NYC Dept of Housing Preservation and Dev

100 Gold St, New York City, NY, 10038 · ~41,872 units under management

Fair Market Rent by unit size — New York City, NY (2026)

Figures shown are Fair Market Rent for the county this agency primarily serves — the agency's actual payment standard (typically 90–110% of FMR) may differ. Confirm directly with the agency. Full county data: New York County

Who this agency serves

NYC Dept of Housing Preservation and Dev served 36,782 households across 42,793 units (86% occupied) as of HUD's 2025 Picture of Subsidized Households data. The typical assisted household here has an average of 1.9 people, an average annual income of $21,377, and pays an average of $543 per month toward rent.

Households served
36,782 of 42,793 units
Avg. household income
$21,377
Avg. rent paid by household
$543
Avg. household size
1.9 people
Households with children
22%
Head of household 62+
50%
Head of household with a disability
43%
Avg. wait to move in
14 months

Unit mix: 52% 1-bedroom, 28% 2-bedroom, 20% 3-bedroom.

Source: HUD's Picture of Subsidized Households, 2025— figures reflect this agency's most recent reporting period across all HUD programs it administers, not just Housing Choice Vouchers.

For Renters

Am I eligible?

To qualify for a Housing Choice Voucher through NYC Dept of Housing Preservation and Dev, your household's gross annual income generally must be at or below the limits below (50% of area median income, as set by HUD). Most agencies are required to prioritize applicants at or below 30% AMI (the Extremely Low Income limit) for at least 75% of new vouchers.

Household sizeMax gross annual income
1 person$59,400
2 people$67,850
3 people$76,350
4 people$84,800
5 people$91,600
6 people$98,400
7 people$105,200
8 people$111,950

Source: HUD Income Limits, 2026. Meeting the income limit does not guarantee a voucher — waiting lists, local preferences, and funding levels vary. Contact NYC Dept of Housing Preservation and Dev directly for current availability. Learn more about eligibility →

For Renters

Income-restricted housing in New York City, NY

These properties were built or rehabilitated using the federal Low-Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC) program and must rent a portion of units below market rate. Many, but not all, accept Section 8 Housing Choice Vouchers — contact the property directly to confirm current availability and voucher acceptance.

Source: HUD LIHTC Public-Use Database. Properties shown were placed in service within the last 35 years and may still be under compliance obligations. Verify availability, income limits, and voucher acceptance directly with each property. More on finding affordable housing →

Applying with this agency

Application processes and waiting-list status vary by agency — contact NYC Dept of Housing Preservation and Dev directly using the info above, or read our general guide to how to apply and how waiting lists work.

Evaluating this market

Landlords and investors: see becoming a Section 8 landlord and how to read this market's numbers.