One of the most common reasons housing applications get delayed or rejected is missing paperwork. Every program has slightly different requirements, but the core documents overlap significantly. This checklist covers what you'll need for most affordable housing programs — Section 8 (Housing Choice Vouchers), HUD-VASH, public housing, LIHTC properties, Section 202, and Section 811. Gather as much as you can before applying so you're ready when your opportunity comes.
Identity and Personal Information
- Government-issued photo ID for all adult household members (driver's license, state ID, passport, or military ID)
- Birth certificates for all household members (especially children)
- Social Security cards for all household members, or documentation of SSN
- Immigration documentation if applicable (green card, work permit, visa, I-94, naturalization certificate)
- Marriage certificate or divorce decree if applicable
Income Documentation
Provide documentation for all sources of income for all adult household members:
- Pay stubs — most recent 4-8 weeks (consecutive), for all employed household members
- Employer verification letter — some programs require a letter from your employer confirming salary, hours, and hire date
- Benefit award letters — Social Security (SSA), SSI, SSDI, TANF, General Assistance, unemployment compensation
- Pension or retirement income statements
- VA compensation letter — if receiving VA disability or pension benefits
- Child support documentation — court order and proof of payments received
- Alimony/spousal support documentation
- Self-employment records — most recent tax return (including Schedule C), profit-and-loss statement, or signed statement of earnings
- Zero income statement — if you have no income, most programs require a signed self-declaration to that effect
Asset Documentation
- Bank statements — most recent 3 months for all checking and savings accounts
- Investment account statements — stocks, bonds, mutual funds, retirement accounts (401k, IRA)
- Real estate documentation — if you own property, the most recent tax assessment and any mortgage statements
- Life insurance policies with cash value
- Vehicle titles (some programs ask about vehicle ownership)
Housing History
- Current lease agreement (if you have one)
- Rental history — names, addresses, and phone numbers of your last 3-5 landlords (covering the last 3-5 years)
- Eviction records — if you have any, bring documentation. Being upfront is better than having the PHA discover it during screening.
- Proof of homelessness — shelter letter, statement from a service provider, or self-declaration (for programs that prioritize homeless applicants)
- Notice of eviction or lease termination — if you're currently being displaced
Veteran-Specific Documents
If applying for HUD-VASH, SSVF, or claiming veteran preference on a Section 8 application:
- DD-214 (Certificate of Release or Discharge from Active Duty) — this is your most important document as a veteran
- VA disability rating letter
- VA healthcare enrollment card
- VA compensation and pension award letter
- Service records — if your DD-214 is unavailable, the National Personnel Records Center (NPRC) can provide verification. Your VA social worker can help you request these.
Disability-Related Documents
If applying for disability-specific programs (Section 811) or claiming disability preference:
- Disability determination letter — from SSA, VA, or other qualifying agency
- SSI or SSDI award letter
- Doctor's letter verifying disability status (if needed for reasonable accommodation requests)
- Documentation of medical expenses — if claiming medical expense deductions to reduce your calculated rent
- Documentation of disability-related expenses — attendant care, specialized equipment, etc.
Deductions and Allowances
These documents can help reduce your calculated income and lower your rent share:
- Childcare expense documentation — receipts, invoices, or provider statements for childcare that enables you to work, attend school, or search for work
- Medical expense documentation — for elderly or disabled households, unreimbursed medical expenses exceeding 3% of annual income can be deducted. Keep receipts for prescriptions, doctor copays, medical equipment, health insurance premiums, and transportation to medical appointments.
- Disability assistance expense documentation — costs for attendant care, auxiliary apparatus, or other expenses that allow a disabled household member to work
- Full-time student verification — enrollment letters for household members attending school full-time (their income may be partially excluded)
Other Documents You Might Need
- Domestic violence documentation — if claiming DV survivor preference, a letter from a shelter, service provider, law enforcement, or a self-certification (VAWA allows self-certification)
- Court orders — custody agreements, restraining orders, guardianship documents
- Power of Attorney — if someone is applying on behalf of another person
- Most recent tax return — some programs require your most recent 1040 filing
Tips for Staying Organized
Make copies of everything. Keep originals in a safe place (a waterproof folder, a trusted friend's house, a safe deposit box) and bring copies to appointments. If you're homeless, ask a service provider if they can store important documents for you.
Keep a folder for each application. If you're applying to multiple programs or PHAs, create a separate folder for each one with copies of everything you've submitted.
Take photos of your documents. Store photos of key documents on your phone or email them to yourself as a backup. If papers get lost, you'll have digital copies to work from.
Don't let missing documents stop you from applying. If you're missing a document, apply anyway and explain what's missing. Most programs will work with you to obtain documentation rather than outright rejecting your application. The VA, PHAs, and service providers all have experience helping people gather paperwork.
Replacing lost documents: If your DD-214, Social Security card, or birth certificate is lost, each has a replacement process. Your case manager, a Veterans Service Organization (for military docs), or a local legal aid office can help. Social Security cards can be replaced online at ssa.gov. Birth certificates are obtained through your state's vital records office.
Quick Reference
Replace a Social Security card: ssa.gov/myaccount
Request military records (DD-214): National Archives / NPRC
Find legal aid near you: LawHelp.org
Need help gathering documents? Contact your local 2-1-1 service or a housing navigation program — they can often assist with document collection.