Section 8 in District of Columbia: how to apply, where to start, and what the waitlists actually look like

Guide to the Housing Choice Voucher program (Section 8), public housing, and other HUD rental assistance available in District of Columbia. PHA data sourced from HUD’s public dataset, last refreshed May 2026.

PHAs
2
Section 8 Vouchers
16,823
Public Housing Units
8,752
Total Assisted Units
25,575

What rental assistance looks like in District of Columbia

Across District of Columbia, roughly 2 Public Housing Agencies (PHAs) administer the federal Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher (HCV) program on behalf of HUD. Together they manage about 16,823 vouchers and 8,752 public housing units. A voucher pays a portion of your rent directly to a private landlord; you pay roughly 30–40% of your monthly income toward rent and utilities, and the PHA covers the rest up to a payment standard.

Each District of Columbia PHA runs its own waitlist, opens applications on its own schedule, and serves a defined geographic area — usually a single county, city, or housing authority district. There is no statewide application that covers everyone, which is the single most common source of frustration. The directory below shows every active PHA so you can apply to the ones that serve where you live (or where you’re willing to live with a voucher).

Income limits in District of Columbia (illustrative HUD FY estimates): A 1-person household generally qualifies as “very low income” (50% of Area Median Income) at roughly $54,750/year, and as “extremely low income” (30% AMI) at roughly $32,850/year. A 4-person household’s very-low-income line is around $78,200. Section 8 priority generally goes to extremely-low-income applicants. These thresholds vary by county — always confirm with the PHA you’re applying to.

How to apply for Section 8 in District of Columbia

  1. Find your PHA. Use the directory below to identify the agency for your county or city. Many renters apply to several nearby PHAs at once — that is allowed and recommended.
  2. Check waitlist status. Call or visit the PHA’s website. Some waitlists are open year-round, others open for a brief window once every few years.
  3. Prepare your documents. Photo ID, Social Security cards for everyone in the household, birth certificates, proof of income (last 60 days of pay stubs, benefit letters), and current address.
  4. Submit the pre-application. Most PHAs use an online portal; some still accept paper. Lottery-style waitlists may pick applicants randomly — the order you apply does not matter.
  5. Stay reachable. Update your address and phone with the PHA whenever they change. Most denials happen because the PHA can’t reach an applicant when they reach the top of the list.

Public Housing Agencies in District of Columbia

The directory below covers every PHA in District of Columbia we have on file from HUD’s public dataset, sorted alphabetically. Click an agency to see its full contact information, voucher counts, and what programs it administers.

2 agencies in District of Columbia

AgencyCityVouchersPublic HousingPhone
Community Connections Washington 298 0 (202) 608-4764 Details ›
D.C Housing Authority Washington 16,525 8,752 (202) 535-1500 Details ›