State directory

Section 8 & HUD Housing in New Hampshire

239 HUD-assisted rental properties across 95 cities in New Hampshire, with approximately 7,236 subsidized units. Pick a city below to see the actual buildings, their addresses, and how to apply.

239
Properties
7,236
Subsidized units
95
Cities
10
Counties

Cities in New Hampshire

Manchester
20 properties
Nashua
19 properties
Concord
15 properties
Claremont
12 properties
Laconia
8 properties
Newport
6 properties
Portsmouth
6 properties
Bedford
5 properties
Berlin
5 properties
Franklin
5 properties
Keene
5 properties
Conway
4 properties
Derry
4 properties
Dover
4 properties
Littleton
4 properties
Rochester
4 properties
Somersworth
4 properties
Bristol
3 properties
Exeter
3 properties
Hudson
3 properties
Lebanon
3 properties
Milford
3 properties
North Conway
3 properties
West Lebanon
3 properties
Antrim
2 properties
Center Ossipee
2 properties
Charlestown
2 properties
Durham
2 properties
Farmington
2 properties
Hampton
2 properties
Hanover
2 properties
Lancaster
2 properties
Penacook
2 properties
Pittsfield
2 properties
Plymouth
2 properties
Salem
2 properties
Swanzey
2 properties
Tilton
2 properties
Whitefield
2 properties
Winchester
2 properties
Woodsville
2 properties
Allenstown
1 property
Alton
1 property
Ashland
1 property
Belmont
1 property
Bethlehem
1 property
Boscawen
1 property
Campton
1 property
Canaan
1 property
Center Sandwich
1 property
Chocorua
1 property
Colebrook
1 property
Enfield
1 property
Epping
1 property
Epsom
1 property
Gorham
1 property
Greenfield
1 property
Greenville
1 property
Groveton
1 property
Hampstead
1 property
Henniker
1 property
Hillsboro
1 property
Hinsdale
1 property
Hooksett
1 property
Kingston
1 property
Lincoln
1 property
Lisbon
1 property
Loudon
1 property
Meredith
1 property
Merrimack
1 property
Moultonborough
1 property
New Hampton
1 property
New London
1 property
Newbury
1 property
Newmarket
1 property
Newton
1 property
North Stratford
1 property
North Swanzey
1 property
North Woodstock
1 property
Northfield
1 property
Northumberland
1 property
Northwood
1 property
Pelham
1 property
Pembroke
1 property
Pittsburg
1 property
Raymond
1 property
Rollinsford
1 property
Sanbornville
1 property
Seabrook
1 property
Tamworth
1 property
Walpole
1 property
Warner
1 property
West Stewartstown
1 property
Windham
1 property
Wolfeboro
1 property

About HUD-assisted housing in New Hampshire

If you're looking for affordable rental housing in New Hampshire, 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 New Hampshire 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 New Hampshire

Across the 239 assisted properties in New Hampshire, residents are housed under a mix of federal contract types. The most common in this state are:

  • Section 8 Project-Based Rental Assistance — about 146 properties.
  • 811 PRA DEMO — about 51 properties.
  • HFDA/8 NC — about 48 properties.
  • Section 202 / 811 Supportive Housing — about 45 properties.
  • PRAC (Project Rental Assistance Contract) — about 41 properties.
  • PRAC/202 — about 37 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 New Hampshire

The New Hampshire 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 New Hampshire 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 New Hampshire 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 New Hampshire is in Manchester, 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 Vermont, Maine, Massachusetts.

Counties represented in New Hampshire: Belknap, Carroll, Cheshire, Coos, Grafton, Hillsborough, Merrimack, Rockingham, Strafford, Sullivan.