Living with roommates or using shared housing programs can make affordable housing more accessible. Whether you're adding a co-tenant to your Section 8 voucher, arranging for a live-in aide, participating in a seniors housing program, or simply splitting an apartment with housemates, this guide explains how shared housing works within the Section 8 system and how it affects your rent and household composition.
Adding Co-Tenants to Your Section 8 Voucher
Your Section 8 voucher is issued to your household — the people listed on your lease. The PHA calculates your rent based on your household's income. If you want to add another person (a co-tenant) to your household, you must request approval from the PHA and add them to your lease.
Who Can Be a Co-Tenant?
A co-tenant is anyone who will live in the unit and share expenses. They become part of your household for Section 8 purposes. Co-tenants can be:
- Family members (adult children, siblings, parents, extended family)
- Friends or roommates
- Romantic partners
The key requirement is that they must be listed on your lease and must be included in your Section 8 household composition. The PHA needs to verify their income and add them to your household eligibility and rent calculation.
How Adding a Co-Tenant Affects Your Rent
When you add a co-tenant, the PHA includes their income in your household's total income. This typically raises your rent because the PHA's income calculation is now based on a larger household income. However, the impact depends on several factors:
Scenario 1: Low-Income Co-Tenant
If your co-tenant has little or no income, adding them may not significantly increase your rent. For example, if your co-tenant is unemployed but needs housing, their zero income contributes nothing to the income calculation, and your rent might barely increase (or stay the same, depending on how the PHA calculates household adjustments).
Scenario 2: Working Co-Tenant
If your co-tenant earns significant income, your household income increases, and so does your rent. The PHA recalculates as (Your Income + Co-Tenant Income - Deductions) × 0.30. If your co-tenant earns $2,000/month, this adds significantly to your household income and increases your TTP.
When Adding a Co-Tenant Might Make Sense
Adding a co-tenant might be worthwhile if:
- Shared rent reduces total cost. If you move from a 1-bedroom to a 2-bedroom with a co-tenant, the co-tenant pays part of the rent. Even if your Section 8 rent increases, the total household housing cost might be lower. For example, your rent goes from $400 (1-bedroom) to $500 (2-bedroom shared with co-tenant). If you split it 50-50, you pay $250 — less than before.
- Safety or health. You need someone to help with childcare, elderly care, or because you have a disability.
- Income stability for the co-tenant. If the co-tenant is unemployed or low-income, adding them to your voucher gives them housing security.
How to Add a Co-Tenant
Contact your PHA and request to add a household member. You'll need to:
- Provide the co-tenant's personal information (name, date of birth, Social Security number)
- Verify their income with pay stubs, benefit letters, or bank statements
- Verify their background (background check may be required)
- Update your lease with the landlord to include the co-tenant's name
- Have the PHA approve the addition
The PHA will recalculate your rent based on the new household composition and income. This typically happens at your next recertification, though some PHAs handle it sooner.
Live-In Aides and Caregivers
If you or someone in your household has a disability or is elderly, you may be able to add a live-in aide (also called a caregiver) to your household without counting their income toward your rent calculation.
What Is a Live-In Aide?
A live-in aide is a person who lives in your unit specifically to provide care or assistance to an elderly person, a person with a disability, or a person with a serious illness. They might help with personal hygiene, medical care, meal preparation, medication management, mobility assistance, or other necessary care.
The Key Benefit: Income Doesn't Count
This is the major advantage of the live-in aide arrangement. Unlike a regular co-tenant, the live-in aide's income is not counted in your household income calculation. Your rent stays based on your original household income, regardless of what the aide earns. This makes live-in aides extremely valuable for people who need care but can't afford to increase their rent.
Eligibility Requirements
To qualify for a live-in aide arrangement:
- You or someone in your household must be elderly (62+), have a disability, or have a serious illness
- The aide must be necessary for you to remain housed and independent
- The aide must not be part of the original household (you can't count a family member already living with you as a "new" aide to avoid counting their income)
- The aide's primary purpose must be providing care, not just living there
How to Add a Live-In Aide
Request a reasonable accommodation from your PHA. Provide:
- A letter from a doctor or healthcare provider explaining the disability or medical need and why live-in care is necessary
- Information about the proposed aide (name, relationship to you, background)
- Explanation of the specific care the aide will provide
The PHA must approve the aide before they move in. Once approved, you update your lease to add the aide, but their income is not included in your household income. This is considered a reasonable accommodation under the Fair Housing Act.
Bedroom Size and Occupancy Standards
Section 8 has occupancy standards that determine the minimum number of bedrooms your unit should have based on household size. These standards vary by PHA but generally follow HUD guidelines:
- 1 person: Studio or 1-bedroom
- 2 people: 1-bedroom
- 3-4 people: 2-bedroom
- 5-6 people: 3-bedroom
- 7-8 people: 4-bedroom
- And so on (typically one additional bedroom per 2 additional people)
Some PHAs allow flexibility. Live-in aides may or may not require their own bedroom — it depends on your PHA's interpretation. Elderly parents who share a bedroom with an adult child typically don't require a separate bedroom. Always confirm with your PHA.
Seniors Housing and Co-Housing Programs
Many communities have specialized housing programs for seniors that include shared arrangements. These programs are designed to reduce costs, provide community, and prevent isolation.
Congregate Housing
In congregate housing, seniors rent individual units but share common spaces (dining room, kitchen, living room) and receive services like meals, transportation, and activities. Section 8 vouchers can be used in congregate housing. Your rent calculation is the same as any other Section 8 unit, but you get the benefit of community and services.
Co-Housing Communities
Co-housing communities bring together multiple households who value shared community while maintaining private units. Residents might share a common house with a shared kitchen and dining area, or participate in group meals and activities. Some co-housing communities accept Section 8 vouchers. Contact HUD or local nonprofits serving seniors to find co-housing options.
Master Leasing Programs
Some nonprofits or community organizations master lease buildings (they lease the whole building from the landlord) and then rent individual units to Section 8 voucher holders or other low-income residents. Living in a master-leased building means the property is specifically designed for low-income residents, sometimes with supportive services.
Splitting Costs with Roommates in LIHTC Housing
While Section 8 is the most common shared housing scenario, many people with vouchers live in Low-Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC) properties where they might have roommates in a shared unit. This is also common in regular market-rate housing where roommates split an apartment.
How Cost-Splitting Works
If you and a roommate both have Section 8 vouchers, the rent is split based on your individual rent calculations. For example:
- Unit rent: $1,200
- Your TTP (calculated based on your income): $500
- Roommate's TTP (calculated based on their income): $300
- Total tenant payments: $800
- PHA pays the difference: $400 to the landlord
The lease should specify how the unit is divided (two separate leases or one lease with both names) and how costs are allocated. Some roommate arrangements are formalized; others are informal. Clarity prevents disputes.
When a Roommate Moves Out
If a roommate leaves, several things can happen:
- You stay; they leave. You may be able to stay in the unit alone, but you need PHA approval. Your PHA might require you to find a smaller unit (if the apartment is too large for your household size), or they might allow you to stay if you can afford the higher rent. Contact the PHA to discuss.
- The lease requires both names. If the lease lists both you and your roommate, and they leave, you typically need to sign a new lease with just your name, or find a new roommate.
- Find a new roommate. If you need shared costs to afford the unit, find someone to replace them. Make sure any new roommate also has a housing voucher or can pay their portion of the cost, and notify the landlord and PHA of the change.
Reporting Requirements
When your household composition changes, you must report it to the PHA. Changes include:
- Adding or removing a household member
- Someone moving out temporarily (prolonged absence) or permanently
- A member of your household getting married or divorced
- A household member's income significantly changing
- Someone becoming disabled or elderly
How to Report
Contact your PHA as soon as the change occurs. Don't wait for your annual recertification. Reporting promptly ensures:
- Your rent is calculated correctly based on current household composition
- If someone moved out and your income decreased, you get a lower rent retroactively
- If someone moved in and their income increased your rent, the increase takes effect prospectively
Consequences of Not Reporting
If you don't report household changes:
- You might pay more rent than you should, and the PHA won't owe you a refund
- Your lease might be inconsistent with your PHA household composition, creating compliance issues
- If someone unstable lives with you temporarily, they might be considered part of your household for eligibility purposes, affecting benefits
- The PHA could terminate your assistance if you knowingly hide household members or income
Practical Considerations for Shared Housing
Written Agreements with Roommates
Even if you're splitting an apartment with a friend, have a written agreement that specifies:
- How you'll split rent and utilities
- What happens if someone can't pay their share
- Notice required if someone wants to move out
- How shared expenses (groceries, household supplies) are handled
- Expectations for cleanliness, quiet hours, guests, and shared spaces
This prevents misunderstandings and reduces conflict.
Landlord Requirements
Make sure everyone living in the unit is on the lease. Undisclosed residents can be grounds for eviction. The landlord needs to know who lives there for insurance, liability, and occupancy standards purposes.
Income Verification for Co-Tenants
When you add a co-tenant, the PHA will request their income documentation. If they're reluctant to share, explain that:
- Income verification is standard and required by the PHA
- Their information is confidential
- It's necessary for your housing assistance to continue
- Without it, you might lose your voucher
When Shared Housing Doesn't Work Out
If a shared housing arrangement falls apart:
- Roommate conflict: You may need to ask someone to move out. Give proper notice (as specified in your roommate agreement). If they refuse, you may need to involve the landlord or, in extreme cases, pursue eviction.
- Can't afford it alone: If a roommate leaves and you can't afford the full rent, you have several options: find a new roommate quickly, request a lease break from the landlord (though this is not guaranteed), apply to move to a smaller unit, or request emergency rental assistance if you're at risk of eviction.
- Lease termination: If the shared housing situation is unsustainable, talk to your landlord about early lease termination. Many landlords will work with you rather than deal with conflict or non-payment.
Key Takeaways for Shared Housing
Shared housing can reduce your costs and provide community, but requires clear communication and PHA approval. Always notify your PHA of household changes, keep your lease updated to reflect who's living there, and use written agreements with roommates to prevent conflicts.