Tucson is closing its Section 8 housing voucher waitlists starting January 1, 2026, citing years-long backlogs and limited voucher availability.
Key facts
- The city will stop accepting new applications for:
- Public Housing
- Housing Choice Vouchers (Section 8)
- More than 40,000 households are already on the waitlists.
- Tucson and Pima County have only about 6,000 active vouchers.
- Annual turnover is roughly 11%, meaning only about 660 vouchers open up per year.
- Officials expect it will take several more years to work through the existing backlog—even with no new applicants added.
- The city says keeping the list open creates false expectations given current supply constraints.
Why this matters
- Demand for subsidized housing far exceeds supply.
- Federal and state resources are not keeping pace with population growth.
- Cities are increasingly managing scarcity by closing programs rather than expanding them.
Local policy context
- Tucson is promoting:
- ADUs (“casitas”)
- Duplexes, triplexes, townhomes, and cottage courts
- Specialty vouchers will still be issued for select groups, including veterans and family-unification cases.
Bottom line
The Section 8 freeze highlights the growing gap between housing demand and actual unit delivery. Without meaningful increases in housing supply, affordability pressures—and waitlists—will persist.