Like any other government program, there are a few negatives associated with participating in the Section 8 program:
- Before tenants can sign a lease or move in, the property must be approved by the Section 8 Housing Authority. This can take from a few days to a few weeks. During this period, your property sits vacant losing money. If Section 8 is not involved, a tenant can move right in after the previous tenant leaves and there is no delay. Also, it may take weeks, or even months before you receive your first check from the government. Since the tenant is on Section 8, usually they do not have funds for a security deposit and that is not provided by the government.
- The Housing Authority decides on the monthly rent and any rent increases. A tenant may be willing to pay $1,800 for your rent and contribute $600 to the monthly lease, but Section 8 may not. They will compare your rent to comparable rentals in their system and may only agree to a lower amount. The same holds true for rent increases. The market may bear a 5% increase, but the Housing Authority may only allow a 3% increase.
- All time frames take longer. For a non-Section 8 rental, if we want to increase the rent 5%, we give the tenant 30-day notice and either they accept, or move. For Section 8, any increase requires a 90-day notice and must be approved by the Housing Authority.
- All Section 8 housing is subject to an interior inspection of the property every year. Some tenants take this opportunity to ask for improvements or have the owner correct wear and tear issues created by the tenant. If called out by the inspector, they must be corrected regardless.
