Section 8 Housing Explained: How to Get Help Paying Rent
Aug 20, 2024 • STAFF

Rent keeps rising, but one voucher can close the gap—if you know how to get it.
Section 8 (the Housing Choice Voucher program) helps pay a portion of your rent so you can afford a safe place to live. Here’s how to get on the right lists, stay active, and use a voucher without getting stuck. For readers in Los Angeles, California, timelines and paperwork steps aren’t identical—plan around your area’s process.
You may qualify for a housing voucher to reduce your monthly rent — see if Section 8 can help.
Get matched with programs that can help — quick, easy, and totally free.
Quick links for Los Angeles, California:
Start Here: How to Get on a Voucher Waitlist (and Stay Active)
Getting help starts with your local Public Housing Agency (PHA). Because demand is high, most PHAs use waitlists and open them only at certain times.
- Search for PHAs in nearby cities or counties; you can apply to more than one.
- Watch for short application windows; some open for hours or days.
- Create a simple “waitlist tracker” with the list name, date applied, login details, and any preferences claimed (veteran, disability, homelessness).
- Read every confirmation email or letter—missing a response can drop you from the list.
- If your contact info changes, update every PHA the same week (phone, email, and mailing address).
- When a list is closed, sign up for alerts/newsletters and follow PHAs on social media for opening announcements.
Payment Standards & the 40% Rule: How Your Rent Share Is Set
Understanding the math helps you pick units you can actually afford with a voucher.
- Your family typically pays about 30% of adjusted monthly income toward rent and utilities.
- At move-in, PHAs cap your share around 40% of adjusted income to prevent rent shock.
- Each PHA sets “payment standards” by bedroom size and area rents; these are not rent caps, but the benchmark used to calculate the subsidy.
- The unit must pass a health and safety inspection and meet “rent reasonableness” (similar units, similar price).
- Strategy tip: If your voucher size is 2 bedrooms but a large 1-bedroom works, ask about “leasing in place” or using the smaller unit to widen your options.
- Keep utility costs in mind—your share is based on gross rent (rent + approved utilities you pay).
Openings, Preferences, and Portability: Why Timelines Differ by PHA
Two families can apply on the same day and have very different paths—because local rules and preferences matter.
- PHAs assign preferences (e.g., veterans, disability, homelessness, residency) that can move you up the list.
- Some PHAs require you to live in their area for the first 12 months if you didn’t already—plan your search accordingly.
- “Portability” lets you use your voucher in another jurisdiction; you’ll coordinate between your “initial” and “receiving” PHAs.
- If you get a voucher, you’ll have a set “search window” (often 60–120 days). Keep a simple search log (addresses, dates, outcomes) to document good-faith effort and to request extensions if needed.
- Landlord outreach matters: prepare a short script, proof of income, and a one-page renter “resume.” Ask about pre-screening before scheduling showings.
- If denied, request reasons in writing—sometimes a unit can be approved after a small repair or a corrected rent calculation.
“I’ve been told ‘we don’t take them’ hundreds of times.”
— Laura Hasselquist, Chicago
(WBEZ Chicago, “Section 8 tenants say they’re being turned away, despite laws against discrimination”)
FAQs for Los Angeles, California
How do I apply for CalFresh in Los Angeles, California?
Start online through LA County DPSS: CalFresh Application. You can also apply by phone or in person.
Is there an office near me?
Yes. See addresses and hours on DPSS Office Locations.
What income rules apply?
Los Angeles County follows state CalFresh rules (often up to 200% FPL). See current details on DPSS CalFresh.