LIHEAP eligibility is not a single national yes-or-no rule. Each state or territory sets application details within federal program rules.
Last checked: June 2, 2026
Quick answer
Check your official state LIHEAP page for household size, income limits, application season, document requirements, and whether crisis, heating, or cooling assistance uses different rules.
What to verify
| Check | Why it matters | Where to confirm |
|---|---|---|
| Household size | Limits usually change by household count. | State eligibility table |
| Income period | States may use monthly, annual, or recent income. | Application instructions |
| Assistance type | Heating, cooling, crisis, and regular assistance may differ. | State LIHEAP guide |
| Residency and utility account | Programs may require proof of address or bill responsibility. | Official application |
| Priority groups | Some programs prioritize seniors, children, or disabled residents. | State program rules |
Step-by-step check
- Find your state through the ACF contact listing.
- Open the current-year eligibility or application page.
- Match your household size to the correct income table.
- Check whether gross or net income is used.
- Read whether crisis or shutoff assistance has a separate process.
- Contact the official office if your income recently changed.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Using a copied income table from an old blog post.
- Checking regular assistance but needing crisis assistance.
- Assuming utility debt alone guarantees approval.
- Ignoring document rules for self-employment, benefits, or shared housing.
Official sources to check
Start with official agency, utility, licensing-board, or government pages before using a private directory, ad, or lead form.
FAQ
Are LIHEAP eligibility rules the same everywhere?
No. State and local administrators set application details within federal rules.
Can I qualify if I am behind on my bill?
Possibly, but income, household, season, and crisis rules still matter.
Should I apply if I am unsure?
If the official agency says applications are open, contacting them is safer than relying on a third-party answer.
Related checks
Note: Home Public Check is not a government agency, utility, lender, insurer, tax adviser, or legal adviser. This guide explains where and how to check official records and program pages. Eligibility, deadlines, portal availability, and record details can change by state, county, city, utility, program, and date.