thresholds

HUD establishes income limits based on Area Median Income (AMI) for each metropolitan area and non-metropolitan county. AMI is the median household income for a family of four in your area. The HCV program uses three income tiers:

HUD Income Limit Categories

Extremely Low Income

30% of AMI

At least 75% of all new HCV vouchers must go to households at this level. Highest priority. Examples: in a metro with $100,000 AMI (family of 4), extremely low income is ≤ $30,000.

Very Low Income

50% of AMI

Basic eligibility threshold for the HCV program. Most applicants who receive vouchers fall at or below this level. For the same example metro, very low income is ≤ $50,000.

Low Income

80% of AMI

PHAs can serve households up to this level, but most vouchers go to those at or below 50% AMI. This tier rarely receives vouchers in practice due to funding constraints.

Income limits vary significantly by location. The 50% AMI threshold for a family of four ranges from approximately $28,000 in rural Mississippi to over $85,000 in San Francisco. HUD publishes updated income limits annually at huduser.gov/portal/datasets/il.html.

Citizenship and Immigration Status

At least one member of the household must be a U.S. citizen or a non-citizen with “eligible immigration status” as defined by HUD. Eligible immigration statuses include lawful permanent residents (green card holders), refugees, and persons with certain other formal immigration statuses. Households with a mix of eligible and ineligible members may receive pro-rated assistance proportional to the eligible members. Undocumented family members are not counted in calculating the assistance amount.

Criminal History

Federal law requires PHAs to deny admission to households that include anyone who:

  • Has been convicted of the manufacture or production of methamphetamine in federally assisted housing
  • Is subject to a lifetime sex offender registry under any state’s sex offender registration program

Beyond these federal mandatory denials, PHAs have discretion to deny admission based on other criminal history. HUD guidance encourages PHAs to avoid blanket bans and instead conduct individualized assessments considering the nature and severity of the crime, the time elapsed, and evidence of rehabilitation.

The Waitlist Process

Demand for HCV vouchers far exceeds the available supply in virtually every jurisdiction. When a PHA opens its waitlist, it typically receives thousands of applications in days. The waitlist process:

  • Apply during the open window: PHAs open waitlists for limited periods, sometimes only a few days. Many now use random lottery selection from all qualified applicants rather than first-come, first-served ordering.
  • Maintain your application: If you are on the waitlist, you must respond to any PHA correspondence promptly and update your address and contact information if it changes. Failing to respond can result in removal from the waitlist.
  • Verify eligibility at the time of offer: When your number comes up, the PHA will re-verify your income and eligibility. You must still be income-eligible at the time the voucher is offered.

Local Preferences That Can Move You Up

PHAs may establish local preferences that place certain applicants ahead of others on the waitlist. Common preferences include:

Veterans and active-duty military families
People experiencing homelessness
People displaced by natural disaster or government action
People currently living or working in the PHA's jurisdiction
Elderly or persons with disabilities
Victims of domestic violence (VAWA protections)
Current public housing residents transferring to HCV
Graduates of HUD-approved housing counseling programs
Waitlist times vary enormously. In New York City, Los Angeles, and Chicago, closed waitlists and wait times exceeding 10 years are common. In smaller cities and rural areas, wait times can be under a year. Apply to every PHA within a reasonable distance of where you want to live — you are not limited to a single application. HUD’s housing search tool at HUD.gov can help you identify PHAs with open waitlists.

3. How the Voucher Works — Payment Standard, Tenant Share, and Fair Market Rent

Once you receive a voucher, the central financial question is: how much does the program pay, and how much do you owe? Understanding the payment formula is essential for finding a unit you can actually afford.

Step 1: HUD Sets Fair Market Rents (FMRs)

HUD publishes Fair Market Rents annually for each metropolitan statistical area and non-metropolitan county. FMRs represent the gross rent (including utilities) needed to rent a “modest” private-market unit — historically defined as the 40th percentile of units occupied by renters who moved within the past two years. In high-cost areas, HUD may use the 50th percentile FMR. FMRs are set by unit size: efficiency, one-bedroom, two-bedroom, three-bedroom, and four-bedroom.

Step 2: PHA Sets the Payment Standard

Each PHA sets its own payment standard within a range of 90% to 110% of the local FMR (and up to 120% with HUD approval for high-cost areas). The payment standard is the maximum monthly assistance the PHA will provide. PHAs that set their payment standard at 110% of FMR provide more flexibility to find housing in higher-cost neighborhoods.

Step 3: Calculate the Tenant Share

The tenant’s share is calculated as follows:

The Payment Formula

Tenant Share = 30% of Adjusted Gross Monthly Income

HAP (PHA payment to landlord) = Lesser of (Payment Standard) or (Actual Rent + Utility Allowance) minus Tenant Share

If Actual Rent > Payment Standard: Tenant pays the overage on top of their standard 30% share (but initial total tenant payment cannot exceed 40% of adjusted income at move-in)

Example Calculation

Monthly adjusted household income: $1,500

30% of income = $450 (tenant share)

PHA payment standard for 2-bedroom = $1,400

Actual apartment rent = $1,300

HAP payment to landlord = $1,300 − $450 = $850

If the rent were $1,600 instead: tenant would pay $450 + $200 overage = $650. Since $650/$1,500 = 43% (> 40%), this unit would be ineligible at move-in.

Utility Allowances

If the tenant pays utilities separately, the PHA provides a Utility Allowance (UA) — an estimate of reasonable utility costs based on unit size and local rates. The UA is factored into the calculation: if the rent is low and the utility allowance is high, the tenant may actually receive a utility reimbursement check from the PHA.

Voucher Portability

Federal regulations give voucher holders the right to use their voucher outside the issuing PHA’s jurisdiction after completing one year of assisted tenancy (some PHAs allow immediate portability). Portability works through a formal process:

  • Notify your PHA: Submit a portability request in writing. The issuing PHA prepares a portability packet.
  • Contact the receiving PHA: The receiving PHA in your destination area accepts the portability packet and verifies your eligibility under their local rules.
  • New payment standard applies: The receiving PHA’s payment standard governs how much assistance you receive in the new location. Moving from a low-cost to high-cost area may reduce the effective value of your voucher.
Annual recertification adjusts your tenant share. Every year (or more frequently if your income changes materially), the PHA recalculates your adjusted income and updates your tenant share. If your income increases, your share goes up. If you lose income, your share goes down. Never skip recertification — missing it can result in voucher termination.

Using a Section 8 voucher?

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4. Finding a Housing Unit — Voucher Shopping, Search Window, and Landlord Participation

Receiving a voucher is the beginning, not the end. You still have to find a willing landlord and a unit that passes HUD’s Housing Quality Standards (HQS) — all within a limited time window.

The Search Window: 60–120 Days

PHAs typically give voucher holders 60 to 120 days to find housing after the voucher is issued. The exact period varies by PHA policy. If you cannot find an eligible unit within the search period, your voucher may expire. PHAs may grant extensions (often up to an additional 60–90 days) if you can show you have been actively searching and were unable to find qualifying housing due to market conditions, disability, or other extenuating circumstances. Always request an extension in writing if you are struggling to find housing — do not wait for the deadline to pass.

Where to Search for Voucher-Accepting Units

  • HUD’s AffordableApartments.com / ApartmentList: Listings that specifically accept vouchers. Many mainstream rental platforms now allow landlords to indicate voucher acceptance.
  • GoSection8.com (Socialserve.com): A HUD-sponsored listing site specifically for voucher holders. Landlords who list there are actively seeking voucher tenants.
  • Your PHA’s landlord list: Many PHAs maintain a list of landlords who have previously accepted vouchers. Ask your case worker for this list immediately upon receiving your voucher.
  • Housing counseling agencies: HUD-approved housing counseling agencies (find them at HUD.gov) often have landlord relationships and can assist with the search at no cost.

Landlord Participation: Why It Matters and What to Know

Not all landlords participate in the HCV program. Some common reasons landlords decline: the HQS inspection process, the time required to set up the HAP contract, and payment standard amounts that may be below market rent in high-demand areas. In jurisdictions without SOI laws, landlords can legally refuse voucher holders.

When approaching a landlord, come prepared with:

  • Your voucher documentation and the PHA contact information
  • A clear explanation of how the HAP payment process works and the typical timeline
  • Rental history, references, and any other documentation that demonstrates you are a reliable tenant
  • Your payment standard amount so the landlord can assess whether their unit falls within the allowed range

The Request for Tenancy Approval (RFTA)

When you find a willing landlord and a unit you want, both you and the landlord must complete a Request for Tenancy Approval (RFTA) form. This form specifies the unit address, the proposed rent, the lease start date, and information about utilities. The PHA reviews the RFTA to ensure the proposed rent is “reasonable” compared to similar unassisted units in the area. After the RFTA is approved, the PHA schedules the HQS inspection.

Rent reasonableness can limit your options. The PHA must confirm that the proposed rent does not exceed what similar unassisted units charge in the same neighborhood. If the landlord’s asking rent exceeds the PHA’s reasonableness standard, the PHA will not approve the unit — even if the rent is below your payment standard. This is different from the payment standard limitation and operates independently of it.

5. Housing Quality Standards (HQS) Inspections

Before any HCV unit can be approved, and at least annually thereafter, the PHA must inspect the unit and certify it meets HUD’s Housing Quality Standards (HQS). HQS establishes a minimum level of habitability that the private market must meet to receive federal rental assistance. The inspection is free to the tenant.

The 13 HQS Inspection Categories

HQS Inspection Areas

1Sanitary facilities (bathroom, sewage, plumbing)
2Food preparation and refuse disposal (kitchen)
3Space and security (adequate bedroom space, lockable doors)
4Thermal environment (adequate heating, protection from cold)
5Illumination and electricity (working outlets, fixtures)
6Structure and materials (roof, walls, ceilings, floors, windows)
7Interior air quality (ventilation, no hazardous odors)
8Water supply (safe drinking water, hot water, adequate pressure)
9Lead-based paint (applies to pre-1978 units)
10Access (no unit is accessible only through another unit)
11Site and neighborhood (free from serious health/safety hazards)
12Sanitary conditions (unit free of vermin, trash, hazards)
13Smoke detectors (required on every level and in sleeping areas)

Common HQS Failures

The most common reasons units fail initial HQS inspections include:

  • Missing or non-functional smoke detectors
  • Inoperable windows (windows that don’t open for ventilation or are broken)
  • Exposed electrical wiring or broken outlets
  • Plumbing leaks or non-functional hot water
  • Evidence of rodents or cockroach infestation
  • Peeling paint in pre-1978 units with children under 6 (lead paint concern)
  • Non-functional heating system (particularly critical in northern climates)

What Happens After a Failed Inspection

HQS deficiencies are categorized by urgency:

  • Emergency (life-threatening): Must be repaired within 24 hours. Examples: no heat in winter, no hot water, major structural hazard, gas leak. If not repaired, PHA payments stop immediately.
  • Non-emergency standard deficiencies: Landlord is typically given 30 days to make repairs, after which a re-inspection is scheduled.
You can notify the PHA if your unit develops problems after move-in. If your landlord refuses to make necessary repairs that would fail an HQS inspection, you can contact your PHA. The PHA can conduct an emergency inspection, and if the unit fails, the PHA can suspend or terminate HAP payments until repairs are made. This is one of the strongest tools HCV tenants have for compelling repairs.

Using a Section 8 voucher?

Our AI reviews your lease for clauses that conflict with HUD program rules — payment interruption traps, unauthorized rent increase provisions, missing HUD addendum language, and more — and explains your rights in plain English.

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6. Tenant Rights — SOI Discrimination, Right to Remain, and Grievance Procedures

Housing Choice Voucher holders have a layered set of rights: federal program rights established by HUD regulations, state and local fair housing rights that may protect against source of income discrimination, and general tenant rights under state landlord-tenant law. Understanding each layer is essential.

Source of Income (SOI) Discrimination

Under federal law, “source of income” is not a protected class under the Fair Housing Act. This means landlords in states without SOI laws can legally post “No Section 8” signs, refuse to accept vouchers, and decline to enter HAP contracts without violating federal fair housing law. However:

  • Approximately 20 states have enacted SOI laws that prohibit landlords from refusing vouchers. See the state comparison table in Section 7.
  • Over 100 cities and counties have local SOI ordinances even where the state has not acted — check your city or county ordinance.
  • Race discrimination intersection: Even without an SOI law, voucher refusal policies that disproportionately screen out Black or Hispanic applicants (who hold vouchers at higher rates due to historical housing discrimination) may constitute race discrimination under the Fair Housing Act’s disparate impact doctrine.

Right to Remain: Lease Protections

HUD regulations require that HCV leases include certain minimum protections for tenants:

  • The initial lease term must be at least one year
  • The landlord can only terminate tenancy for serious or repeated lease violations, criminal activity, or other good cause
  • The landlord must give the PHA notice if they intend to terminate the tenancy
  • The HUD-required Tenancy Addendum must be included in the lease and its terms supersede conflicting lease provisions

VAWA Protections for Voucher Holders

The Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) provides significant protections to HCV holders who are victims of domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, or stalking. Key VAWA protections:

  • A victim cannot be evicted or denied admission to the HCV program solely because they are a victim of VAWA-covered violence
  • A victim can bifurcate the lease to remove an abuser and retain the unit and voucher
  • PHAs must have emergency transfer plans to help victims move to safer housing
  • PHAs must give victims a confidential certification process and cannot disclose VAWA status without consent

PHA Grievance Procedures

If your PHA makes a decision you disagree with — denying your application, terminating your voucher, reducing your payment — you have the right to an informal hearing. The process:

  • Request a hearing promptly: The PHA’s written notice will specify the hearing request deadline — typically 10 to 30 days. Missing this deadline usually waives your right to a hearing.
  • Prepare your case: Gather all documents, correspondence, and evidence relevant to the PHA’s decision. Request a copy of your file from the PHA before the hearing.
  • Bring a representative: You have the right to be represented at the hearing by an attorney, legal aid attorney, or other person you choose.
  • Judicial review: If you lose the informal hearing, some decisions can be challenged in state court. Consult a legal aid attorney about this option.
Legal aid is available at no cost. If you face voucher termination, eviction from a voucher unit, or a PHA adverse action, contact your local legal aid organization. Legal aid attorneys specialize in housing and HCV program law and can represent you at PHA hearings and in court. Find local legal aid at lawhelp.org.

7. State-by-State Comparison — 15 States

The legal landscape for voucher holders differs dramatically by state. The table below compares 15 key states on four dimensions: statewide source of income (SOI) protection, the governing statute or ordinance, portability notes, and any state supplement programs that can extend a voucher’s reach.

StateSOI Protection?Statute / OrdinancePortability NotesState Supplement Programs
CaliforniaYesCal. Gov. Code § 12955(p); SB 329 (2019)Statewide portability; receiving PHAs must accept incoming vouchers. No residency period required for portability.California ERAP, local housing trust funds in LA, SF, Oakland supplement voucher value in high-cost areas.
New YorkYesN.Y. Exec. Law § 296(5)(a)(1); NYC Admin. Code § 8-107(5)(a)NYC Housing Authority administers the largest voucher program in the U.S. NYC-issued vouchers portable after 12 months.CityFHEPS (NYC) supplements HCV for households with high rents. NY State also has FHEPS supplement program.
IllinoisYes775 ILCS 5/3-102; Chicago MHRLTO § 5-12Chicago Housing Authority allows immediate portability. Statewide IHDA portability for Rural Housing Choice Vouchers.Illinois ARPA-funded rental assistance bridges income gaps. Chicago Renters Assistance Fund.
WashingtonYesRCW 49.60.222(1)(f); Seattle SMC 14.08.040KCHA (King County) and SHA (Seattle) offer immediate portability. State law requires acceptance of portable vouchers.Seattle Voucher Subsidy Program and KCHA Opportunity Moves help voucher holders access high-opportunity areas.
MassachusettsYesMass. Gen. Laws ch. 151B § 4(7)(B)RAFT (Rental Assistance for Families in Transition) supplements HCV. Metro Boston has high FMRs reflecting costs.Commonwealth Rental Voucher Program (CRVP) state-funded supplement. MRVP for individuals with disabilities.
New JerseyYesN.J.S.A. 10:5-12(g)(1)NJ DCA administers statewide portability coordination. No minimum tenancy required before porting.HMFA Tenant Based Rental Assistance for disabled and elderly renters supplements federal vouchers.
OregonYesORS 659A.421(1)(g)Multifamily NW and OHCS coordinate portability. Portland has local ordinance additionally protecting voucher holders.Oregon Rent Assistance (ORA) bridges income-to-rent gaps. LIFT Housing program state supplement.
MarylandYesMd. Code, State Gov't Art. § 20-705(a)(6)HABC, HACPG, and MCPD administer largest programs. Portability widely available; high-opportunity moves encouraged.Maryland Rental Housing Works supplement. Montgomery County RentHelp MD voucher enhancement program.
MinnesotaYesMinn. Stat. § 363A.09, subd. 3Minneapolis Public Housing Authority and Metropolitan Council offer regional portability coordination.Minnesota ERAP supplements. Hennepin County rental assistance programs bridge payment standard gaps.
ConnecticutYesConn. Gen. Stat. § 46a-64c(a)DECD coordinates statewide portability. Connecticut has high FMRs — vouchers cover most market units statewide.State Rental Assistance Program (RAP) supplements HCV for households with highest need.
VirginiaYesVa. Code § 36-96.3(A)(11)ARHA (Alexandria), RRHA (Richmond), NRHA (Norfolk) coordinate portability. VHDA regional portability program.Virginia CARES Rent Relief Program and local affordable housing trust funds supplement vouchers.
TexasNoNo statewide SOI law; Austin Code §§ 5-1-3, 5-1-34 (Austin only)HPHA, DHA, and SAHA administer large programs. Texas has no statewide portability coordination — port-ins can face delays.Texas DHCA Emergency Rental Assistance. Local supplements in Houston and Dallas for high-cost units.
FloridaNoNo statewide SOI law; Miami-Dade Code § 11A-34 (county only)MDHA, OCH, and TCHA administer major programs. Florida's statewide preemption law limits local SOI ordinances.Florida ERAP and Sadowski Affordable Housing Trust Fund provide limited supplements.
GeorgiaNoNo statewide SOI law; Atlanta Code § 94-112 (Atlanta city ordinance)AHPA (Atlanta) administers the state's largest program. Portability available per federal rules after 12 months.Georgia DCA state rental assistance program. Atlanta Housing Opportunity Fund limited supplement grants.
OhioNoNo statewide SOI law; Columbus City Code § 2331.01 (Columbus only)CMHA, HACP, and CMHA administer largest programs. No statewide portability coordination — varies by PHA.Ohio ERAP and COHHIO rental assistance programs bridge gaps for households near the payment standard ceiling.
Check local ordinances even where state law is silent. Texas and Florida have no statewide SOI protection, but Austin, Dallas, San Antonio, and Miami-Dade County have local protections. State laws also change — verify current status with your state civil rights agency or fair housing organization.

8. Lease Clause Analysis — Red Flags and Green Lights for Section 8 Tenants

When you use a Housing Choice Voucher, your lease has two components: the standard lease the landlord uses for all tenants, and the HUD-required Tenancy Addendum that the PHA provides. If there is a conflict between the two, the Tenancy Addendum controls. Here is a clause-by-clause analysis of what to watch for.

Red Flag Clauses That May Conflict with HCV Program Rules

Lease terminates automatically if HAP payments stop or are delayed: “This lease shall automatically terminate, without notice, if Landlord fails to receive Housing Assistance Payments for any reason.” — This is a red flag. HAP payment delays do occur (due to PHA funding gaps, processing errors, or government shutdowns) and are not within your control. A clause making your tenancy contingent on payment timing exposes you to improper eviction. The HUD Tenancy Addendum requires proper notice and good cause for termination, which this clause would circumvent.
Tenant is liable for full rent if HAP payments are interrupted: “If the PHA fails to make its portion of the rent for any reason, Tenant agrees to pay the full contractual rent.” — Your obligation under the HCV program is your tenant share only. You are not responsible for the HAP portion even if the PHA delays or stops payment. A clause making you responsible for the full rent is inconsistent with HUD program rules and the Tenancy Addendum.
Rent increases outside the PHA approval process: “Landlord may increase rent with 30 days written notice to Tenant.” — In an HCV unit, rent increases require PHA approval of a new rent reasonableness determination. A clause purporting to allow rent increases with notice to the tenant only — without PHA review and approval — is inconsistent with program requirements. The landlord cannot collect a higher rent from the PHA without PHA approval.
Waiver of HCV program rights or hearing rights: “Tenant waives any rights to complain to the PHA, HUD, or any government agency about conditions in the unit.” — You cannot waive federal program rights in a lease. Your right to contact the PHA about maintenance, to trigger HQS inspections, and to request PHA grievance hearings cannot be contractually eliminated.
Security deposit exceeding state law maximums or PHA limits: “Security deposit = $3,500 (equal to two months’ rent).” — In states with security deposit caps (such as California’s two-month limit for unfurnished units), the cap applies regardless of whether the tenant has a voucher. Additionally, many PHAs publish guidance on what security deposits are reasonable — excessive deposits may raise fair housing concerns if applied selectively to voucher holders.

Green Light Clauses That Are Lawful (and Beneficial for Tenants)

HUD Tenancy Addendum incorporated by reference: “This lease is subject to the HUD Tenancy Addendum (Form HUD-52641-A), which is attached hereto and incorporated by reference. In the event of conflict, the Tenancy Addendum controls.” — This is the correct language. The Tenancy Addendum should always be attached to your lease. If it is not, ask your PHA to provide one and require the landlord to sign it before moving in.
Good cause termination requirement: “Landlord may not terminate this tenancy except for serious or repeated violation of the terms of the lease, violation of applicable federal, state, or local law, or other good cause as defined by applicable law and HUD regulations.” — This mirrors the federal HCV program’s good cause requirement and is a strong tenant protection. A landlord who tries to evict a voucher holder for arbitrary reasons is limited by this clause and the Tenancy Addendum.
Rent increase notice to both tenant and PHA: “Any proposed rent increase must be submitted in writing to both Tenant and the PHA at least 60 days prior to the proposed effective date and is subject to PHA approval of a rent reasonableness determination.” — This correctly reflects how rent increases work in the HCV program and protects you by ensuring the PHA has the required notice window to evaluate the increase.

Yellow Flag Clauses Worth Clarifying

Utilities clause with unclear allocation between tenant and landlord: “Tenant is responsible for all utilities.” — Not automatically a problem, but you must verify that the PHA’s Utility Allowance (UA) for your unit correctly reflects all utilities you will pay. The UA is subtracted from the payment standard to determine the HAP — an incorrect UA (too low) will mean you are effectively paying more than your intended 30% income share. Ask your PHA for the UA schedule and verify it matches your actual utility responsibilities under the lease.
Lease term shorter than one year: “Initial lease term: six (6) months.” — HUD regulations require the initial HCV lease term to be at least one year. A lease with an initial term shorter than one year does not comply with HCV program requirements. Your PHA should have flagged this when reviewing the RFTA. If your lease is for less than a year, contact your PHA before signing.

Using a Section 8 voucher?

Our AI reviews your lease for clauses that conflict with HUD program rules — payment interruption traps, unauthorized rent increase provisions, missing HUD addendum language, and more — and explains your rights in plain English.

Review My Lease — $9.99

No account needed · Not legal advice

9. Landlord Obligations Under the HAP Contract

When a landlord agrees to rent to a voucher holder, they enter into a Housing Assistance Payment (HAP) contract with the PHA. This contract creates binding obligations on the landlord — in addition to their regular landlord-tenant law duties. Understanding these obligations helps tenants know what they can demand.

Maintenance and Habitability

Under the HAP contract, the landlord must maintain the unit in a condition that meets HQS throughout the tenancy — not just at move-in. This means the landlord must:

  • Make repairs promptly when HQS deficiencies are identified
  • Cooperate with annual PHA re-inspections
  • Maintain all services specified in the lease (heat, hot water, appliances included in the rent)
  • Not charge the tenant for any services the PHA is already paying for

If the landlord fails to maintain HQS, the PHA can withhold HAP payments and the tenant may have additional remedies under state landlord-tenant law (including rent withholding in states that permit it).

Annual Inspections and Rent Increases

The PHA must inspect the unit at least annually. At the time of the annual inspection (or lease renewal), landlords may request a rent increase. The process for a rent increase is strict:

  • Written notice to both the tenant and the PHA at least 60 days before the proposed effective date
  • PHA conducts a rent reasonableness review to confirm the new rent doesn’t exceed comparable unassisted units
  • PHA approves or denies the increase. If denied, the old rent remains in effect
  • If approved and the new rent exceeds the payment standard, the tenant’s share increases by the overage amount

What Landlords Cannot Do

  • Charge rent above the PHA-approved amount to the tenant, directly or indirectly (“side payments” are prohibited)
  • Discriminate against the voucher holder in the provision of services, amenities, or unit maintenance relative to non-voucher tenants
  • Evict a voucher holder without proper notice and good cause as required by the Tenancy Addendum
  • Refuse to cooperate with PHA inspections
Illegal side payments: If a landlord asks you to pay cash “off the books” in addition to your standard tenant share — whether framed as extra fees, utilities, or any other payment — this is a violation of HUD program rules. Report any side payment requests to your PHA immediately. You will not be penalized for reporting; the landlord faces HAP contract termination.

10. Common Problems — Payment Delays, Failed Inspections, Landlord Opt-Out, and Voucher Termination

The HCV program is complex, and problems arise even when everyone is acting in good faith. Here are the most common issues tenants face and how to address them.

HAP Payment Delays

PHAs sometimes experience payment delays due to funding shortfalls, administrative backlogs, or processing errors. If your PHA’s HAP payment is late:

  • Contact your PHA case worker immediately to inquire about the status and expected payment date
  • Document the delay with dates and written communications
  • Provide the landlord with written documentation from the PHA confirming the delay is on the PHA’s end
  • A landlord who threatens eviction for a PHA-caused payment delay should be reminded that the Tenancy Addendum requires good cause for termination

Unit Failing Annual HQS Inspection

If your unit fails an annual HQS inspection and the landlord refuses to make repairs, the PHA may abate (suspend) HAP payments until repairs are complete. During the abatement period:

  • Your tenant share payment obligation does not change during HAP abatement
  • If the landlord tries to evict you due to the abatement, you have strong defenses under the Tenancy Addendum and possibly state habitability law
  • If repairs are not made within the abatement period, the PHA may terminate the HAP contract, and you would need to move and find a new unit

Landlord Opt-Out at Lease End

At the end of the initial lease term (or any subsequent renewal period), a landlord may decline to renew the lease. In states without SOI protections, this is generally permissible even if the sole reason is not wanting to participate in the HCV program. However:

  • In SOI-protected jurisdictions, declining to renew specifically because of the voucher may violate state law
  • If eviction is being used as retaliation for complaints about HQS deficiencies, the retaliatory eviction doctrine may apply
  • If you receive notice of non-renewal, contact your PHA immediately to request a search extension and find out your options

Voucher Termination

A PHA can terminate your voucher for program violations. Common causes include: failure to report income changes, unauthorized household members, drug-related criminal activity, and repeated HQS violations caused by the tenant. If you receive a termination notice:

  • Request an informal hearing immediately — the deadline is typically 10–30 days from the notice date. Missing it waives your right to challenge the termination.
  • Request your file from the PHA to see all documents the PHA is relying on
  • Contact legal aid immediately for representation at the hearing
Government shutdowns can delay HAP payments. During federal government shutdowns, HCV program funding may be disrupted. Most PHAs have reserves to cover one to three months of payments, but extended shutdowns create real risk. During a shutdown, document all communications with your landlord and PHA, and consult legal aid if your landlord threatens eviction.

11. Protecting Your Voucher — Reporting Requirements, Household Changes, and Violations

Your Housing Choice Voucher represents a significant financial benefit — in high-cost cities, a voucher may be worth hundreds of thousands of dollars over your lifetime. Protecting it requires proactive compliance with reporting obligations and awareness of conduct that can put it at risk.

Income Reporting Requirements

You must report income changes to your PHA promptly — most PHAs require reporting within 10 to 30 days of the change:

New job or return to work
Pay increase or change in hours
New Social Security or SSDI award
Child support payments starting/stopping
Self-employment income beginning
Inheritance or large one-time income
Loss of income (may reduce your share)
Lottery or gaming winnings over PHA threshold

Household Composition Changes

You must receive PHA approval before adding any person to the household. This includes adult children moving back, a new partner moving in, or taking in a family member. Unauthorized household members are one of the most common causes of voucher termination. The process:

  • Submit a written request to add a household member before they move in
  • The PHA will screen the new member for criminal history and immigration status
  • The PHA will also verify that the unit size is still appropriate for the new household composition
  • If a household member moves out, report that too — it may affect your income calculation and unit size eligibility

Conduct That Can Put Your Voucher at Risk

  • Drug-related criminal activity: Any drug trafficking or manufacturing on or near the premises. PHAs have zero-tolerance policies for drug crimes under the “one strike” rule.
  • Violent criminal activity: Any violent crime by household members or guests that threatens the health, safety, or right to peaceful enjoyment of neighbors or PHA staff.
  • Fraud and program abuse: Providing false information on recertification, fraudulently collecting HAP payments, allowing the unit to be used for illegal purposes.
  • Subletting the unit: Renting out your HCV unit to another person is a serious program violation. You must occupy the unit as your primary residence.

Annual and Interim Recertification

Every year, your PHA will conduct an annual recertification to verify your household income, composition, and eligibility. You must:

  • Respond to recertification notices promptly and provide all requested documents
  • Update your mailing address and phone number with the PHA so you receive all notices
  • Keep copies of all documents submitted and all correspondence received from the PHA
  • If you cannot attend a recertification appointment, request a reschedule in writing before the appointment date
Keep your PHA informed — it protects you. The voucher program works best for tenants who maintain proactive, documented communication with their PHA. Many terminations result from missed correspondence (often because the tenant moved without updating their address), missed appointments, or unreported changes that the PHA later discovers. A simple update call or letter can prevent months of legal battles.

12. Frequently Asked Questions

What is Section 8 and who runs it?

Section 8 refers to the Housing Choice Voucher (HCV) Program, named after Section 8 of the Housing Act of 1937. It is the federal government's largest rental assistance program, funded by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and administered locally by approximately 2,400 Public Housing Authorities (PHAs) across the country. PHAs receive federal funds from HUD and issue vouchers directly to eligible low-income families, the elderly, and persons with disabilities. Recipients use the voucher to rent housing in the private market rather than moving into government-owned public housing. HUD sets program rules; PHAs implement them locally, set local payment standards, maintain waitlists, conduct inspections, and make payments to landlords.

Who is eligible for a Housing Choice Voucher?

To be eligible for a Housing Choice Voucher, a household must meet three criteria: (1) Income limit — household income must be below a threshold set by HUD, typically at or below 50% of the Area Median Income (AMI) for the local area. By law, PHAs must issue at least 75% of new vouchers to households at or below 30% of AMI ("extremely low income"). (2) Citizenship/immigration status — at least one member of the household must be a U.S. citizen or have eligible immigration status. Households with mixed immigration status may still receive partial (pro-rated) assistance. (3) Criminal history — PHAs may deny assistance based on certain criminal histories; federal law requires denial for households with members convicted of manufacturing methamphetamine in federally assisted housing or on the lifetime sex offender registry. Beyond these federal minimums, PHAs may have additional local admission criteria.

How long is the wait for a Section 8 voucher?

Waiting times vary enormously by location — from a few months in rural areas to 5, 10, or even 20+ years in high-demand cities like New York, Los Angeles, and Washington D.C. Most major-city waitlists are closed to new applicants for years at a time. The national average wait is estimated at 18–24 months, but this masks extreme variation. PHAs are allowed to establish local preferences that let certain groups move to the top of the waitlist — common preferences include: veterans and their families, people experiencing homelessness, people displaced by natural disaster, current public housing residents, and people living or working in the PHA's jurisdiction. If you qualify for a preference, your wait could be dramatically shorter. HUD maintains a database of open PHAs at HUD.gov/topics/housing_choice_voucher_program_section_8.

How does the payment standard work and how much will my landlord receive?

The Housing Choice Voucher program uses a two-part payment system. First, HUD establishes Fair Market Rents (FMRs) for each metropolitan area — these are HUD's estimate of the gross rent (including utilities) at the 40th or 50th percentile of market-rate units in the area. Second, each PHA sets a "payment standard" — the maximum the voucher will cover — at 90% to 110% of the local FMR, with HUD permission to go up to 120% in high-cost areas. The tenant's share is: the tenant must pay at least 30% of their adjusted gross monthly income. The PHA pays the difference between the payment standard and 30% of the tenant's income, directly to the landlord. If the actual rent exceeds the payment standard, the tenant must pay the difference on top of their standard 30% share — but the tenant's share at initial lease-up cannot exceed 40% of their adjusted income. If the rent is below the payment standard, the tenant still pays 30% of income.

Can a landlord legally refuse to accept my Section 8 voucher?

Under federal law alone, landlords are not required to accept Housing Choice Vouchers — source of income (SOI) is not a federally protected class under the Fair Housing Act. However, approximately 20 states and over 100 cities and counties have enacted SOI anti-discrimination laws that prohibit landlords from refusing to accept vouchers or other lawful income sources. States with statewide voucher protections include California, Connecticut, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, and others. If you live in a protected jurisdiction and a landlord refuses your voucher, you can file a complaint with the state civil rights agency. Even where no SOI law exists, refusing vouchers that are disproportionately held by minority applicants may support a race discrimination claim under the Fair Housing Act's disparate impact doctrine.

What is an HQS inspection and what happens if the unit fails?

Before a Housing Choice Voucher can be used, the PHA must inspect the unit and certify that it meets HUD's Housing Quality Standards (HQS). HQS covers 13 categories: sanitary facilities, food preparation/refuse disposal, space/security, thermal environment, illumination/electricity, structure/materials, interior air quality, water supply, lead-based paint, access, site/neighborhood, sanitary conditions, and smoke detectors. An inspector will also verify the unit size is appropriate for the family. If the unit fails, the landlord is given a specific timeframe (typically 24–72 hours for emergency deficiencies, 30 days for standard deficiencies) to make repairs. The voucher holder cannot move in until the unit passes. If repairs are not made in time, the voucher holder must find another unit. PHAs also conduct annual re-inspections. If a unit fails an annual inspection and the landlord refuses to make repairs, the PHA can stop making housing assistance payments.

What is voucher portability and can I move to a different city or state?

Voucher portability means you can use your Housing Choice Voucher to rent housing outside the PHA's jurisdiction — in a different city, county, or even a different state. Federal regulations require PHAs to allow portability once a household has lived on the voucher for one year (some PHAs allow portability immediately). The process: (1) You notify your issuing PHA that you want to move; (2) The issuing PHA sends a portability packet to the receiving PHA in your destination area; (3) The receiving PHA absorbs the voucher (takes on full responsibility and billing HUD directly) or bills the issuing PHA for the payments; (4) The receiving PHA sets the applicable payment standard for your new location. Portability can significantly affect the value of your voucher — a voucher issued in a low-cost rural area may cover very little housing in San Francisco, while a voucher from New York may go much further in a lower-cost city.

What are my rights if my landlord wants to raise the rent on my voucher unit?

A landlord in the Housing Choice Voucher program cannot raise the rent without PHA approval, and the new rent must be "reasonable" — meaning it cannot exceed the rent charged for comparable unassisted units in the area. The process for a rent increase: (1) The landlord must give advance written notice to both the tenant and the PHA — typically 60 days before the proposed increase; (2) The PHA reviews the proposed rent against its rent reasonableness standard; (3) The PHA determines whether it will approve the increase. If approved, the PHA adjusts its Housing Assistance Payment accordingly. If the new rent exceeds the payment standard, the tenant's share increases — but the initial total tenant payment cannot exceed 40% of adjusted income. If the landlord raises rent without PHA approval or in violation of the lease notice requirements, the increase is void. Tenants should verify that any rent increase notice was also sent to the PHA and that the PHA has approved it.

What should I do if my landlord wants to opt out of the Section 8 program?

Landlord opt-out from the Housing Choice Voucher program works differently depending on the type of contract. For regular voucher tenants (tenant-based assistance), the landlord can opt out at the end of the lease term by declining to renew — but must give proper notice under the lease. However, in some jurisdictions with SOI laws, declining to renew specifically because of the voucher may constitute retaliatory or discriminatory non-renewal. For project-based Section 8 housing (where the subsidy is tied to the building, not the tenant), opt-out is governed by the project-based contract with HUD. Tenants in project-based units have the right to receive a tenant-protection voucher to move if the owner opts out. If you are being forced to move due to a landlord opting out of the program, contact your PHA immediately — you may be eligible for additional search time or a new voucher.

What income changes do I need to report to keep my voucher?

Voucher holders are required to report changes in household income and composition promptly — typically within 10–30 days, depending on your PHA's policies. Income changes you must report include: a new job or increased hours, a pay raise, receiving a new source of income (Social Security, SSDI, child support, inheritance, lottery winnings), and income increases from self-employment. You must also report changes in household composition — if someone moves in or out of the unit. Failure to report changes is considered a program violation and can result in termination of your voucher. If your income increases significantly, your tenant share will increase. If your income decreases, your tenant share will decrease. Do not wait until your annual recertification to report major changes — report them as soon as they occur.

Can my voucher be terminated, and what are my rights if it is?

Yes, PHAs can terminate voucher assistance for various reasons including: serious or repeated program violations, failure to report income or household composition changes, allowing unauthorized persons to live in the unit, creating a threat to health or safety, criminal activity on or near the premises, and failure to pay the tenant's rent share. If your PHA proposes to terminate your voucher, federal regulations require the PHA to give you written notice stating the reasons and the effective date. You have the right to an informal hearing before the termination takes effect. At the hearing, you can present evidence and argue your case. If you prevail, your voucher is reinstated. If you do not prevail, you can seek judicial review in some jurisdictions. Do not miss the hearing request deadline — it is typically 10–30 days from the notice date, and missing it waives your hearing rights.

What lease clauses should Section 8 tenants watch for?

Section 8 tenants should watch for several red flag lease clauses: (1) Clauses stating that the lease terminates or tenant breaches if the PHA payments stop — this could be used to evict you for payment delays that are outside your control; (2) Clauses requiring tenant to pay the full rent if HAP payments are interrupted — your obligation is your tenant share only; (3) Clauses waiving your right to a PHA grievance hearing or any federal program rights; (4) Clauses that conflict with the HUD-required lease addendum — the HUD addendum controls; (5) Clauses requiring a security deposit larger than what is permitted by the PHA's payment standard or state law; (6) Clauses permitting rent increases outside the PHA approval process. Additionally, your lease must include a tenancy addendum provided by the PHA — if the landlord refuses to sign it, the PHA cannot approve the unit.

Legal Disclaimer: This guide is for general educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. The Housing Choice Voucher Program is governed by federal regulations (24 C.F.R. Part 982) and local PHA administrative plans, which vary by jurisdiction. Program rules are subject to change through Congressional appropriations, regulatory action, and HUD guidance. The information in this guide reflects general principles and may not apply to your specific PHA’s policies. For advice about your specific situation, consult a HUD-approved housing counselor (1-800-569-4287), your local legal aid organization, or a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction.

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