Section 8 Apartments in Staten Island
Staten Island has the smallest Section 8 inventory of NYC's five boroughs, reflecting the borough's lower overall rental density. Most voucher-friendly listings are on the North Shore — St. George, Port Richmond, Tompkinsville, and Stapleton — within walking distance or a short bus ride from the Staten Island Ferry to Manhattan.
About Staten Island
Staten Island has 470,000 residents across 59 square miles — NYC's least populous borough. The North Shore (St. George, Tompkinsville, Stapleton, Port Richmond) is the most diverse and urban part of the borough, with significant African American, Latino, Liberian, and West Indian populations and most of the borough's apartment housing stock. The South Shore (Tottenville, Annadale, Great Kills) is predominantly white, suburban, and dominated by single-family homes. The Mid-Island (New Springville, Bulls Head) is mixed. Most Staten Island voucher inventory is in older apartment buildings on the North Shore.
Neighborhoods in Staten Island
Available Apartments
View allNo listings currently available in Staten Island.
Transit Access
Staten Island has unique transit — there is no subway service to the borough. The Staten Island Ferry runs 24/7 from St. George Ferry Terminal to Whitehall Terminal in Lower Manhattan (free, 25 minutes). The Staten Island Railway (SIR) runs from St. George south to Tottenville, parallel to the borough's east coast. Bus service is extensive: the SI Express buses (X1, X8, X10, etc.) provide direct service to Manhattan. Local buses (S40, S46, S48, S51, S53, S78, S79 SBS) connect neighborhoods. The Staten Island Ferry is the only direct connection to Manhattan; voucher holders on the North Shore typically have 30-45 minute total commutes to Lower Manhattan.
Voucher Housing in Staten Island
Staten Island voucher inventory is small but exists, primarily on the North Shore. Section 8 is the most common; CityFHEPS landlord acceptance has grown modestly since the 2024 payment standard increase. NYCHA on Staten Island operates small developments at Markham Gardens (West Brighton), Berry Houses (Dongan Hills), Richmond Terrace Houses (West New Brighton), South Beach Houses, and Stapleton Houses — roughly 5,000 total apartments. Staten Island one-bedrooms in voucher-friendly buildings typically run $1,400-$1,900; two-bedrooms $1,700-$2,300; three-bedrooms $2,100-$2,800. Most Staten Island voucher landlords are individual owners of small apartment buildings or converted houses.
About Staten Island
Staten Island has 470,000 residents in 59 square miles — NYC''s least populous and least densely populated borough. The population is roughly 62% white, 19% Hispanic/Latino, 11% Black, and 9% Asian. The borough has three distinct regions: the **North Shore** (St. George, Tompkinsville, Stapleton, Port Richmond, West Brighton — the most diverse and urban part, with the borough''s largest Black and Latino populations and significant Liberian and Sri Lankan immigrant communities); the **Mid-Island** (New Springville, Westerleigh, Bulls Head, Mariners Harbor — mixed); and the **South Shore** (Tottenville, Annadale, Great Kills, Eltingville, Charleston — predominantly white, suburban, and dominated by single-family homes). Median household income is approximately $87,000 (one of the highest of any NYC borough) but with substantial variation between the South Shore (often $100,000+) and the North Shore (often $50,000 or below). About 31% of Staten Island households rent — the lowest rental rate of any borough. An estimated 15,000+ Staten Island households use Section 8, NYCHA Public Housing, or other rental assistance.
Local Services & Resources
NYC HRA Job Centers: Staten Island has the Richmond Job Center (201 Bay St, near St. George Ferry Terminal). This is the primary HRA service location for Staten Island residents seeking cash assistance, food stamps, Medicaid, and related benefits.
HRA Homebase: Staten Island Homebase services are operated by Catholic Charities and other providers. Find your local office at nyc.gov/site/hra/help/homebase.page.
NYCHA Customer Contact Center: Staten Island residents are typically served by the Brooklyn Customer Contact Center (787 Atlantic Ave) accessible by Staten Island Ferry plus subway, or by phone and online services.
Major hospitals: Staten Island University Hospital (Northwell Health, with two campuses — North in Ocean Breeze and South in Princes Bay), Richmond University Medical Center (West Brighton), Staten Island Sea View Hospital (Sea View — public). Compared to other boroughs, Staten Island has fewer public hospitals and clinic resources, particularly for North Shore residents who may need to travel to Manhattan or Brooklyn for specialized care.
New York Public Library (Staten Island branches): 13 branches across the borough including the St. George Library Center (largest branch), New Dorp Library, and Stapleton Library. Free WiFi, computer access, ESL classes, after-school programs.
Legal aid: Staten Island Legal Services (Legal Services NYC) at 36 Richmond Terrace, the primary free housing legal aid resource for Staten Island. Pro Bono Net (Project Lifeline) and Staten Island Community Justice Center also provide tenant advocacy.
El Centro del Inmigrante (Port Richmond): Spanish-language services for Staten Island''s growing Mexican American community.
Parks, Museums & Cultural Sites
Parks: Staten Island has more parkland per resident than any other NYC borough. Greenbelt (2,800 acres of woods and trails — the largest urban forest east of Mississippi River), Fresh Kills Park (over 2,200 acres being transformed from the world''s largest landfill into one of the largest parks in NYC), Clove Lakes Park (Sunnyside), Silver Lake Park (Silver Lake), Wolfes Pond Park (Annadale).
Beaches: South Beach, Midland Beach, Wolfe''s Pond Beach, and Cedar Grove Beach offer free public access along Staten Island''s eastern shore.
Cultural sites: Snug Harbor Cultural Center & Botanical Garden (Livingston — 83 acres of historic buildings, gardens, and museums), the Alice Austen House (Rosebank — historic photography museum), Historic Richmond Town (Richmondtown — 100-acre living history village), the Jacques Marchais Museum of Tibetan Art (Lighthouse Hill).
The Staten Island Ferry: The free 25-minute ferry between St. George and Whitehall Terminal in Lower Manhattan is itself a major attraction, with views of the Statue of Liberty and Manhattan skyline. Runs 24/7, every 15-30 minutes during peak hours.
Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island: Accessed by ferry from Battery Park in Manhattan, but visible from Staten Island''s North Shore.
NYCHA Developments in Staten Island
Major NYC Housing Authority developments in this borough. Apply through the NYCHA Self-Service Portal at selfserve.nycha.info.
| Development | Neighborhood | Address | Units |
|---|---|---|---|
| Markham Gardens | West Brighton | Broadway and Jersey St | 215 |
| Richmond Terrace Houses | West New Brighton | 499 Richmond Terrace | 489 |
| South Beach Houses | South Beach | 190 Lamont Ave | 460 |
| Stapleton Houses | Stapleton | 100 Hill St | 693 |
| Berry Houses | Dongan Hills | 44 Dongan Hills Ave | 506 |
| West Brighton Houses I | West Brighton | 200 Henderson Ave | 488 |
| West Brighton Houses II | West Brighton | 232 Henderson Ave | 165 |
| Mariners Harbor Houses | Mariners Harbor | 30 Continental Pl | 605 |
| Todt Hill Houses | Todt Hill | 1090 Schmidts Ln | 502 |
| Cassidy-Lafayette Houses | New Brighton | 184 Lafayette Ave | 391 |
Schools
Staten Island public schools fall under Community School District 31, which covers the entire borough — the only NYC borough with a single school district.
Within District 31, schools serve very different populations:
- North Shore schools (PS 16, PS 18, PS 20, PS 31, IS 51, IS 61, Curtis HS, Concord HS, Port Richmond HS): substantial voucher and immigrant family populations, free breakfast/lunch participation high, substantial support services
- Mid-Island schools (PS 19, PS 26, PS 29, IS 7, IS 24, Susan Wagner HS, New Dorp HS): mixed populations
- South Shore schools (PS 1, PS 5, PS 23, PS 32, PS 36, Tottenville HS): predominantly middle-class populations
Staten Island schools tend to have lower student-to-teacher ratios than other NYC boroughs due to the lower population density. Many South Shore schools rank among the highest-performing in NYC; North Shore schools have substantial support infrastructure for low-income and immigrant families.
For high school, Staten Island students can apply to any NYC high school including specialized high schools in other boroughs (Staten Island Tech, the borough''s specialized high school, admits by SHSAT). Tottenville High School is one of the largest high schools in NYC by enrollment.
Cost of Living Context
Staten Island rental markets vary by region:
- South Shore (Tottenville, Annadale, Great Kills): one-bedrooms $1,800-2,400 in the limited apartment inventory; mostly single-family homes that are owner-occupied
- Mid-Island (New Springville, Westerleigh, Mariners Harbor): one-bedrooms $1,600-2,200
- North Shore (St. George, Stapleton, Port Richmond, West Brighton): one-bedrooms $1,400-1,900 — most affordable Staten Island area and where voucher housing concentrates
Voucher payment standards typically cover Staten Island rents in pre-war and mid-century apartment buildings on the North Shore. The borough''s lower density means smaller voucher landlord networks than the other boroughs.
Transit Reality for Staten Island Voucher Holders
Staten Island has no subway service. Voucher families must factor transit into housing decisions:
- Staten Island Ferry (St. George Terminal to Whitehall Terminal): Free, 25 minutes, runs 24/7. The primary connection to Manhattan.
- Staten Island Railway (SIR): Single subway-like line running from St. George south to Tottenville along the eastern shore. Connects North Shore voucher communities to South Shore residential areas.
- Express buses to Manhattan (X1, X8, X10, X12, X14, X15, X17, X42): Direct service during commute hours; full express fare ($7 one-way as of 2026), more expensive than subway/ferry.
- Local buses: Extensive bus network connecting Staten Island neighborhoods, but commute times can be long.
Voucher holders working in Manhattan typically have 45-60 minute commutes from North Shore Staten Island via ferry plus subway. From the South Shore, commutes can be 60-90 minutes.
Source-of-Income Discrimination Enforcement
Staten Island has documented source-of-income discrimination, particularly in larger management companies operating on the North Shore and in South Shore single-family rental properties. The Fair Housing Justice Center has conducted testing on Staten Island.
Staten Island Legal Services handles source-of-income cases for borough residents and works closely with El Centro del Inmigrante for Spanish-speaking clients. Voucher families facing discrimination should document everything, file with NYC CCHR, and contact legal aid.
Hurricane Sandy and Climate Resilience
Staten Island was severely impacted by Hurricane Sandy in 2012, particularly along the eastern shore (Midland Beach, Ocean Breeze, South Beach, Tottenville). Substantial post-Sandy investment has addressed:
- NYCHA resilience upgrades: South Beach Houses, Markham Gardens, and other developments received new mechanical systems, electrical upgrades, and flood mitigation
- Build It Back Program: Single-family home rebuilding and elevation
- Living Breakwaters and other coastal protection: Long-term flood reduction infrastructure
When searching for housing on Staten Island''s eastern shore, voucher families should check whether buildings have completed post-Sandy resilience upgrades and consider flood zone designations.
Recent Housing Policy
Staten Island-specific developments:
- 2024 CityFHEPS expansion: Brought CityFHEPS payment standards in line with Section 8, expanding voucher options on Staten Island
- Bay Street Corridor Rezoning: Substantial new affordable housing development along Bay Street in St. George, Tompkinsville, and Stapleton; some buildings incorporate project-based Section 8
- North Shore 2030: NYC Economic Development Corporation initiative for waterfront development with affordable housing components
Why Voucher Holders Choose Staten Island
Compared to other boroughs, Staten Island offers:
- More parkland per resident — green space access for families
- Lower density and more single-family inventory in some neighborhoods
- Free Staten Island Ferry providing 24/7 free transit to Manhattan
- Generally lower crime rates than denser urban neighborhoods (varies by area)
- Strong community organizations for specific immigrant populations (particularly Liberian, Sri Lankan, Mexican)
Trade-offs include longer commute times, smaller voucher landlord networks, fewer service options, and a more car-dependent built environment than other boroughs.
Neighborhood-Specific Considerations
Staten Island''s primary voucher-friendly neighborhoods:
- St. George: Major transit hub with the Staten Island Ferry Terminal; most active voucher market on the island. See our St. George guide.
- Port Richmond: North Shore commercial corridor with growing voucher acceptance; substantial Mexican American community. See our Port Richmond guide.
Other Staten Island areas with notable voucher inventory: Stapleton (Stapleton Houses NYCHA), West Brighton (Markham Gardens NYCHA, West Brighton Houses NYCHA), South Beach (South Beach Houses NYCHA), Dongan Hills (Berry Houses NYCHA), Mariners Harbor (Mariners Harbor Houses NYCHA).
Frequently Asked Questions
- Why is there limited voucher housing on Staten Island?
- Staten Island has the lowest rental density of NYC's five boroughs — most of the South Shore is owner-occupied single-family housing that does not participate in voucher programs. The borough's smaller renter population, combined with historically lower landlord awareness of voucher programs, has produced fewer voucher-accepting buildings than other boroughs.
- How do I get to Manhattan from Staten Island voucher housing?
- The Staten Island Ferry runs 24/7 from St. George to Whitehall in Lower Manhattan (free, 25 minutes). North Shore voucher housing is typically a 10-20 minute bus ride from the ferry terminal. Express buses (X1, X8, X10) provide direct service from Staten Island to Manhattan but charge full express fare ($7 one-way as of 2026).
- Are Staten Island schools good for voucher families?
- Staten Island public schools are part of NYC Department of Education. School District 31 covers the entire borough. School quality varies — some North Shore schools serve large voucher and immigrant populations and have substantial support services; South Shore schools tend to be in more affluent neighborhoods. Families should research specific schools serving their target neighborhood.