State directory

Section 8 & HUD Housing in Massachusetts

902 HUD-assisted rental properties across 203 cities in Massachusetts, with approximately 67,633 subsidized units. Pick a city below to see the actual buildings, their addresses, and how to apply.

902
Properties
67,633
Subsidized units
203
Cities
14
Counties

Cities in Massachusetts

Boston
89 properties
Springfield
55 properties
Dorchester
53 properties
Roxbury
35 properties
Worcester
34 properties
Lynn
21 properties
Lowell
20 properties
Somerville
19 properties
Newton
15 properties
Cambridge
14 properties
New Bedford
14 properties
Framingham
13 properties
Jamaica Plain
13 properties
Lawrence
13 properties
Chelsea
12 properties
Chicopee
11 properties
Brockton
10 properties
Fall River
10 properties
Haverhill
10 properties
Holyoke
10 properties
Pittsfield
10 properties
East Boston
9 properties
Quincy
9 properties
Revere
8 properties
Vineyard Haven
8 properties
Beverly
7 properties
Brighton
7 properties
Longmeadow
7 properties
Needham
7 properties
Taunton
7 properties
Westfield
7 properties
Fitchburg
6 properties
Hyde Park
6 properties
Methuen
6 properties
Peabody
6 properties
Roslindale
6 properties
Allston
5 properties
Amesbury
5 properties
Brookline
5 properties
Charlestown
5 properties
Malden
5 properties
Marlborough
5 properties
Reading
5 properties
South Boston
5 properties
Weymouth
5 properties
Attleboro
4 properties
Greenfield
4 properties
Marshfield
4 properties
Melrose
4 properties
North Adams
4 properties
Northampton
4 properties
Salem
4 properties
Waltham
4 properties
West Roxbury
4 properties
Adams
3 properties
Andover
3 properties
Billerica
3 properties
Braintree
3 properties
Brewster
3 properties
Danvers
3 properties
Dartmouth
3 properties
East Longmeadow
3 properties
Falmouth
3 properties
Gardner
3 properties
Hyannis
3 properties
Lee
3 properties
Leominster
3 properties
Mattapan
3 properties
Maynard
3 properties
Medford
3 properties
Milton
3 properties
Norwood
3 properties
Oak Bluffs
3 properties
Southbridge
3 properties
Wakefield
3 properties
Wellesley
3 properties
West Springfield
3 properties
Wilbraham
3 properties
Agawam
2 properties
Amherst
2 properties
Arlington
2 properties
Ashland
2 properties
Athol
2 properties
Ayer
2 properties
Berlin
2 properties
Bourne
2 properties
Canton
2 properties
Easthampton
2 properties
Everett
2 properties
Gloucester
2 properties
Great Barrington
2 properties
Hanover
2 properties
Harwich
2 properties
Kingston
2 properties
Littleton
2 properties
Ludlow
2 properties
Marlboro
2 properties
Merrimac
2 properties
Middleborough
2 properties
Natick
2 properties
Newburyport
2 properties
Northbridge
2 properties
Randolph
2 properties
Rockland
2 properties
Roxbury Crossing
2 properties
Sandwich
2 properties
Saugus
2 properties
Scituate
2 properties
South Yarmouth
2 properties
Townsend
2 properties
Watertown
2 properties
Webster
2 properties
Whitinsville
2 properties
Woburn
2 properties
Yarmouth Port
2 properties
Abington
1 property
Auburn
1 property
Auburndale
1 property
Barre
1 property
Bedford
1 property
Belchertown
1 property
Blackstone
1 property
Bolton
1 property
Bridgewater
1 property
Carlisle
1 property
Chelmsford
1 property
Clarksburg
1 property
Clinton
1 property
Concord
1 property
Dalton
1 property
Douglas
1 property
Dracut
1 property
Duxbury
1 property
East Sandwich
1 property
East Wareham
1 property
Eastham
1 property
Fairhaven
1 property
Feeding Hills
1 property
Fiskdale
1 property
Florence
1 property
Foxborough
1 property
Franklin
1 property
Grafton
1 property
Groton
1 property
Groveland
1 property
Hampden
1 property
Hanson
1 property
Hingham
1 property
Holbrook
1 property
Holden
1 property
Holliston
1 property
Hubbardston
1 property
Hudson
1 property
Ipswich
1 property
Lanesborough
1 property
Lanesbourgh
1 property
Lexington
1 property
Medway
1 property
Middleton
1 property
Nantucket
1 property
North Andover
1 property
North Attleboro
1 property
North Brookfield
1 property
North Chelmsford
1 property
North Reading
1 property
Northborough
1 property
Norton
1 property
Orange
1 property
Orleans
1 property
Oxford
1 property
Palmer
1 property
Plymouth
1 property
Plympton
1 property
Raynham
1 property
Rutland
1 property
Sharon
1 property
South Hadley
1 property
Southampton
1 property
Southwick
1 property
Spencer
1 property
Stoneham
1 property
Stoughton
1 property
Stow
1 property
Sudbury
1 property
Tewksbury
1 property
Topsfield
1 property
Turners Falls
1 property
Upton
1 property
Uxbridge
1 property
Wales
1 property
Wareham
1 property
West Warren
1 property
West Yarmouth
1 property
Westborough
1 property
Weston
1 property
Westwood
1 property
Whitman
1 property
Williamstown
1 property
Wilmington
1 property
Winchester
1 property
Winthrop
1 property
Worthington
1 property
Wrentham
1 property

About HUD-assisted housing in Massachusetts

If you're looking for affordable rental housing in Massachusetts, you have two big federal options: a Housing Choice Voucher that you take to a private landlord, and project-based assistance that's tied to a specific building. The directory above covers the second category. Each entry comes from HUD's public Multifamily Properties (Assisted) dataset and represents a real building that accepts HUD subsidies under one or more federal programs.

To apply, you contact each property's management office directly. Most properties keep their own waiting lists separate from the housing authority's voucher waiting list — applying to a project-based building does not put you on the voucher waiting list, and vice versa. If you want every option open, apply to both.

How to use this Massachusetts directory:

  • Click your city to see the actual buildings, with addresses, unit counts, and the federal programs each one accepts.
  • From the property page, copy the management contact's phone number and call them to ask whether their waiting list is open.
  • If a building's list is closed, ask when it's expected to reopen — many post a notice 30–60 days before reopening.
  • Apply to several buildings in parallel; waits commonly run 1–5 years.

Federal programs active in Massachusetts

Across the 902 assisted properties in Massachusetts, residents are housed under a mix of federal contract types. The most common in this state are:

  • Section 8 Project-Based Rental Assistance — about 587 properties.
  • Section 202 / 811 Supportive Housing — about 248 properties.
  • PRAC (Project Rental Assistance Contract) — about 232 properties.
  • PRAC/811 — about 135 properties.
  • Section 8 LMSA — about 97 properties.
  • PRAC/202 — about 97 properties.

If you're new to these acronyms, the short version: Project-Based Section 8 is the classic family/general program; Section 202 is for low-income elderly applicants 62 and older; Section 811 is for adults with disabilities; and PRAC/PAC are the rental-assistance contracts that fund newer 202 and 811 communities. Mixed-finance and RAD properties combine HUD subsidies with state housing finance or Low-Income Housing Tax Credits (LIHTC).

How to apply for Section 8 in Massachusetts

The Massachusetts path looks the same as anywhere else in the country, just with state-specific waiting lists. Start by gathering your documents — government-issued ID, Social Security cards or numbers for everyone in the household, the last 2–3 months of pay stubs or benefit award letters (SSI, SSDI, TANF, unemployment), birth certificates for minors, and the names and addresses of every landlord you've had in the past five years.

Then split your effort between two tracks. Track A is the Housing Choice Voucher: contact the Public Housing Agency (PHA) that covers your county and ask whether the voucher waiting list is open. Most large Massachusetts PHAs maintain online application portals; smaller agencies may only accept paper applications during open enrollment windows. Track B is project-based: pick the buildings on this page that fit your household and call each management office. Their lists are independent of the PHA list, so being on one does not put you on the other.

Expect waits of 12 months in smaller Massachusetts markets and 2–5+ years in the largest metros. Senior-only Section 202 properties often move faster than family lists. Keep your contact information current on every list — missed mail is the most common reason applicants are dropped.

The largest concentration of HUD-assisted housing in Massachusetts is in Boston, but every county in the state has at least some federally subsidized stock — the directory above is the easiest way to find it.

For a deeper walkthrough, see Section 8 explained, the eligibility limits, and the application checklist. To compare with neighboring states, see New Hampshire, Vermont, New York, Connecticut.

Counties represented in Massachusetts: Barnstable, Berkshire, Bristol, Dukes, Essex, Franklin, Hampden, Hampshire, Middlesex, Nantucket, Norfolk, Plymouth, Suffolk, Worcester.