Baltimore, MD Low Income Apartments
Baltimore,MD (dorchester County)
ADDRESS: 1962 E. 28th Street BALTIMORE, MD 21218
DESCRIPTION: I have a section 8 certificate and I am looking for a 1 bedroom apt. t...
BEDROOMS: 1 Bedrooms
RENT: $750-843
PHONE: (443) 909-5708
Baltimore,MD (Baltimore City County)
ADDRESS: 325 MCMECHEN ST BALTIMORE, MD 21217
Baltimore,MD (Baltimore City County)
ADDRESS: 1300 E LANVALE ST BALTIMORE, MD 21213
Baltimore,MD (Baltimore City County)
ADDRESS: 5900 PARK HEIGHTS AVE BALTIMORE, MD 21215
Baltimore,MD (Baltimore City County)
ADDRESS: 5110 Baltimore National PIKE BALTIMORE, MD 21229
Baltimore,MD (Baltimore City County)
ADDRESS: 3915 Calloway AVE BALTIMORE, MD 21215
Baltimore,MD (Baltimore City County)
ADDRESS: 1234 PATAPSCO ST BALTIMORE, MD 21230
Baltimore,MD (BALTIMORE CITY County)
ADDRESS: 104 S. Amity Street BALTIMORE, MD 21223
Baltimore,MD (Baltimore City County)
ADDRESS: 201 N WASHINGTON ST BALTIMORE, MD 21231
Baltimore has many low income apartments throughout most of the city. There are over 40,000 low income renters who are not able to afford almost any rent on their unit and many of them live in Sectin 8 or another form of subsidized housing. An amazing stat is that at least 1/2 of all apartments in Baltimore are rented for less than $400 a month - there are many people in Baltimore living under the official poverty line.
There are still many cheap apartments to rent in Baltimore if you are looking for Sectin 8 housing. There are units near the Waterfront and the inner city that come with covered parking and a washer and dryer. There are also fully furnished rentals and corporate housing for people looking to stay in a long term arrangement in the city of Baltimore.
Make sure you do a drive by or get a reference before you settle on an apartment in Baltimore. There is a lot of crime, so be careful and don't pick a place that is very run down as it will be unsafe to stay and live there long term. The Section 8 housing voucher program was built to address the issue of unaffordable housing for people who live below certain income thresholds. Baltimore relies very heavily on Section 8 as many of the residents use that program to find rental units where they can only pay less than 30% of their overall income. HUD administers this program on a federal level and everyone realizes how reliant Baltimore is on this federal money to help give housing to the poor of the city.
Many Baltimore landlords are smaller companies and individually owned so they lack the funding to expand and refurbish their units on a regular basis. It takes quite a bit of money to upgrade older apartment units and that capital is lacking from the owners and the city of Baltimore to make the necessary capital improvements that help reduce the inner city blight. Baltimore needs to take large strides to upgrade it's infrastructure and that will take private and public funding to make sweeping changes in the low income apartment market that dominates the inner core.