
Low Income Housing
4035 Poinsettia St, San Luis Obispo, CA, 93401
860 on the Wye Has 20 Units Available
Bishop Street Studios Has 34 Units Available
Brizzolara Apartments Has 30 Units Available
Carmel Street Apartments Has 19 Units Available
Del Rio Terrace Apartments Has 41 Units Available
Iron Works Has 46 Units Available
Ironbark Apartments Has 20 Units Available
Laurel Creek Apartments Has 24 Units Available
Madonna Road Apartments Has 118 Units Available
Pismo-Buchon Apartments Has 11 Units Available
Village At Broad Street Has 42 Units Available
Villas At Higuera Has 28 Units Available
Dan Law Apartments Has 9 Units Available
Judson Terrace Homes Has 43 Units Available
Judson Terrace Lodge Has 31 Units Available
Monterey Arms Has 68 Units Available
CABRILLO CARE CENTER Has 1 Units Available
MISSION VIEW HEALTH CENTER Has 1 Units Available
Pristine Home Services Has 1 Units Available
SAN LUIS TRANSITIONAL CARE Has 1 Units Available
Have you ever been frustrated by making mistakes on your HUD application? Applying for HUD can be a complicated process, but avoiding common mistakes will make the whole process go much smoother. Today, we will discuss some common application mistakes and show you how to avoid these pitfalls and get your HUD application approved.
Many renters assume that lowering housing costs requires moving to a cheaper apartment, but that is not always necessary. Utility usage, optional services, daily habits, and small recurring fees all contribute to total monthly spending. Understanding these factors can help reduce housing costs without changing your living situation.
Finding an apartment with a pet is already stressful. Finding one with a dog on the restricted breed list can feel like trying to rent with a tiny criminal record attached to your leash. You find the perfect unit. The rent works. The commute is reasonable. The floors are not carpeted. There is a patch of grass nearby. You are already imagining morning walks, a food bowl in the kitchen, and your dog sleeping in the sun by the window. Then the pet policy hits like a locked door. No aggressive breeds. No bully breeds. No shepherds. No huskies. No rottweilers. No mixes. No dogs over a certain weight. No exceptions. Suddenly, your well-behaved dog is being judged by a line in a lease before anyone has even met them.
A bad roommate does not always destroy your apartment in one dramatic disaster. Sometimes the damage happens slowly. A wet towel stays on the floor. A candle burns too close to the wall. Food spills under the stove and nobody cleans it. A guest sleeps on the couch for three weeks. Someone says, “I will deal with it later,” and later becomes a stain, a smell, a broken blind, a clogged drain, or a charge on your move-out statement. That is the ugly part about shared rentals. You can be careful, respectful, and clean, but your security deposit is only as safe as the most careless person on the lease.