Public Housing Authorities in Denver, Colorado

3 Public Housing Authorities serve the Denver area.

Housing Authority of the City and County of Denver

1035 Osage St · Denver, CO 80204 · (720) 932-3000
Public Housing: 3,685Section 8: 8,090
Public HousingSection 8 (HCV)

Colorado Housing Finance Authority

1981 Blake St · Denver, CO 80202 · (303) 297-7312
Public Housing: 0Section 8: 87
Section 8 (HCV)

Colorado Division of Housing

1313 N Sherman St Ste 320 · Denver, CO 80203 · (303) 864-7845
Public Housing: 0Section 8: 7,961
Section 8 (HCV)

Applying for Affordable Housing in Denver

Affordable housing in Denver is administered locally by the housing authorities listed above. Each authority sets its own application schedule, but the basic process is consistent: gather identification and income documentation for every member of your household, complete the authority’s pre-application (usually online or by mail), and wait to be placed on the list. When your name reaches the top of an open waiting list, the authority will contact you to verify income, run a background check, and issue either a public housing offer or a Section 8 voucher you can use to rent from a private landlord.

Wait times vary enormously. In some smaller cities a household may receive housing assistance within a few months. In high-cost metros, waits of two to eight years are not unusual. Apply to multiple authorities to maximize your chances, keep your contact information current with each one, and respond to every letter promptly — missing a single notice can result in your application being purged from the list.

What to Bring to Your Denver PHA Appointment

When a Denver housing authority invites you to an eligibility appointment, the staff will need to verify every figure you reported on your pre-application. Bring originals (not photocopies) of: a government-issued photo ID for every adult; Social Security cards or letters for every household member; the most recent two months of pay stubs for everyone earning wages; the latest annual federal tax return; current statements from any other income source — Social Security, SSDI, child support, pension, unemployment, veterans’ benefits; bank statements covering the last 60 days for every account in any household member’s name; and birth certificates for any minor children. If you claim a local preference (veteran, working family, displaced by domestic violence, current resident), bring documentation of that as well. Missing any of these documents typically results in the appointment being rescheduled, which can push you weeks deeper into the queue.

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