Washington · City directory

HUD & Section 8 Housing in Olympia, WA

7 assisted multifamily properties in Olympia, totaling about 299 subsidized units. Each listing below points to the actual building and the management contact who keeps the waiting list — that's who you call to apply.

7
Properties
299
Subsidized units
1
Senior-focused (62+)
1
Disability-focused

Properties in Olympia

EVERGREEN VILLAGE

505 Division St NW, Olympia, WA 98502
Section 8 Project-Based Rental Assistance Preservation
180 units

PROVIDENCE ST FRANCIS HOUSE

3415 12th Ave NE, Olympia, WA 98506
Section 202 / 811 Supportive Housing PRAC (Project Rental Assistance Contract) PRAC/202 Senior 62+
59 units

OLYMPIAN APTS

519 WASHINGTON ST SE, Olympia, WA 98501
Section 8 Project-Based Rental Assistance Sec 8 SR Disability-focused
50 units

Billy Frank Jr Place

318 State Ave NE, Olympia, WA 98501
811 PRA DEMO
10 units

WA19RDD1201

1011 Plum St SE, Olympia, WA 98501
811 PRA DEMO
0 units

Washington State Department of Commerce

1011 Plum St SE, Olympia, WA 98501
0 units

Washington State Dept of Commerce

1011 Plum St SE, Olympia, WA 98501
811 PRA DEMO
0 units

How to apply for Section 8 in Olympia

If you're hoping to land a unit in one of the buildings above, here's the practical path for Olympia applicants:

  1. Confirm your income. Project-based Section 8 in Olympia uses the same HUD income limits as the rest of Washington. Most buildings serve households at or below 50% of the area median income (AMI), with some prioritizing extremely-low-income (30% AMI) applicants. See the eligibility page for the cutoffs by household size.
  2. Pick the buildings that fit your household. Look at unit count, the program type, and any senior or disability designation. Senior-only properties (Section 202) accept applicants 62+; Section 811 properties are reserved for adults with qualifying disabilities. Family-occupancy buildings are open to households of all ages.
  3. Call the management contact on each property page. Ask: "Is your waiting list open? If it's closed, when do you expect it to reopen, and where do I check for the announcement?" Get the answer in writing if you can — an email reply is a useful paper trail.
  4. Apply to several buildings. A typical wait in Olympia-sized markets is 12–36 months; some big Washington metros run several years. Applying to 5–10 buildings in parallel materially shortens your wait. Don't be choosy on the first round — once you're housed, you can transfer.
  5. Keep your application live. Once on a list, respond to every recertification mailing within the deadline — missed mail is the most common reason applicants get dropped. Update your phone number and mailing address with every property the moment they change.

What kind of HUD housing exists in Olympia?

The 7 assisted properties in Olympia represent a mix of federal program types. The most common contracts attached to Olympia buildings include:

  • 811 PRA DEMO — about 3 properties in Olympia.
  • Section 8 Project-Based Rental Assistance — about 2 properties in Olympia.
  • Preservation — about 1 property in Olympia.
  • Section 202 / 811 Supportive Housing — about 1 property in Olympia.
  • PRAC (Project Rental Assistance Contract) — about 1 property in Olympia.
  • PRAC/202 — about 1 property in Olympia.

Buildings flagged "Senior 62+" above are typically Section 202 communities, where every unit is reserved for older adults; many include congregate dining, on-site case management, and accessible design. Buildings flagged "Disability-focused" are usually Section 811 properties, designed around adults with mobility, cognitive, or behavioral-health disabilities and often paired with supportive services.

Section 8 in Olympia is run by HUD with day-to-day administration handled by each property's management agent. You do not have to be a current resident of Olympia to apply; many buildings accept applications from anywhere in the country, though local applicants often get a preference. If you're moving to Olympia from another part of Washington, applying remotely before you arrive can knock months off your wait.

What you'll pay

In every program above, the resident's share of rent is generally capped at roughly 30% of adjusted household income. "Adjusted" means after subtracting allowances for dependents, elderly/disabled status, certain medical expenses, and qualifying childcare. For a household earning $24,000/year with no significant deductions, that works out to a tenant share of about $600/month — regardless of the building's market rent. HUD pays the rest of the contract rent directly to the owner.

If a building you want is full, see the waiting lists page for tactics on tracking new openings, and read how to apply for the document checklist you'll need. You can also broaden your search to nearby cities — see the sidebar for the closest options in Washington.