You served your time. Now you're out. And the first thing you need, a roof over your head, feels completely out of reach. Landlords run background checks. Applications get denied. Family situations are complicated. And the clock is ticking from the moment you walk out the gate.
This guide is for returning citizens and their families who need real, actionable information about housing after prison. Not inspiration. Not vague encouragement. Actual steps, actual resources, and an honest look at what the system allows landlords to do. And what it does not.
Why Housing Is the Hardest Part of Reentry
Stable housing is the foundation that everything else in reentry rests on. Employment, mental health treatment, substance use recovery, family reunification. All of it is harder, sometimes impossible, without a stable place to live.
The barriers are real. Private landlords conduct background checks and many use blanket policies that reject any applicant with a felony conviction. Public housing authorities have their own restrictions. Some people are legally barred from federally assisted housing depending on their conviction type. And even when a person legally qualifies, discrimination still happens.
What makes this especially painful is the timing. Most people leave prison with very little. Transportation money, minimal clothing, maybe a discharge ID. Finding housing within the first 72 hours is the difference between stability and survival mode. And survival mode quickly leads back to the situations that led to incarceration in the first place.
The research is clear on one point: housing instability is one of the strongest predictors of reincarceration. That is not a character flaw. It is a system failure. And knowing the system helps you work around it.
What HUD Actually Says About Felony Screening
The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development has issued formal guidance that many landlords, and even many public housing authorities, ignore or do not fully understand.
Under current HUD guidance, blanket bans on renting to people with criminal records may violate the Fair Housing Act. The legal reasoning is based on disparate impact. Because incarceration rates affect certain racial groups disproportionately, a no-felons-ever policy can constitute discriminatory housing practice under federal civil rights law.
HUD's guidance specifically says that housing providers should conduct an individualized assessment. That means looking at the nature of the conviction, how much time has passed, evidence of rehabilitation, and whether the specific conviction actually creates a demonstrable risk to other residents or property.
This does not mean every landlord will follow this guidance. Many do not. But it gives returning citizens a legal foundation to push back, especially with public housing authorities, housing voucher programs, and any entity that receives federal funding.
There are still hard limits. Federal law bars people with certain convictions from federally assisted housing. Lifetime sex offender registration under state law, manufacturing methamphetamine on federally assisted housing premises, and a few other categories result in mandatory exclusions. Outside of those narrow categories, blanket bans are legally questionable under current HUD policy.
If you believe a public housing authority has improperly denied your application, you have the right to request an informal hearing and to appeal the decision. Document everything in writing.
Transitional Housing: Your First Real Step
Transitional housing is not a permanent solution. It is a bridge. And for most returning citizens, it is the most realistic option in the first weeks and months after release.
Transitional housing programs provide temporary, supervised or semi-supervised living arrangements specifically designed for people leaving incarceration. Many include wraparound services: case management, job placement help, substance use counseling, and financial literacy support.
Here is where to start looking:
- Federal Bureau of Prisons Residential Reentry Centers (RRCs): Also called halfway houses, these are BOP-contracted facilities. People serving federal sentences may be eligible for placement in an RRC toward the end of their sentence under the First Step Act. Placement is not guaranteed and depends on programming compliance, PATTERN risk score, and bed availability. Ask your case manager at least 17-19 months before your release date.
- State-level halfway houses: Each state contracts with private operators to run transitional housing for people released from state prisons. Quality varies significantly. Ask your state corrections department for a list of approved providers in the county you plan to return to.
- Faith-based transitional programs: Organizations like the Salvation Army, Catholic Charities, and locally operated faith communities often run sober living homes or transitional housing with fewer barriers to entry than government programs. They may require program participation but rarely conduct the same criminal history screening that private landlords do.
- Sober living homes: If substance use is part of your history, structured sober living can provide housing and accountability. These are not exclusively for people with convictions, they are open to anyone committed to sobriety, which can make the entry process easier.
The honest reality is that some transitional programs have rules that are difficult to follow: curfews, random drug testing, limited personal freedom. For people who have spent years in a controlled environment, that can feel like an extension of incarceration rather than a bridge to independence. That frustration is valid. The goal is to use transitional housing as a short-term platform to build toward something permanent, not to stay there longer than necessary.
Expungement and What It Actually Does for Housing
Expungement is often presented as a magic fix. It is not. But it matters, and knowing what it actually does helps you use it strategically.
When a record is expunged or sealed, it is removed from public-facing background check databases. That means a private landlord running a standard tenant screening check will not see it. In that context, expungement directly improves your ability to rent from private landlords who rely on commercial screening services.
What expungement does not do:
- It does not clear your record from federal databases used by public housing authorities
- It does not typically affect records used for federally assisted housing programs
- It does not automatically remove records from every third-party background screening company (you may need to dispute those separately)
- It does not apply in every state. Eligibility rules vary widely
Eligibility for expungement depends on your state, the nature of the conviction, and how much time has passed since you completed your sentence. Many states now have expanded expungement eligibility as part of broader criminal justice reform efforts. A legal aid organization or public defender office can review your specific record and tell you what is possible.
Even a partial expungement, clearing older, less serious charges while leaving others on the record, can make a meaningful difference on a rental application. It reduces what a landlord sees and narrows the conversation you have to have.
Start the expungement process as early as possible. It takes time. Courts have backlogs. Filing fees may apply, though many legal aid organizations can help waive them. Do not wait until you are already searching for housing to start this process.
Reentry Organizations That Actually Help
There are reentry organizations across the country that provide direct housing assistance, not just referrals. The quality and availability of services vary by location, but here are categories of organizations to seek out:
- Legal aid organizations: Many legal aid offices have reentry units that help with housing discrimination complaints, expungement filings, and appeals of public housing denials. Search for legal aid in your county through the Legal Services Corporation directory at lsc.gov.
- Second Chance Act grantees: The Second Chance Act funds organizations specifically to provide reentry support including housing navigation. The Department of Justice's Office of Justice Programs maintains a list of funded organizations. These programs are designed for this exact situation.
- Local reentry councils: Many cities and counties have formal reentry councils or coalitions that coordinate services across providers. They often maintain up-to-date lists of housing options that general internet searches miss.
- 211 hotline: Dialing 211 connects you to local social services, including emergency housing, transitional programs, and rental assistance. It is available in most states and is one of the fastest ways to identify what exists in your specific geographic area.
For a curated list of reentry resources organized by state and service type, visit drprison.org. Our team has vetted these resources to ensure they provide real services to returning citizens and their families.
For a first-person perspective on navigating reentry housing challenges, kengaughan.com offers honest accounts from someone who has lived this process and documented what worked and what did not.
How to Approach Private Landlords as a Returning Citizen
Some private landlords will rent to returning citizens. The key is finding them and approaching them in a way that builds trust before the background check becomes the entire conversation.
Look for independent landlords rather than large property management companies. Corporate property managers typically use automated screening systems with hard cutoffs. Individual landlords make decisions personally and are far more likely to consider context.
Be direct and proactive. If you know a background check will reveal a conviction, bring it up yourself before the landlord asks. This sounds counterintuitive, but it works. Landlords are more concerned about being blindsided than about the conviction itself. When you bring it up first, you control the framing.
Prepare a brief written statement, one page or less, that explains the conviction, what has changed, and what your current situation looks like: employment, references, completion of programming. This is not an apology letter. It is a professional document that demonstrates self-awareness and stability.
Offer concrete risk reducers: first and last month's rent upfront if you can, a co-signer if you have one, a shorter initial lease term so the landlord can evaluate your tenancy before committing long-term. These offers reduce the perceived risk and make a yes easier to say.
Gather strong references. A parole or probation officer who can speak to your compliance, an employer, a case manager, a faith leader. Anyone who can credibly vouch for your reliability as a tenant carries weight.
Building a Housing Plan Before Release Day
The biggest mistake people make is waiting until they are out to start solving the housing problem. By that point, the timeline is brutal and options are limited.
If you or someone you love is still incarcerated, start working on the housing plan now. The First Step Act created stronger pathways for pre-release planning, and BOP case managers are required to assist with reentry preparation. That includes housing.
Steps to take while still inside:
- Request a reentry needs assessment from your case manager and document your housing needs in writing
- Ask about RRC placement eligibility and timeline as early as possible
- Contact reentry organizations in your release county by mail. Many respond and can begin coordinating before your release date
- Research your state's expungement eligibility and begin the paperwork process if you are eligible
- Reconnect with family members who might provide short-term housing. Even a couch for 30 days creates breathing room
- Gather all identity documents: birth certificate, Social Security card, state ID. These are required for housing applications. BOP and state corrections systems are required to help facilitate this before release.
Family members on the outside can make calls, do research, and contact organizations on behalf of their loved one. That pre-release groundwork changes the outcome dramatically.
Housing after prison is genuinely hard. The system creates barriers that are difficult and sometimes unfair. Knowing your rights under HUD guidance, understanding what transitional housing actually offers, using expungement strategically, and approaching landlords with preparation rather than resignation. These are not guarantees, but they are the real tools that make a difference.
If you are supporting a family member through reentry or navigating this yourself, you are not alone. The resources exist. The path is narrow in some places. But it is there.
If you or someone you know is in crisis, please contact the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline by calling or texting 988. Crisis support is available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
