
Grants awarded by the city of Vancouver’s AHF will support the acquisition, creation and/or preservation of affordable homes to increase housing choice and opportunity
VANCOUVER – Up to $9.5 million in Affordable Housing Fund (AHF) dollars are currently available to developers, nonprofits and other housing providers for projects that provide housing for low-income households in Vancouver.
“Thanks to Vancouver voters’ passage of Proposition 3 last year, we’re looking forward to building on the momentum of this program’s past success and expanding its impact to help even more households over the next decade,” said Sam Whitley, Housing Programs Manager. “We’re looking for creative projects that create the permanently affordable housing solutions Vancouver urgently needs.”
Grants awarded by the city of Vancouver’s AHF will support the acquisition, creation and/or preservation of affordable homes to increase housing choice and opportunity for households earning 50 percent or less of the Area Median Income (AMI). The current AMI for a family of four is $56,400.
For more information and application guidelines, visit cityofvancouver.us/ahf Applications are due by 5 p.m. March 1 and grant awards will be announced in April.
The AHF supports people experiencing very low income in Vancouver through affordable housing development, rental assistance, home ownership assistance and homelessness services. In 2016, voters approved a $42 million property tax levy to support AHF projects through 2023. Over the life of that levy, the AHF distributed $42 million to create or preserve 1,048 affordable homes and assist 1,144 households experiencing or at risk of homelessness. In 2023, a replacement affordable housing fund levy, Proposition 3, was approved by voters and will sustain the AHF at increased levels for the next decade. This renewed levy is projected to provide rent assistance and housing services to 2,500 households, preserve or construct 2,400 affordable homes, support 550 shelter beds and help 150 households with home ownership.
To request the application guidelines in another format or language, please get in touch with Samantha Whitley at (360) 487-7952, TTY: (360) 487-8602, WA Relay: 7-1-1 or by email at samantha.whitley@cityofvancouver.us.
Information provided by the city of Vancouver.
Also read:
- Letter: Rising property values hurt our communityA Hockinson resident argues that rising property values and taxes are forcing longtime neighbors out of the community and eroding its social fabric.
- Truck crashes into apartment complexVancouver firefighters responded to a vehicle that struck an apartment complex, resulting in one resident being displaced and the driver transported to a local hospital.
- Woodland School District secures $600,000 grant for essential repairsWoodland School District received a $600,000 state Urgent Repair Grant to fund fire alarm upgrades at Woodland Middle School and roof repairs at Columbia Elementary.
- Clark County launches new equitable park access programs in 2026, including free-parking daysClark County is introducing new park access programs in 2026 that include free parking days and a library-based parking pass checkout option.
- Additional measles exposure site identified in RidgefieldClark County Public Health identified an additional measles exposure location in Ridgefield involving a medical clinic visit while a confirmed case was contagious.
- The Study of Sports Podcast Jan. 31, 2026: We discuss how the 2A GSHL football is about to change in a major way, plus some Seahawks talk, tooThe Jan. 31 episode of the Study of Sports Podcast covers major upcoming changes to 2A GSHL football, local high school sports updates, and discussion of the Seattle Seahawks.
- Fort Vancouver athletics improving under partnership with Trico LeagueFort Vancouver High School athletics are showing measurable gains in competition and participation during the second year of a partnership competing in the Class 1A Trico League.









More of the housing/homeless-industrial complex, funded by yours and my tax money. Don’t know about you, but I’ve got better things to do with my money than to give it away to these never-ending causes.
The tax levy was put into place in 2016; it’s now approx. 8 years later in 2024. Please tell me what noticeable, what concrete improvements, have been made? Sure, “sally” has had her rent paid by our tax dollars. Trouble is, there are more and more “sally’s” and there will always be more and more “sally’s” as long as free money is available.
This smells strongly of take-from-the-rich-and-give-to-the-poor. All noble and good until we all realize our standard of living is decreasing due to our household budgets being stretched too thin. Where’s our household money going, you may ask? It’s being taken by the City of Vancouver and is being given away. The local middle-class, working family unit is being decimated here by the City of Vancouver.
Nothing to see here, move on. All is well, says the City.