If Congress Cuts Section 8 Housing, These States Will Suffer (2024)

In Brief:

  • 2.3 million low-income families currently use Housing Choice Vouchers to make up the difference between what they can pay for rent and what landlords charge.
  • The program only covers one in four eligible households.
  • Advocates want to hold the line — and ultimately expand the program — as some conservative lawmakers have discussed paring it back.
  • After years of slow-growing momentum for federal action to address America’s housing challenges, is the country’s already-patchy housing safety net once again on the chopping block?

    Advocates worry it may be. Since last November’s election, groups like the National Low Income Housing Coalition have been sounding the alarm that a Republican-controlled Congress may renew efforts to cut public assistance programs. As Roll Call recently reported, GOP leaders have hinted that they may demand spending cuts to the Housing and Urban Development budget as part of debt-ceiling negotiations. And according to a report in The New York Times, House Republicans are developing their budget proposal using a former Trump administration official’s outline that calls for phasing out the Housing Choice Voucher program, a critical source of rental support for 2.3 million U.S. households.

    The Housing Choice Voucher program, also called Section 8, helps low-income renters find housing on the private market by paying the difference between what they’re able to afford and what landlords charge for rent. Families must earn less than 50 percent of the area median income (AMI) in order to qualify for a voucher, and three quarters of vouchers are reserved for “extremely low-income” renters who earn less than 30 percent of AMI. The program cost about $30 billion last year — by far the largest part of HUD’s annual budget.


    President Joe Biden’s recent budget proposal calls for modest increases to the Housing Choice Voucher program to keep up with rising rental costs and extend vouchers to an additional 50,000 households. As a candidate, Biden called for making vouchers available to everyone who qualifies — a longtime goal of housing advocacy groups. Currently, local housing authorities administer only enough vouchers to serve about 1 in 4 eligible families.

    “It’s a very important program. Any cuts to it would exacerbate the huge problem we already have of not having enough housing for extremely low-income renters,” says Andrew Aurand, senior vice president for research at the National Low Income Housing Coalition.

    Longstanding Conservative Opposition


    What would it look like if the Housing Choice Voucher program were pared back or eliminated? According to HUD data, there were 2,262,451 vouchers in use across the country as of November 2022. California, New York and Texas have the most, with a combined 687,000 vouchers, according to the data. Washington, D.C., has by far the highest concentration of vouchers per capita, followed by New York and Massachusetts.

    The Section 8 program has come under fire from conservatives as part of their broader critiques of America’s welfare programs. Some have argued that the design of the program discourages voucher holders from trying to increase their income and become self-sufficient. Lawmakers have occasionally considered proposals to put time limits on vouchers.

    Those critiques have sometimes been tied to gendered tropes about “welfare queens” living on taxpayer support. In a 2000 City Journal piece titled “Let’s End Housing Vouchers,” Howard Husock, now a senior fellow at the conservative American Enterprise Institute, wrote that “marriage and thrift,” rather than public assistance, were the best path to good housing in good neighborhoods. House Republicans are currently considering trying to impose work requirements on more public benefit programs, according to reports.

    But the Section 8 program itself originated out of critiques and calls for reform of other HUD programs, like traditional public housing. The program, partly reliant on private-market housing providers, is intended to give people who received housing assistance choices in where to live, rather than concentrating them in one place.

    “If you go back far enough in history, the voucher program was a conservative idea,” Aurand says.

    Bipartisan Support Remains

    In practice, voucher holders still have limited options for where to live. Some landlords in poor neighborhoods have found ways to recruit voucher holders and use the Section 8 program as a financial lifeline, while other landlords outright refuse to rent to voucher holders at all. Voucher holders operate under a patchwork of state laws related to source-of-income discrimination in the housing market.

    Despite perennial cost concerns about the Housing Choice Voucher program and other aspects of the social safety net, Congress has only prevented the program from keeping up with rising costs once — during the budget sequestration of 2013, says Peggy Bailey, vice president for housing and income security at the left-leaning Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.

    Both Sen. Patty Murray (D-WA) and Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME), the chair and vice chair of the Senate Appropriations committee, respectively, have shown support for the program in the past, Bailey says. While there’s good reason to believe that bipartisan support for the program would prevent it from being eliminated or scaled back dramatically, Bailey says, even small cuts to a single year’s budget could compound over time and leave more people vulnerable to homelessness.

    “People often think that housing assistance is an entitlement, and it’s not,” Bailey says. “Only 1 in 4 households that are currently eligible for the program receive rental assistance. And we know that incomes, while they may increase a little, they don’t keep up with rent costs. So whatever we do today that continues to prevent three-fourths of people who are eligible from getting assistance, and would increase that, only makes the affordable housing crisis worse.”

    Related Articles

    • Archive

      'Section 8 Need Not Apply': States and Cities Outlaw Housing Discrimination

      August 27, 2018

      ·Mattie Quinn

    • Archive

      Is There a Better Model for Housing Vouchers?

      March 24, 2014

      ·J.B. Wogan

    • Housing and Urban Issues

      States Work to Prevent Homelessness as Pandemic Relief Ends

      Jan. 23, 2023

    • Housing and Urban Issues

      The Untapped Potential of Nonprofits to Provide Affordable Housing

      OPINION | Nov. 17, 2022

      ·Jabari Simama

    If Congress Cuts Section 8 Housing, These States Will Suffer (2024)

    FAQs

    Which state has the most Section 8 housing? ›

    Which states offer the most subsidized housing units? Rhode Island had the most subsidized units per 100,000 people in 2022, with over 35 units per 1,000 people. It's followed by New York (30), Massachusetts (28), Connecticut (23), and Louisiana (21).

    What state is the easiest to get low income housing? ›

    These Are the 10 Best States for Housing Affordability
    • West Virginia.
    • Arkansas.
    • Mississippi.
    • Alabama.
    • Kentucky.
    • Oklahoma.
    • South Dakota.
    • North Dakota.
    May 7, 2024

    What percentage of Americans live in Section 8 housing? ›

    Section 8 Facts 2022-2023. Less than three percent (2.84%) of the American population lives in low-income housing, at a total of 9.3 million people.

    Is Section 8 managed by local government? ›

    Housing choice vouchers are administered locally by public housing agencies (PHAs). The PHAs receive federal funds from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to administer the voucher program.

    What state in the US has the cheapest rent? ›

    West Virginia ranked as the state with the lowest average rent, according to doxo. The average cost of bills in West Virginia, including rent, is 25.2% below the national average and the overall cost of living in West Virginia comes in at 9% lower, according to RentCafe.

    What is the most affordable state to live in? ›

    The most affordable U.S. state overall is Utah, in which the cost of living makes up 63.3% of average residents' income. Coming in second place is Tennessee, in which the cost of living makes up 63.7% of average income. Meanwhile, Arizona comes in third place, with cost of living making up 64.1% of average income.

    What is the best state to live in for low income? ›

    Oklahoma consistently ranks as one of the states with the most affordable housing costs. The state also has a number of financial assistance programs through staples like SNAP and WIC, as well as local nonprofit Bethel Foundation for single mothers and young children.

    What city has the most government housing? ›

    With more than 180,000 public housing units, the New York City Housing Authority is by far the nation's largest public housing authority (PHA).

    What state has the longest Section 8 waiting list? ›

    The average waiting period in Hawaii was 62 months, much higher than the national average of 19 months. California followed closely, with a waiting period of 55 months.

    What percentage of blacks are on Section 8? ›

    The distribution of residents living in Project-Based Section 8 housing units is similar to the racial composition of ELI renters. About half (49%) of Project-Based Section 8 residents are white, about a third (33%) are black and 13% are Hispanic (See Chart 2).

    What's the most Section 8 will pay? ›

    In most cases, the local housing authority, funded by HUD, will pay about 70% of a tenant's rent, while the tenant will pay the other 30%. Fair Market Rents generally determine the maximum rent that a Section 8 landlord will be allowed to charge its residents.

    What does Section 8 mean in slang? ›

    Section VIII provided for the discharge of men who were deemed mentally unfit for military service. The term "Section 8" eventually came to mean any service member given such a discharge, or behaving as if deserving such a discharge, as in the expression, "he's a Section 8".

    How much does Section 8 pay in Los Angeles? ›

    Posted:
    Bedroom(s)Voucher Payment Standards
    1$2,407
    2$3,052
    3$3,915
    4$4,320
    3 more rows
    Sep 25, 2023

    What is section 9 of the U.S. housing Act? ›

    Authorized by Section 9 of the United States Housing Act of 1937, the Public Housing Operating Fund program provides subsidies necessary for PHAs to operate and maintain nearly 1.1 million deeply affordable public housing units that constitute a critical piece of the housing market, providing homes for some of the ...

    Which state has the most public housing? ›

    Population living in public housing in U.S. 2022, by state

    In 2022, New York led all states in the United States with the highest population residing in public housing units. The number of residents in assisted houses in New York was more than 300,000, much higher than in other states.

    What is the most Section 8 will pay? ›

    Your rent payment is based on your income. The voucher will pay anything above 30% of your adjusted monthly income up to an established limit.

    Can I move anywhere in US with Section 8? ›

    Households that receive help with their rent through the federal Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher rental assistance program can move with their rental assistance to any rental unit anywhere in the United States.

    Top Articles
    Latest Posts
    Article information

    Author: Van Hayes

    Last Updated:

    Views: 6407

    Rating: 4.6 / 5 (46 voted)

    Reviews: 93% of readers found this page helpful

    Author information

    Name: Van Hayes

    Birthday: 1994-06-07

    Address: 2004 Kling Rapid, New Destiny, MT 64658-2367

    Phone: +512425013758

    Job: National Farming Director

    Hobby: Reading, Polo, Genealogy, amateur radio, Scouting, Stand-up comedy, Cryptography

    Introduction: My name is Van Hayes, I am a thankful, friendly, smiling, calm, powerful, fine, enthusiastic person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.