Emergency Rental Assistance Programs by State
Emergency rental assistance (ERA) programs distribute government funds to renters facing eviction, utility shutoffs, or housing instability caused by financial hardship. This page covers how ERA programs are structured at the federal and state levels, the eligibility frameworks administrators use, the most common application scenarios, and the decision boundaries that determine whether a household qualifies. Understanding these programs matters because billions of dollars in rental relief remain disbursed through state and local agencies, and eligibility rules vary significantly across jurisdictions.
Definition and scope
Emergency rental assistance programs are government-administered funds that pay overdue rent, prospective rent, and utility arrears directly to landlords or utility providers on behalf of qualifying renters. The two largest federal funding vehicles were the Emergency Rental Assistance Program 1 (ERA1) and ERA2, authorized under the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2021 and the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021, respectively (U.S. Department of the Treasury). Treasury allocated $25 billion under ERA1 and an additional $21.55 billion under ERA2, for a combined federal investment of $46.55 billion across the two programs.
Funds flow from the federal government to roughly 450 grantees — states, territories, tribal governments, and local jurisdictions with populations above 200,000 — which then operate their own intake and disbursement systems. This creates a layered structure: federal rules set minimum eligibility floors, while state and local administrators add jurisdiction-specific requirements, income documentation standards, and priority scoring. Renters must consult their specific local grantee's portal, as program names, application windows, and fund availability differ.
Distinct from ongoing programs like Section 8 Housing Choice Vouchers or the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit, ERA programs are crisis-response instruments designed for acute, short-term housing instability rather than long-term affordability subsidies.
How it works
ERA programs follow a structured intake-to-disbursement process, typically organized in the following phases:
- Eligibility screening — The household establishes that at least one member qualifies as a renter with a signed lease or evidence of a rental obligation, meets household income thresholds (generally at or below 80% of the Area Median Income, or AMI, as defined by HUD), and documents a qualifying financial hardship.
- Documentation submission — Applicants submit proof of income (pay stubs, tax returns, benefit letters), evidence of housing instability (past-due rent notices, eviction filings), and identification for household members.
- Landlord participation — In most programs, landlords must agree to participate, accept the payment as full satisfaction of the arrears covered, and refrain from evicting the tenant for a defined period after receiving funds. If a landlord refuses participation, some programs allow direct payment to the renter.
- Review and approval — Program staff or automated systems verify documentation against eligibility criteria, assign priority status (households at imminent risk of eviction typically receive priority), and approve an award amount.
- Disbursement — Funds are paid via check or electronic transfer to the landlord or utility provider. ERA programs generally cover up to 12 months of arrears, with an additional 3 months of prospective rent permitted if necessary to ensure housing stability (Treasury ERA FAQ).
- Reporting — Grantees report disbursement data to Treasury quarterly, and unused funds are subject to reallocation to higher-performing grantees.
For renters navigating a formal eviction process, the eviction process explained resource provides context on how ERA applications interact with court timelines.
Common scenarios
Scenario 1: Pandemic-era income loss with accumulated arrears. A household that experienced job loss and accumulated 6 months of unpaid rent applies for ERA. The program covers the full arrears balance up to the 12-month ceiling, pays the landlord directly, and may cover two additional months of prospective rent. This is the core use case ERA programs were designed to address. For context on how COVID-era protections interacted with these funds, see COVID-era renter relief legacy.
Scenario 2: Medical hardship with ongoing income. A household with current but reduced income due to a medical expense cannot maintain rent payments. ERA programs accepting self-certification of hardship (permitted under Treasury guidance for ERA2) allow this household to qualify without requiring income documentation beyond a signed attestation, depending on the grantee's rules.
Scenario 3: Utility arrears only. Some ERA grantees restrict awards to combined rent-and-utility cases, while others permit standalone utility assistance. A household current on rent but facing a utility shutoff may qualify for utility-only ERA funds where the grantee permits it.
Scenario 4: Landlord refusal. A landlord declines to participate in the ERA program. Under Treasury guidance, grantees may pay the renter directly in this scenario, though the renter must demonstrate the funds will be applied to the rental obligation. For protections applicable when landlords act in bad faith, the wrongful eviction and retaliatory eviction pages cover relevant legal frameworks.
Decision boundaries
The table below contrasts the two primary ERA fund structures across key eligibility and operational dimensions:
| Dimension | ERA1 (CAA 2021) | ERA2 (ARP 2021) |
|---|---|---|
| Federal authorization amount | $25 billion | $21.55 billion |
| Income ceiling | ≤80% AMI | ≤80% AMI |
| Self-certification permitted | Limited | Expanded |
| Prospective rent coverage | Up to 3 months | Up to 3 months |
| Utility coverage | Permitted | Permitted, broader scope |
| Homeowner eligibility | No | No |
Additional decision boundaries that determine program access include:
- Citizenship and immigration status — Treasury guidance does not require citizenship, but individual grantees set their own documentation standards within federal anti-discrimination rules. The housing discrimination protected classes page covers applicable Fair Housing Act protections.
- Income documentation vs. self-attestation — ERA2 expanded permission for self-attestation of income for households at or below 50% AMI or where an applicant is unemployed, reducing documentation burden.
- Fund exhaustion — Once a grantee's ERA allocation is depleted, applications close. Renters in jurisdictions with exhausted ERA funds must pursue state-funded alternatives, local emergency assistance through local housing authority resources, or programs administered through renter advocacy organizations.
- Duplication of benefits prohibition — ERA funds cannot duplicate benefits received through other federal programs covering the same rental period. A household receiving a housing subsidy through a different program for the same months is ineligible for ERA on those months.
For a full overview of rental assistance eligibility criteria used across multiple program types, the dedicated eligibility page provides a cross-program comparison.
References
- U.S. Department of the Treasury — Emergency Rental Assistance Program
- U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) — Area Median Income
- Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2021 — Public Law 116-260
- American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 — Public Law 117-2
- Treasury ERA Frequently Asked Questions (Official FAQ)
- National Low Income Housing Coalition — ERA Tracker