Public Housing Authorities in Hawaii

6 Public Housing Authorities operate in Hawaii, managing approximately 19,254 subsidized units between public housing developments and Section 8 Housing Choice Vouchers.

Total PHAs
6
Subsidized units
~19,254
Cities served
4

All PHAs in Hawaii

Hilo

County of Hawaii

1990 Kinoole St Ste 102, Hilo, HI 96720 · (808) 959-4642
Public Housing: 0 unitsSection 8: 2,263 vouchers
Section 8 (HCV)

Honolulu

City and County of Honolulu

842 Bethel St Fl 1, Honolulu, HI 96813 · (808) 768-7096
Public Housing: 0 unitsSection 8: 5,126 vouchers
Section 8 (HCV)

Hawaii Public Housing Authority

1002 N School St, Honolulu, HI 96817 · (808) 832-4694
Public Housing: 4,667 unitsSection 8: 0 vouchers
Public Housing

Hawaii Public Housing Authority

1002 N School St, Honolulu, HI 96817 · (808) 832-4694
Public Housing: 0 unitsSection 8: 4,457 vouchers
Section 8 (HCV)

Lihue

Kauai County Housing Agency

4444 Rice St Ste 330, Lihue, HI 96766 · (808) 241-4440
Public Housing: 0 unitsSection 8: 1,178 vouchers
Section 8 (HCV)

Wailuku

County of Maui

2065 Main St Ste 108, Wailuku, HI 96793 · (808) 270-7751
Public Housing: 0 unitsSection 8: 1,563 vouchers
Section 8 (HCV)

About Affordable Housing in Hawaii

Like every U.S. state, Hawaii participates in the federal Public Housing and Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher programs through a network of locally administered Public Housing Authorities. Each authority sets its own waiting list policies within HUD’s broader rules: some keep their lists permanently open, others open only for a brief window every year or two, and a handful share regional waiting lists with neighboring authorities to make the application process easier for residents.

Eligibility for both programs is income-based. Applicants generally must earn less than 50% of the area median income (AMI) for the city or county where the authority operates — and at least 75% of new admissions must come from households earning under 30% of AMI, the “extremely low-income” tier. Local preferences may also apply: many authorities give priority to current residents of their service area, working families, veterans, the elderly, or applicants displaced by domestic violence or natural disaster. The detail page for each authority explains what programs are administered and points you to the right phone number to ask about local preferences.

If your nearest authority’s waiting list is closed, don’t give up. Most renters in Hawaii are within commuting distance of two or three different PHAs, and applying to multiple lists at once is allowed and encouraged. Use our open waiting lists tracker to find authorities that are currently accepting new applications.