Housing — Veterans Collaborative

Home & Housing Resource Network

This page includes events, information, resources, and directories of community resources; HUD resources; VA housing programs, VA home loans, and specially adapted housing grants; public housinghome ownership programs, and property tax exemptions; and summit/meeting notes.


Strategies for Suicide Prevention

The Center for Disease Control’s Strategies for Communities support a public health approach to suicide prevention that uses data to drive decision-making; implements and evaluates multiple prevention strategies to enhance resilience and improve well-being based on the best available evidence; and works to prevent people from becoming suicidal.

Stabilizing housing means keeping people in their homes and providing housing options for those experiencing financial insecurity who need them through affordable housing programs, government subsidies, loan modification programs, and financial counseling services.

Swords to Plowshares offers Insights on Mission-Driven Veteran Housing via TOOLBOX.vet, focused on anyone working with with unhoused populations and describes risk and resilience factors related to military service presents important considerations for developers, operators, property management, clinical and support staff.

In 2023, RAND published Recent Trends in Housing Cost Burden Among U.S. Military Veterans. Veteran households are less likely than nonveterans overall to be burdened by housing costs (spending more than 30% of their gross household income on housing) and more likely than nonveterans to own their home (with lower associated home ownership costs), however:

  • women veterans are less likely to be homeowners and move more frequently than male veterans;

  • veterans who served after 9/11/2001 are twice as likely to be renters and have the most severe housing cost burden overall;

  • housing costs for veterans are similar to and in some regions greater than for nonveterans;

  • veterans and nonveterans with the lowest incomes have similarly high housing burdens; and

  • nonveteran income growth has been outpacing veterans, reducing the difference since 2011.

Researchers recommend addressing disparities to stabilize housing for younger veterans, women veterans, veterans in high-cost housing markets, and veterans who rent.


Community Housing Resource Network

Service providers aligned with the Home & Housing Resource Network focus on increasing housing security, belonging, and home ownership in the Massachusetts military and veteran community. Organizations include those meeting the need for safe and stable housing and shelter, providing support with home repairs/modifications, and supporting home ownership through VA home loans.


U.S. Department of Housing & Urban Development

U.S. Department of Housing & Urban Development (HUD) also sponsors local housing counseling. Follow the links below for approved agencies in Massachusetts or call 800-569-4287.

Continuum of Care Program

HUD’s Continuum of Care (CoC) Program is designed to promote community-wide commitment to the goal of ending homelessness. The Massachusetts CoC includes 12 regional CoCs. A map of the service areas is available here. During the last week of January, CoC’s count all of the homeless people reported by service providers and counted by local police and volunteer groups on the streets.

Based on the 2022 Annual Report to Congress, Massachusetts had the largest absolute decrease in veteran homelessness (36.1%) from 2020–2022 among all states. Massachusetts had the third largest absolute decrease in homelessness (13.7%) and chronic homelessness (44.2%) and the fourth largest decrease (33.3%) in the number of individuals experiencing homelessness from 2007–2022.

Veteran Homelessness in Massachusetts

There were 534 Massachusetts veterans experiencing homelessness during the 2022 Point-in-Time Count, including 57 women, who made up 10.6% of homeless veterans. Veteran homelessness increased overall by nearly 3% in 2023, withy 545 homeless veterans, including 70 women, who made up 12.8% of homeless veterans. Women veteran homelessness increased by nearly 23%.


Housing Insecurity & Domestic Violence

Domestic violence is a leading cause of homelessness for women. One in 3 women veterans experience intimate partner violence in their lifetime; these women veterans are 3x more likely to experience housing insecurity or homelessness.

The GAO found that most VA transitional housing programs serving veterans (including those fleeing domestic violence) don’t house children; most of those that did placed restrictions on the ages or numbers of children. Many providers continue to lack capacity to serve women or children.

Public Law 114-315 expanded eligibility for veterans to participate in Supportive Services for Veterans & Families (SSVF) and Grant & Per Diem (GPD) in 2017 by defining individuals and families fleeing or attempting to flee domestic violence as homeless, increasing options for eligible veterans with children.

In the context of SSVF, VA found women veterans with children were more likely to accept hotel rooms for emergency housing. During the pandemic, SSVF lifted limits on spending on emergency shelter and officials intended to continue offering hotels as an emergency housing option to keep families together, such as “when shelter options do not exist.”


Executive Office of Housing & Livable Communities

The Executive Office of Housing & Livable Communities (EOHLC) was established in 2023 to create more homes and lower housing costs. EOHLC distributes funding to municipalities, oversees the state-aided public housing portfolio, and operates the Emergency Assistance family shelter.

EOHLC offers information on affordable rental units available statewide that aren’t associated with private market realtors. The directories below include information about affordable housing developments maintained by owners and RAAs in Massachusetts.

MyMassHome is the official listing and search tool for accessible and affordable homeownership opportunities.

Housing Navigator MA is the official listing and search tool for accessible & affordable rental homes.


VA Home Loans

The VA offers a Home Loan Guarantee benefit to service members, veterans, and eligible surviving spouses to buy, build, repair, retain, or adapt homes. The VA home loan is a lifetime benefit that can be used multiple times. Eligibility for the VA home loan guarantee is determined by a veteran’s length of service or service commitment, duty status, and character of service.

VA-backed home loans offer limited closing costs and competitively low interest rates, with no down payment required by VA (though lenders may require them for some borrowers) and no Private Mortgage Insurance. Download the VA Buyer’s Guide for more information.

VA Specially Adapted Housing Grants

The VA offers Housing Grants for service members and veterans with qualifying service-connected disabilities so they can buy or renovate their permanent home or in some cases a family member’s home they permanently or temporarily reside in to meet their needs and live more independently.

Veterans’ Mortgage Life Insurance (VMLI) is for veterans under age 70 with severe service-connected disabilities who received a SAH or SHA grant and have a title (including partial) to the home and mortgage obligation.

Eligible veterans may obtain coverage on new, existing, refinanced, or second mortgages. VMLI will pay the mortgage lender up to $200,000 toward the outstanding mortgage.

Premiums are based on the veteran’s age, outstanding balance, and remaining mortgage length. Premiums are deducted monthly from VA compensation payments.

Use the VMLI Premium Calculator to determine your premium and apply.


Housing Resource Network Meetings & Summits

 

Key Topics

Service providers aligned with our Home & Housing Resource Network focus on housing security and home ownership among the veterans and families we collectively serve. Participants in this network ensure those experiencing housing insecurity remain housed and that the houseless find a place to call home; some also offer support with home repairs, adaptations, and VA Home Loans.

  • Ensuring veterans and families have a place to call home and that those in crisis or facing homelessness know where to turn for shelter and long-term services and support

  • Orienting providers to the Housing First approach for permanent supportive housing in which individuals and families experiencing homelessness are quickly placed in permanent housing without preconditions and barriers (such as sobriety, treatment, or service participation requirements) to maximize housing stability and prevent chronic homelessness

  • Promoting existing initiatives, programs, and projects that sustain involvement and connections with and among organizations building community and those meeting urgent needs of veterans and their families experiencing housing insecurity and homelessness

  • Encouraging information sharing and the development of common metrics and agendas across organizations working in the housing space and centralizing their access to open housing units

  • Recognizing the unique challenges with housing affordability and cost of living in the region and gaps for those in need of support who don’t meet income requirements for all programs

  • Sharing opportunities for collaboration and developing partnerships for events to encourage broader engagement and understanding of the data and unique issues contributing to housing insecurity and homelessness among veterans in Massachusetts

  • Forming affinity groups to facilitate community summits around relevant topics and issues and to collect and share information and resources among service providers

  • Submitting events to the shared calendar using the tag #housing and other tags so they appear on relevant resource or regional pages

Shared Housing Resource Tracker


The ache for home lives in all of us, the safe place where we can go and not be questioned.
— Maya Angelou