The gap
Need vs supplyEvery household in this bar is a renter earning under 30% of what a typical family in their area earns. A third of them have a subsidy. The other two thirds are not on a shorter list or a slower track - there is simply no unit for them.
How 5.1 million units become 3.5 million poor households housed
- Units under contract 5,132,918 what HUD pays for
- Occupied 4,471,285 12.9% sit empty
- Of those, extremely low income 3,532,315 79% of tenants
- Households who qualify 10,620,313 CHAS 2017-2021
The wait, where it is measured
Months, by stateHUD records how long each household waited before it moved in. It records nothing at all about the households still waiting - they enter the file on the day they are housed, and not before. So this is the wait experienced by those admitted, and the true wait is longer than anything shown here. Even so, it varies by a factor of 5.7: Maryland at 57 months, Wyoming at 10.
Table: every state, in full
| State | Wait (mo, those admitted) | Units | Occupied | ELI need met |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Maryland | 57 | 102,353 | 91,459 | 38.5% |
| New Hampshire | 43 | 22,563 | 20,225 | 43.2% |
| Delaware | 40 | 13,186 | 11,060 | 33.4% |
| Northern Mariana Islands | 40 | 492 | 465 | no data |
| New Jersey | 39 | 169,445 | 153,600 | 36.6% |
| New York | 39 | 588,668 | 516,539 | 40.3% |
| Connecticut | 35 | 84,206 | 75,399 | 39.8% |
| Florida | 33 | 205,176 | 180,144 | 25.6% |
| Oregon | 33 | 57,559 | 50,217 | 31.9% |
| Maine | 32 | 27,425 | 23,207 | 43.9% |
| Massachusetts | 31 | 195,871 | 182,701 | 47.6% |
| California | 28 | 507,349 | 449,875 | 27.2% |
| Hawaii | 28 | 23,624 | 19,295 | 39.9% |
| Michigan | 28 | 146,787 | 128,123 | 34% |
| Alaska | 27 | 7,935 | 6,870 | 28.8% |
| Missouri | 27 | 93,924 | 75,826 | 32.3% |
| Rhode Island | 27 | 38,494 | 35,246 | 56.2% |
| Arizona | 26 | 41,985 | 37,420 | 17.8% |
| Nevada | 26 | 24,578 | 21,856 | 19.1% |
| Guam | 25 | 3,474 | 3,314 | no data |
| U.S. Virgin Islands | 25 | 6,191 | 4,489 | no data |
| Utah | 25 | 20,331 | 17,485 | 25.8% |
| Virginia | 25 | 107,467 | 92,877 | 31.3% |
| Louisiana | 24 | 94,457 | 81,263 | 37.9% |
| Ohio | 24 | 226,712 | 198,038 | 39.8% |
| Mississippi | 23 | 56,893 | 49,336 | 41.3% |
| Minnesota | 22 | 92,586 | 81,765 | 40.3% |
| Iowa | 21 | 41,324 | 34,504 | 30% |
| North Carolina | 21 | 128,527 | 104,659 | 26.7% |
| Tennessee | 21 | 106,452 | 91,928 | 36.1% |
| Wisconsin | 21 | 78,710 | 68,005 | 30% |
| Georgia | 20 | 135,704 | 113,062 | 29.1% |
| Idaho | 20 | 12,942 | 11,165 | 25.2% |
| Montana | 20 | 14,113 | 11,432 | 28.8% |
| Pennsylvania | 20 | 224,531 | 193,029 | 35.7% |
| Indiana | 19 | 89,420 | 76,942 | 31.1% |
| New Mexico | 19 | 27,103 | 21,143 | 27.3% |
| Texas | 19 | 288,627 | 248,565 | 24.5% |
| Alabama | 18 | 92,548 | 80,491 | 39% |
| Illinois | 18 | 231,185 | 202,644 | 36.6% |
| Colorado | 17 | 63,715 | 56,780 | 30.2% |
| South Carolina | 17 | 63,728 | 55,836 | 30.2% |
| Vermont | 16 | 13,563 | 11,196 | 46.1% |
| Arkansas | 15 | 52,339 | 42,818 | 35.7% |
| Kansas | 15 | 35,419 | 28,447 | 26.6% |
| Nebraska | 15 | 28,297 | 23,272 | 31.8% |
| Washington | 15 | 96,312 | 86,484 | 33.9% |
| District of Columbia | 14 | 34,553 | 27,697 | 45.9% |
| Oklahoma | 13 | 54,103 | 45,878 | 32.3% |
| South Dakota | 13 | 14,057 | 11,083 | 36.4% |
| Kentucky | 12 | 83,998 | 73,448 | 39.3% |
| North Dakota | 12 | 14,311 | 10,528 | 31.2% |
| Puerto Rico | 12 | 107,040 | 96,144 | 51.2% |
| West Virginia | 10 | 34,674 | 30,734 | 42.1% |
| Wyoming | 10 | 5,809 | 5,205 | 25.4% |
Guam, Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico, U.S. Virgin Islands appear in the table but not on the map: the Albers-USA projection has no geometry for them. CHAS publishes no county file for them either, so their ELI need is shown as no data.
Who gets in
Share of households, by programNationally, 43% of subsidized households are headed by someone 62 or older and 24% include a disabled member. But the average hides the design: two of these programs admit almost no one else. 202/PRAC is elderly housing by statute and 811/PRAC is disability housing by statute. Vouchers are the only door families with children go through in any number.
- Elderly (62+)
- Disabled
- With children
| Program | Units | Households | Elderly 62+ | Disabled | With children | Extremely low income |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Housing Choice Vouchers | 2,797,793 | 2,334,114 | 35% | 26% | 36% | 79% |
| Project Based Section 8 | 1,321,244 | 1,208,945 | 54% | 19% | 26% | 82% |
| Public Housing | 848,351 | 772,585 | 38% | 23% | 34% | 74% |
| 202/PRAC | 120,345 | 116,132 | 100% | 8% | 0% | 79% |
| 811/PRAC | 33,372 | 30,501 | 34% | 91% | 2% | 87% |
| Mod Rehab | 8,723 | 9,009 | 36% | 34% | 16% | 90% |
| S236/BMIR | 3,090 | 0 | 52% | 8% | 26% | 37% |
| 811 Project Rental Assistance (PRA) | 0 | 0 | 10% | 77% | 12% | 97% |
Who pays for it
Per unit-month, 2025A subsidized household pays $452 a month and HUD pays $1,135. The tenant covers 28.5% of the cost of their own home - not because the rent is cheap, but because the statute caps their share at roughly 30% of an adjusted income that averages $18,483 a year, or 21% of what a typical family in the same area earns.
- All HUD programs $452 $1,135 tenant 28%
- Housing Choice Vouchers $493 $1,255 tenant 28%
- Project Based Section 8 $389 $1,150 tenant 25%
- Public Housing $439 $856 tenant 34%
- 202/PRAC $401 $571 tenant 41%
- 811/PRAC $354 $588 tenant 38%
- Mod Rehab $298 $812 tenant 27%
- Tenant pays
- HUD pays
Multiplied out - $1,135 a month across 4,471,285 occupied units - HUD's side of this split runs to roughly $60.9 billion a year. That is an implied figure, not an appropriation: it is the per-unit subsidy in the file times twelve times the occupied units, and it excludes administrative cost, capital funds, and the two programs below. Read it as the order of magnitude of the transfer, not as a budget line. Not charted: S236/BMIR and 811 Project Rental Assistance (PRA) - HUD suppresses the subsidy side of their split, and half a split is not a split.
Seventeen years of standing still
2009-2025The number of subsidized homes has barely moved since 2009: 4,970,225 then, 5,132,918 now, a change of 3.3% across seventeen years in which the country added more than twenty million people. The number of people living in them fell 7.1%, because the households moving in are smaller and older than the ones they replaced. Meanwhile the subsidy HUD pays per unit rose 84%. The program did not grow. It got more expensive to hold in place.
- Units under contract
- People served
- Tenant pays
- HUD pays
Table: every year, 2009-2025
| Year | Units | People | Tenant pays | HUD pays | Wait (mo, those admitted) | Geography |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2009 | 4,970,225 | 9,536,969 | $286 | $617 | 18 | pre-2020 census |
| 2010 | 5,095,126 | 9,859,194 | $288 | $631 | 18 | pre-2020 census |
| 2011 | 5,147,935 | 10,099,094 | $289 | $631 | 20 | pre-2020 census |
| 2012 | 5,168,778 | 10,027,278 | $297 | $640 | 20 | pre-2020 census |
| 2013 | 5,180,467 | 10,072,890 | $304 | $637 | 18 | pre-2020 census |
| 2014 | 5,031,773 | 9,834,571 | $321 | $666 | 26 | pre-2020 census |
| 2015 | 5,038,578 | 9,853,342 | $328 | $680 | 26 | pre-2020 census |
| 2016 | 5,015,895 | 9,785,085 | $332 | $697 | 26 | pre-2020 census |
| 2017 | 5,018,939 | 9,653,388 | $337 | $693 | 27 | pre-2020 census |
| 2018 | 5,035,824 | 9,535,360 | $346 | $743 | 26 | pre-2020 census |
| 2019 | 5,034,685 | 9,439,919 | $357 | $765 | 26 | pre-2020 census |
| 2020 | 5,076,615 | 9,338,358 | $355 | $810 | 27 | pre-2020 census |
| 2021 | 5,098,041 | 9,170,091 | $364 | $839 | 27 | pre-2020 census |
| 2022 | 5,124,368 | 9,027,284 | $386 | $899 | 25 | 2020 census |
| 2023 | 5,129,585 | 9,045,714 | $416 | $989 | 25 | 2020 census |
| 2024 | 5,149,303 | 9,039,779 | $433 | $1067 | 27 | 2020 census |
| 2025 | 5,132,918 | 8,860,364 | $452 | $1135 | 25 | 2020 census |
Where you live
3,126 countiesThe national picture is an average of 3,126 very different local ones. Pick a state to see every county in it: how many subsidized homes there are, how long the people who got one waited, and what share of the local need that covers.
Longest waits for those admitted
Counties with at least 500 units, so a single admission cannot top the list.
Least of the local need met
Share of extremely-low-income renter households with a subsidy. Same 500-unit floor.
Wait figures exist for 2605 of the 3126 counties HUD reports (83.3%); the rest are suppressed (fewer than 11 families), missing, or non-reporting, and are shown as "no data" rather than as a zero. A further 14,327 units across 56 rows could not be placed in any county by HUD and appear nowhere on the map or in these lists.
Browse by state
- Alabama 18 mo
- Alaska 27 mo
- Arizona 26 mo
- Arkansas 15 mo
- California 28 mo
- Colorado 17 mo
- Connecticut 35 mo
- Delaware 40 mo
- District of Columbia 14 mo
- Florida 33 mo
- Georgia 20 mo
- Guam 25 mo
- Hawaii 28 mo
- Idaho 20 mo
- Illinois 18 mo
- Indiana 19 mo
- Iowa 21 mo
- Kansas 15 mo
- Kentucky 12 mo
- Louisiana 24 mo
- Maine 32 mo
- Maryland 57 mo
- Massachusetts 31 mo
- Michigan 28 mo
- Minnesota 22 mo
- Mississippi 23 mo
- Missouri 27 mo
- Montana 20 mo
- Nebraska 15 mo
- Nevada 26 mo
- New Hampshire 43 mo
- New Jersey 39 mo
- New Mexico 19 mo
- New York 39 mo
- North Carolina 21 mo
- North Dakota 12 mo
- Northern Mariana Islands 40 mo
- Ohio 24 mo
- Oklahoma 13 mo
- Oregon 33 mo
- Pennsylvania 20 mo
- Puerto Rico 12 mo
- Rhode Island 27 mo
- South Carolina 17 mo
- South Dakota 13 mo
- Tennessee 21 mo
- Texas 19 mo
- U.S. Virgin Islands 25 mo
- Utah 25 mo
- Vermont 16 mo
- Virginia 25 mo
- Washington 15 mo
- West Virginia 10 mo
- Wisconsin 21 mo
- Wyoming 10 mo