
Low Income Housing
1423 E Thousand Oaks Blvd, Thousand Oaks, CA, 91362
The Project Has 6 Total Buildings. The Units Consists Of Both Public Housing And Section 8 Apartment Units.
The Project Has 19 Total Buildings. The Units Consists Of Both Public Housing And Section 8 Apartment Units.
The Project Has 3 Total Buildings. The Units Consists Of Both Public Housing And Section 8 Apartment Units.
Hacienda De Feliz Has 25 Units Available
Hillcrest Villas Has 60 Units Available
Los Feliz Apartments Has 36 Units Available
Los Feliz Apartments Phase 2 Has 20 Units Available
Schillo Gardens Has 29 Units Available
Shadows Apartments Has 148 Units Available
Stoll House Apartments Has 11 Units Available
Villa Garcia Has 54 Units Available
Conejo Future Apartments Has 90 Units Available
Mountclef Apartments Has 3 Units Available
Warwick House Has 6 Units Available
Atria Hillcrest Has 1 Units Available
Castle Hill Retirement Village Has 1 Units Available
Everlasting Springs Has 1 Units Available
Heartland Home Residential Carefclty Fr The Eldrly Has 1 Units Available
Hillcrest Royale Has 1 Units Available
OAKVIEW AT UNIVERSITY VILLAGE Has 1 Units Available
THOUSAND OAKS HEALTHCARE CENTER Has 1 Units Available
Thousand Oaks Royale Retirement Has 1 Units Available
University Village Thousand Oaks Has 1 Units Available
Lately, have you noticed that HUD's Housing News is everywhere? Yes, HUD has expanded its homeownership programs, and as soon as the news broke, it immediately caught everyone's attention. Why is everyone suddenly talking about this? Is it just because the media is hyping it up? Of course not! This time, HUD's actions have truly grabbed people's attention.
Expanding your apartment search area can reveal better deals, but going too far can create new costs and daily inconvenience. Renters should compare travel time, transportation costs, and access to essentials before choosing a wider search zone. This guide explains how to expand your search area without making the wrong trade-off.
Most renters check the kitchen before signing a lease. They look at the countertops, appliances, closet space, bathroom fixtures, and whether the apartment feels clean during the tour. Almost nobody checks the window frames. That is a mistake. The small gaps around a window can reveal whether your apartment will hold heat during winter—or quietly leak money every month through higher heating bills.
You pay rent on time. You follow the lease. You did not buy the house, sign the mortgage, or miss the landlord’s loan payments. Then one day a foreclosure notice appears on the door, a bank letter arrives in the mail, or a stranger says the property has been sold and you need to move out immediately. This is one of the most terrifying moments a renter can face. The landlord’s financial disaster suddenly feels like your emergency. But here is the first thing to understand: a foreclosure notice does not automatically erase your lease, and it usually does not mean you must leave tomorrow.