Fair Market Rents by State

Select a state to view all HUD FMR areas, income limits, and Public Housing Authorities.

AS
1 area
Alabama
88 areas
Alaska
35 areas
Arizona
23 areas
Arkansas
87 areas
California
91 areas
Colorado
72 areas
Connecticut
364 areas
Delaware
6 areas
District of Columbia
2 areas
Florida
100 areas
GU
1 area
Georgia
187 areas
Hawaii
9 areas
Idaho
55 areas
Illinois
127 areas
Indiana
121 areas
Iowa
114 areas
Kansas
115 areas
Kentucky
139 areas
Louisiana
84 areas
MP
1 area
Maine
545 areas
Maryland
33 areas
Massachusetts
376 areas
Michigan
108 areas
Minnesota
101 areas
Mississippi
96 areas
Missouri
128 areas
Montana
67 areas
Nebraska
100 areas
Nevada
21 areas
New Hampshire
264 areas
New Jersey
32 areas
New Mexico
37 areas
New York
81 areas
North Carolina
135 areas
North Dakota
59 areas
Ohio
110 areas
Oklahoma
87 areas
Oregon
46 areas
PR
94 areas
Pennsylvania
89 areas
Rhode Island
41 areas
South Carolina
63 areas
South Dakota
71 areas
Tennessee
115 areas
Texas
304 areas
Utah
35 areas
VI
3 areas
Vermont
257 areas
Virginia
156 areas
Washington
56 areas
West Virginia
69 areas
Wisconsin
91 areas
Wyoming
25 areas
mn
1 area

How HUD Defines FMR Areas

HUD publishes Fair Market Rents for two types of geographic areas: metropolitan areas and non-metropolitan counties. Metropolitan areas are defined using Office of Management and Budget (OMB) metropolitan statistical area (MSA) boundaries, though HUD sometimes creates separate sub-areas within an MSA when rental markets vary significantly within the larger metro.

Non-metropolitan areas are individual counties not part of any MSA. Rural counties in states like Montana and West Virginia typically have much lower FMRs than coastal metros, reflecting substantial differences in local housing costs.