This page collects the specific programs, agencies, phone numbers, and rules that apply in Tucson and Pima County — not generic Section 8 advice. The City of Tucson Housing and Community Development closed both the Section 8 and Public Housing waitlists on January 1, 2026, so the realistic short-term path is one-time rental assistance routed through named providers like Primavera, the TPCH Rental Assistance Fund, and Pima County's Community Action Agency. The named resources below are where to start.
- 211 Arizona — dial 211 (free, 24/7) for any housing emergency in Pima County
- City of Tucson HCD: (520) 791-4171 · tucsonaz.gov/Departments/Housing-and-Community-Development
- Southern Arizona Legal Aid (SALA): (520) 623-3434 or 1-800-238-3424 · sazlegalaid.org
- Primavera Foundation — emergency services: (520) 623-9515
Emergency Help Tonight in Tucson
If you need a safe place to sleep tonight or are facing an imminent eviction, these are the local resources to contact first:
- Primavera Foundation — Men's Shelter — emergency shelter for adult men. Stays start at seven nights with extension possible up to 90 days. (520) 623-9515 · primavera.org/emergency-services
- Primavera — Casa Paloma — emergency shelter and transitional housing for unaccompanied women
- Primavera — Family Pathways — emergency shelter for families of any configuration with minor children
- Gospel Rescue Mission — two campuses (Center of Opportunity for men, Center of Hope for women and children). (520) 740-4666 · grmtucson.com
- Salvation Army Hospitality House — emergency overnight shelter for single adults and families. (520) 795-7830
- Sister Jose Women's Center — day services, overnight shelter, and case management for women experiencing homelessness
- Old Pueblo Community Services — permanent supportive housing, rapid rehousing, and short-term rental assistance focused on people exiting incarceration or living with mental illness. (520) 881-0450
- Our Family Services — Reunite Youth Program — shelter for youth ages 12-17
- Tucson Pima Collaboration to End Homelessness (TPCH) — Coordinated Entry — central intake. Call 211 · tpch.net
- City of Tucson Housing First — outreach-led permanent supportive housing for residents experiencing chronic homelessness
- 211 Arizona — free 24/7 information line for shelters, food, financial assistance, and social services
For a full walkthrough of finding shelter the first night, see our emergency housing tonight guide.
Section 8 in Tucson: HCD Status and How to Apply
Section 8 Housing Choice Vouchers in Tucson are administered by the City of Tucson Department of Housing and Community Development (HCD), which also acts as the regional voucher administrator for unincorporated Pima County under an intergovernmental agreement. Current status (May 2026):
- The HCV (Section 8) waitlist is closed as of January 1, 2026, with no reopening date announced. HCD announced the closure in late December 2025 because the existing waitlist already contained more than enough applicants to absorb expected voucher turnover for several years
- The Public Housing waitlist is also closed as of January 1, 2026, with no reopening date
- Specialty referrals still accepted: HUD-VASH (veterans), Family Unification Program (FUP — families with open child welfare cases and youth aging out of foster care), Emergency Housing Vouchers (where capacity allows), and project-based vouchers tied to specific permanent supportive housing buildings
- South Tucson Housing Authority — separate jurisdiction inside the one-square-mile City of South Tucson. Runs its own small public housing portfolio. Call (520) 629-1136 to check current waitlist status
- Apply to neighboring authorities too: Arizona Department of Housing (statewide voucher program) and the Pima County Community Action Agency run separate referral processes
- Status check: call HCD at (520) 791-4171 if you've already applied and need to verify your position on the list
For the national application process, see our step-by-step Section 8 guide and how to find your PHA.
Emergency Rental Assistance in Tucson (Named Programs)
Because vouchers are not available to new applicants, the realistic short-term path is one-time or short-term rental assistance through community providers. Funding shifts month to month — always call to confirm current availability:
- Tucson Pima Collaboration to End Homelessness (TPCH) Rental Assistance Fund — first-come, first-served fund administered by TPCH. Designed for currently-housed households who hit a temporary financial crisis (medical bill, lost shift, car repair) and need a one-time payment to prevent eviction. Call 2-1-1 to be screened and referred · tpch.net
- Pima County Community Action Agency (CAA) — administers rental and utility assistance for residents of unincorporated Pima County and smaller jurisdictions. (520) 724-4667 · pima.gov/684/Community-Action-Agency
- Primavera Foundation — Emergency Eviction Prevention — direct rental and utility assistance with case management. (520) 623-9515
- United Way of Tucson and Southern Arizona Emergency Relief Fund — flexible emergency grants for residents of Pima, Cochise, Graham, Greenlee, Pinal, and Santa Cruz counties · unitedwaytucson.org/emergency-relief-fund
- Catholic Community Services of Southern Arizona — rental, utility, and case-management help across southern Arizona. (520) 770-5000
- St. Vincent de Paul Tucson Diocese — one-time emergency rental and utility help through local parish conferences
- Salvation Army Tucson — eviction prevention and utility assistance. (520) 795-7830
- Arizona Rental Assistance Program (ARAP) through the Arizona Department of Economic Security. des.az.gov/ARAP
The pandemic ERAP funds have ended
The federal Emergency Rental Assistance Program (ERA1/ERA2) money that flowed through the City of Tucson and Pima County during 2021-2023 has been fully spent. Current paths are the TPCH Rental Assistance Fund, Pima County CAA, and the nonprofit options above. Don't waste time on closed pandemic-era portals.
Utility assistance: LIHEAP
The Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) in Arizona helps with heating and cooling bills — essential in the desert. Lowering your electric bill frees up cash for rent. Apply through Pima County CAA or Arizona DES, or call 211 to find your local agency.
Tenant Rights in Arizona (Applies in Tucson)
Tucson tenants are covered by the Arizona Residential Landlord and Tenant Act (ARLTA), A.R.S. Title 33, Chapter 10. The same statewide rules apply to renters in Mesa, Phoenix, and every other Arizona city. The points that matter most for Tucson renters facing trouble:
- Five-day nonpayment notice (A.R.S. § 33-1368). Paying the full amount owed plus reasonable late fees within those five days defeats the eviction
- Ten-day notice for lease violations (A.R.S. § 33-1368). The tenant has a chance to cure the violation
- Security deposit cap of 1.5 months' rent (A.R.S. § 33-1321(A)). The deposit must be returned within 14 business days after move-out with an itemized statement of any deductions
- No source-of-income protection: Arizona does not protect Section 8 voucher holders from refusal under state law, and Tucson does not have a local source-of-income ordinance. A landlord can lawfully decline to accept a voucher. Finding a landlord who already participates is part of the work
- No rent control: A.R.S. § 33-1329 preempts cities from enacting rent control on private residential property
- Essential services failure (A.R.S. § 33-1364) — if the landlord fails to maintain running water, heat, hot water, electricity, or gas after written notice, the tenant may obtain reasonable substitute services and deduct the cost from rent
- Self-help eviction is illegal (A.R.S. § 33-1367) — landlords cannot lock you out, shut off utilities, or remove belongings without a court order. Damages can include actual damages plus two months' rent
- Justice Court venue: eviction cases are heard in the Pima County Justice Courts. Trial is typically scheduled 3-6 days after the complaint is served
- Fair housing: discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, national origin, familial status, or disability is illegal under federal and Arizona law
For free legal help: Southern Arizona Legal Aid (SALA) at (520) 623-3434 or 1-800-238-3424 — Spanish-language services available. Step Up to Justice runs a pro bono Housing Help Clinic in downtown Tucson. For state-level details, see our Arizona housing resources. If you experience discrimination, see how to file a housing discrimination complaint.
Other Housing Programs in Tucson
- Public housing: HCD owns and manages public-housing communities across Tucson. Waitlist is closed; specialty referrals still accepted
- LIHTC (Tax Credit): Tucson has substantial LIHTC inventory. Search HUD's LIHTC database for properties in Pima County. See how to find LIHTC housing
- HUD-VASH (veterans): Tucson veterans are referred through the Southern Arizona VA Health Care System. See how to apply for HUD-VASH
- Rapid Rehousing & Permanent Supportive Housing — coordinated through TPCH. Access via 211
- Arizona Refugee Resettlement Program (RRP) — Catholic Community Services of Southern Arizona is a primary partner
- Habitat for Humanity Tucson — homeownership and home-repair programs. habitattucson.org
- HUD-approved housing counseling: find a counselor through the HUD counselor locator
Next Steps
Not sure which program is right for you? Our Where to Start tool asks a few quick questions about your situation and routes you to the right combination of programs. It takes about two minutes.
The Tucson HCD voucher and public-housing waitlists are closed — call (520) 791-4171 to verify your existing position or ask about specialty referrals (HUD-VASH, FUP, EHV). For rent help, call 211 to be routed to the TPCH Rental Assistance Fund or Primavera. If you got a 5-day notice, contact Southern Arizona Legal Aid at (520) 623-3434 the same day.