This page collects the specific programs, agencies, phone numbers, and rules that apply in Seattle and King County — not generic Section 8 advice. Seattle has some of the strongest renter protections in the country: a Just Cause Eviction Ordinance that allows only 16 specific reasons to end a tenancy, a Right to Counsel program providing free attorneys in eviction cases, and Washington's statewide source-of-income protection making voucher refusal illegal. The named resources below are where to start.
- 211 King County — call 1-800-621-4636 Mon–Fri 8 AM–6 PM for housing emergencies (free)
- Seattle Housing Authority (SHA): 206-239-1737 · seattlehousing.org
- Keep King County Housed (rent help): rent-help.kingcounty.gov
- Housing Justice Project (free eviction attorneys): via King County Bar Association · kcba.org
Emergency Help Tonight in Seattle
If you need a safe place to sleep tonight or are facing an imminent eviction, these are the local resources to contact first:
- Downtown Emergency Service Center (DESC) — Seattle's largest single-adult shelter system. Multiple shelters across downtown including Morrison and Lyon. desc.org
- Mary's Place — emergency shelter and rapid rehousing specifically for families with children. Crisis call line: 206-621-8474. marysplaceseattle.org
- Seattle Union Gospel Mission — emergency shelter for men, including addiction recovery and faith-based programs
- Compass Housing Alliance — day shelter, supportive housing, and Compass Center hygiene services downtown
- Solid Ground — multiple shelter programs and rapid rehousing for families. solid-ground.org
- New Beginnings — domestic violence shelter and 24-hour crisis line: 206-522-9472. Bilingual advocates
- Salvation Army Seattle — emergency shelter and meals at multiple locations
- King County Regional Homelessness Authority (KCRHA) — Coordinated Entry for All — central intake for housing assistance across King County. Call 211
- 211 King County — 1-800-621-4636 Mon–Fri 8 AM–6 PM. Connects to shelters, food, financial assistance, and disability supports
For a full walkthrough of finding shelter the first night, see our emergency housing tonight guide.
Section 8 in Seattle: SHA Status and How to Apply
Section 8 Housing Choice Vouchers in Seattle are administered by the Seattle Housing Authority (SHA), separate from the King County Housing Authority (KCHA) which serves the suburbs. Current status (May 2026):
- The SHA Housing Choice Voucher waitlist is closed as of May 2026. The most recent application period ran in January 2024 (a lottery-style window). Before that, the previous opening was way back in February 2017. The next opening date has not been announced. Watch savemyspot.seattlehousing.org
- SHA Public Housing waitlists for specific properties may have different statuses. Wait times vary by property; check seattlehousing.org/wait-times-sha-properties
- King County Housing Authority (KCHA) serves Renton, Bellevue, Kent, Federal Way, and the suburbs. Separate waitlist — apply through kcha.org
- Project-Based Voucher (PBV) lists at specific Seattle properties may be open even when the general HCV list is closed
- Other special programs: Emergency Housing Vouchers (EHV), HUD-VASH for veterans, Mainstream vouchers for non-elderly people with disabilities — separate referral processes
- Apply to neighboring authorities too: Renton, Bellevue, Tacoma, Everett, and the Washington State Housing Finance Commission all run separate programs
- Status check: call SHA at 206-239-1737 to verify your position on the list if you already applied
For the national application process, see our step-by-step Section 8 guide and how to find your PHA.
Emergency Rental Assistance in Seattle (Named Programs)
If you're behind on rent or can't pay this month, these are the local programs currently operating in Seattle. Funding shifts month to month — always call to confirm current availability:
- Keep King County Housed — King County's main rent-assistance and eviction-prevention program for renters with past-due rent or an active eviction notice. Apply at rent-help.kingcounty.gov
- City of Seattle Emergency Rental Assistance (2026) — Mayor Harrell's 2026 budget includes $4 million in emergency rental assistance, including past-due rent, future rent, mediation, relocation, and case management. Administered through partner agencies. my.seattle.gov/rentinginseattle
- YWCA Housing Stability Project of King County — grants for tenants in danger of eviction and homeless families. ywcaworks.org/programs/housing-stability-project-king-county
- Housing Justice Project (HJP) — free legal representation for Seattle renters facing eviction. Operated through the King County Bar Association. This is Seattle's Right to Counsel for eviction. kcba.org
- Solid Ground — Tenant Counseling and Hotline — King County tenant counseling, eviction prevention, and education. Hotline: 206-694-6767
- Catholic Community Services of Western Washington — emergency financial assistance, food, immigration legal services. Spanish-language services available
- St. Vincent de Paul of Seattle/King County — one-time emergency rental and utility help through local parish conferences
- Salvation Army Northwest Division — eviction prevention and utility assistance
- Wellspring Family Services — case management and emergency funding for families
The federal pandemic ERA has ended
The federal pandemic Emergency Rental Assistance Program funds distributed through Washington State and King County have closed. Current paths are Keep King County Housed, the 2026 City of Seattle ERA program, YWCA, and HJP for legal help. Don't waste time on old 2021–2023 application portals.
Utility assistance: LIHEAP
Washington's LIHEAP is administered by community action agencies. In Seattle, Byrd Barr Place (Central District) and Hopelink (East/North King County) administer LIHEAP. Heating help typically runs October–April. Apply through Byrd Barr Place, Hopelink, or call 211.
Tenant Rights in Seattle & Washington
Washington has some of the strongest tenant protections in the country, and Seattle layers additional local rules on top:
- Source-of-income protection is the law statewide: RCW 59.18.255 makes it illegal in Washington for a landlord to refuse a Section 8 voucher or other government rental subsidy. If a Seattle landlord tells you they "don't take Section 8," that's a state violation. File at the Washington State Human Rights Commission or with the Seattle Office for Civil Rights
- Seattle Just Cause Eviction Ordinance: a landlord must have one of 16 specific causes to end your tenancy or decline to renew your lease. Examples include nonpayment after notice, lease violations, owner move-in, and substantial renovation. Generic "end of lease" is NOT a just cause in Seattle. seattle.gov/rentinginseattle
- Statewide just cause eviction (RCW 59.18.650, effective May 2021): Washington extended just cause protections to most renters statewide, layered on top of Seattle's existing local rules
- 14-day pay-or-vacate for nonpayment (RCW 59.18.057). Doubled from 3 days by HB 1236 in 2021
- Notice to end month-to-month: 20 days from tenant, 60 days from landlord for rent increases over 10% (Seattle requires 180 days for any increase over 10%)
- Security deposit return: within 30 days of move-out with itemized deductions (RCW 59.18.280). Washington does not cap deposit amounts, but Seattle's Move-In Fees Ordinance limits non-refundable fees and allows tenants to pay deposits in installments
- Warranty of habitability: RCW 59.18.060 requires landlords to maintain dwellings in habitable condition, comply with codes, and make repairs after written notice. Tenants have repair-and-deduct rights up to certain limits
- Retaliatory eviction is illegal under RCW 59.18.240 within 90 days of tenant complaints or organizing activity
- Self-help eviction is illegal: RCW 59.18.290 prohibits lockouts, utility shutoffs, and removal of belongings, with double the actual damages plus attorneys' fees
- Eviction Resolution Pilot Program (ERPP): Washington requires mediation before most eviction filings — the landlord must send a 14-day notice and offer mediation through a dispute resolution center
- Seattle Right to Counsel: the Housing Justice Project (HJP) provides free legal representation in eviction cases for income-eligible Seattle tenants — one of the strongest tenant defense programs in the country
- Fair housing: Washington Law Against Discrimination protects more classes than federal law — including source of income, marital status, sexual orientation, gender identity, ancestry, and military status. Seattle adds additional local protections
For free legal help: Housing Justice Project (Right to Counsel for evictions), Northwest Justice Project CLEAR Hotline at 1-888-201-1014, and Tenants Union of Washington. For state-level details, see our Washington housing resources. If you experience discrimination, see how to file a housing discrimination complaint.
Other Housing Programs in Seattle
- Public housing: SHA owns properties across Seattle including Yesler Terrace (currently being redeveloped), High Point, and NewHolly. Application is separate from Section 8
- LIHTC (Tax Credit): Seattle has one of the larger LIHTC inventories in the Pacific Northwest. Search HUD's LIHTC database for properties in King County. See how to find LIHTC housing
- Seattle Mandatory Housing Affordability (MHA) — new market-rate developments must include affordable units or pay into a fund. New affordable inventory comes online steadily
- HUD-VASH (veterans): combines a voucher with VA case management. Seattle-area veterans are referred through the VA Puget Sound Health Care System. See how to apply for HUD-VASH
- Rapid Rehousing & Permanent Supportive Housing — coordinated through the King County Regional Homelessness Authority. Access via 211 or Coordinated Entry for All
- Washington State Housing Finance Commission programs — Home Advantage homebuyer assistance, down-payment programs, and rental development. wshfc.org
- HUD-approved housing counseling: find a counselor through the HUD counselor locator — Solid Ground and Neighborhood House cover Seattle
Next Steps
Not sure which program is right for you? Our Where to Start tool asks a few quick questions about your situation — emergency vs. long-term, family vs. individual, employed vs. on benefits — and routes you to the right combination of programs. It takes about two minutes.
If you received an eviction notice in Seattle, contact the Housing Justice Project immediately — you may qualify for free legal representation. Apply to Keep King County Housed for rent help in parallel. If a landlord told you they "don't take Section 8," file a complaint with the Seattle Office for Civil Rights or the Washington State Human Rights Commission — that refusal is illegal.