Tarrant County Housing Assistance Office
About Tarrant County Housing Assistance Office
Tarrant County Housing Assistance Office is the local Public Housing Authority (PHA) serving Fort Worth, Texas and the surrounding Tarrant County area. As one of 379 PHAs in the state, the agency is responsible for administering federal housing-assistance dollars on behalf of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) for low-income families, the elderly, and persons with disabilities. It is identified in HUD's records by participant code TX431.
Like every other PHA in the country, Tarrant County Housing Assistance Office operates under federal regulations published in 24 CFR Parts 5, 960, 982 and 983. Within those rules, individual agencies set their own administrative plan, local preferences (for example, preferences for veterans, working families, or victims of domestic violence), and waitlist procedures. That is why the experience of applying to Tarrant County Housing Assistance Office may look very different from applying to a PHA in the next county over.
Section 8 vs. Public Housing at Tarrant County Housing Assistance Office
If you have ever heard people talk about “Section 8” and “public housing” as the same thing, they are not. They are two distinct federal programs — with separate funding streams, separate eligibility paperwork, and almost always two separate waitlists. Some PHAs run only one. Tarrant County Housing Assistance Office currently administers Section 8:
Housing Choice Voucher waitlist
The HCV program lets selected families rent a private-market home from any landlord willing to accept the voucher. The PHA pays the difference between the family's contribution (about 30% of adjusted income) and a HUD-set rent ceiling. The voucher belongs to the household and can typically be used anywhere in the U.S. after the first year (“portability”).
Not administered here
HUD records do not show traditional public-housing units operated directly by Tarrant County Housing Assistance Office. The agency may still serve households through Housing Choice Vouchers or other tenant-based programs.
Inventory snapshot
According to HUD's Public and Indian Housing Information Center, Tarrant County Housing Assistance Office currently reports approximately the following:
- 3,314 Housing Choice Vouchers
- Approximately 91.6% reported occupancy across the combined inventory
- Classified by HUD as a large (1,000-4,999) agency
- Median household income of assisted families: roughly $14,509 per year
How to apply
To apply for assistance through Tarrant County Housing Assistance Office, you must contact the agency directly — HUD does not run a national application. Use the phone number above, or visit the agency's official website to confirm which waitlists are currently open. Some PHAs maintain rolling open lists; others only open theirs for short windows every few years and you must apply during the announced window or wait for the next opening.
Applying for housing assistance is always free. Be cautious of any third-party service that asks you to pay a fee to apply for Section 8, public housing, or any other HUD program. There are no “skip the line” services, fast-tracks, or paid placements — that is true at every PHA in the country, including Tarrant County Housing Assistance Office.
Documents to gather before you call
- Names, dates of birth, and Social Security numbers for every household member
- Proof of total annual gross household income (pay stubs, Social Security or SSI award letters, child support, unemployment, etc.)
- Documentation of any disability accommodations you may need
- Current address, plus at least one prior landlord reference if available
- For non-citizen household members: documentation of eligible immigration status, where required
Frequently asked questions
How do I apply for housing assistance through Tarrant County Housing Assistance Office?
You apply directly with the agency. Call the main number listed above to ask which waitlists are currently open. If a list is open, the agency will direct you to either an online pre-application portal, an in-person intake office, or a paper application you can mail in. There is no fee at any step.
Application status is tied to the calendar date of submission, so file as soon as a list opens. Most pre-applications take 15–30 minutes to complete.
Is the Tarrant County Housing Assistance Office waitlist open right now?
Waitlist status changes frequently and we do not maintain it in real time. Call (817) 531-7654 or check the PHA's official website for the current status.
Remember: the Section 8 / HCV waitlist and the Public Housing waitlist are managed separately. One may be open while the other is closed. Some PHAs also keep a special list for elderly or disabled applicants.
What are the income limits for assistance in Fort Worth, TX?
HUD publishes income limits annually based on the area median income (AMI) for each metropolitan area or non-metro county. For most rental assistance programs, your household must earn at or below 50% of AMI (Very Low Income) to be eligible, and PHAs must give priority to households earning at or below 30% of AMI (Extremely Low Income).
Exact dollar limits depend on your household size and where you live; check HUD's official income-limit lookup for the current year, and read our eligibility & income limits guide for context.
Can I use a voucher from another city in Fort Worth?
Yes — this is called voucher portability. After your initial year as a Housing Choice Voucher holder, you can typically port your voucher to anywhere a PHA administers the program, including Tarrant County Housing Assistance Office. Notify your current ("issuing") PHA in writing of your intent to move; they will coordinate paperwork with the receiving PHA.
Some PHAs “absorb” ported vouchers into their own funding; others “administer” them on behalf of the issuing PHA. Either way, your voucher remains valid.
How long is the wait for a voucher or public housing unit?
Wait times vary widely. In larger metropolitan areas, voucher waits commonly run 2–8 years; in smaller PHAs the list may move in months. Public Housing waits depend on turnover — a unit only becomes available when an existing tenant moves out.
Read our guide to how PHA waitlists work for the real mechanics of selection, preferences, and what to do if a list closes before you reach the top.
Do I have to live in Fort Worth to apply at Tarrant County Housing Assistance Office?
Generally no — you can apply to any PHA in the country, even if you do not live in its service area. However, many PHAs apply residency preferences that move local applicants up the list ahead of out-of-area applicants. If you plan to live elsewhere using portability, you must first lease up in the issuing PHA's jurisdiction before moving.
Other agencies in Tarrant County
Renters who do not get a quick response from Tarrant County Housing Assistance Office often apply to multiple PHAs in nearby cities. View every Public Housing Authority in Tarrant County, or browse the full Texas directory.