Programs to check first
Low-income household
Iowa Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP)
- Eligibility
- Iowa Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) serves income-qualified Iowa households responsible for home energy costs. State rules consider income, household size, citizenship or qualified immigration status, fuel type, energy burden, and crisis status, with priority for older adults, people with disabilities, and young children.
- What it covers
- Covers bill assistance, crisis help for shutoff or fuel emergencies, and sometimes cooling, heating-equipment, or energy-related repair support. Benefit caps, seasons, and direct-to-vendor payment rules are set by the current state plan and funding.
- How to apply
- Apply through the Iowa page, portal, county office, or local community-action agency. Gather recent utility or fuel bills, income proof, identification, household details, lease or ownership information if requested, and any shutoff, crisis, medical, disability, or senior documentation.
Low-income household
Iowa Weatherization Assistance Program
- Eligibility
- Weatherization is for income-qualified homeowners and renters. DOE and state guidance generally allow households at or below 200% of federal poverty guidelines, SSI or certain cash-assistance recipients, or LIHEAP-eligible households, with priority for older adults, disability, children, high energy use, and high energy burden.
- What it covers
- Covers a no-cost energy audit and approved measures such as air sealing, insulation, duct work, heating-system safety checks or limited repair, ventilation, water-heater measures, and energy-related health and safety fixes. The audit sets the scope; it is not a general remodel fund.
- How to apply
- Contact the Iowa weatherization administrator or local provider. The provider screens income and priority, confirms the home can be weatherized, obtains owner permission for rentals, schedules the audit, assigns approved contractors, and completes final inspection.
Senior homeowner
USDA Rural Development Section 504 Home Repair Loans and Grants in Iowa
- Eligibility
- Section 504 is for very-low-income homeowners who occupy the home, cannot obtain affordable credit elsewhere, and live in a USDA-eligible rural area. Grants are only for owners age 62 or older who cannot repay a loan; USDA county income and property rules apply.
- What it covers
- Covers repairs, improvements, modernization, accessibility work, and removal of health or safety hazards. Current USDA caps are loans up to $40,000, grants up to $10,000, or $15,000 in certain presidentially declared disaster areas; loans and grants may be combined up to $50,000, or $55,000 in those disaster areas.
- How to apply
- Use the USDA Iowa page to confirm the property location, then contact the local Rural Development office or home-loan specialist. Prepare income documents, ownership and occupancy proof, repair estimates, contractor details, and USDA review before work starts; applications are year round as funding allows.
Veteran
VA Home Improvements and Structural Alterations (HISA)
- Eligibility
- HISA is for eligible Veterans and Servicemembers who need medically necessary improvements or structural alterations to a primary residence because of service-connected or non-service-connected disability. VA medical documentation must justify the project, and renters need written owner authorization.
- What it covers
- Covers disability-related access and sanitary use, such as permanent ramps, roll-in showers, access to sinks or counters, and plumbing or electrical changes required for home medical equipment. VA lists a lifetime benefit of $6,800 for qualifying service-connected or certain 50% rated cases and $2,000 for other qualifying disabilities; routine roofs, furnaces, decks, spas, and new construction are excluded.
- How to apply
- Start with the nearest VA medical center Prosthetic and Sensory Aids Service. A package generally includes VA physician approval with diagnosis and medical justification, VA Form 10-0103, owner authorization for rentals, an itemized estimate, permit and inspection costs, and a color photo.
Student renter
HUD Housing Choice Voucher Program
- Eligibility
- Housing Choice Vouchers are for low-income renters, including elderly people and people with disabilities, through local public housing agencies. Student renters are not automatically eligible; the PHA applies HUD student rules, income, immigration status, household composition, local preferences, and wait-list priority.
- What it covers
- Covers rental assistance rather than homeowner repairs. In the standard voucher model, the household generally pays about 30% of adjusted monthly income toward rent and utilities, while the PHA pays the approved subsidy to the landlord up to the local payment standard and rent-reasonableness limits.
- How to apply
- Find the public housing agency for the Iowa city or county where the household wants to rent, then follow that PHA's application and wait-list process. Expect income verification, student-status questions, identity and immigration documents when applicable, landlord approval, unit inspection, and lease review.
Where to start
Start with Iowa Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) when the urgent problem is a utility bill, shutoff notice, empty fuel tank, or unsafe heat or cooling situation. Choose Iowa Weatherization Assistance Program for a home that is drafty, poorly insulated, or expensive every month; expect an audit before work is approved. Use USDA Section 504 when a very-low-income owner lives in an eligible rural home and the repair affects habitability, accessibility, modernization, or health and safety. Veterans and servicemembers should ask VA about HISA before paying for ramps, bathroom access, or utility changes required by medical equipment. Student renters should contact HUD or the local public housing agency only if their full household can meet voucher rules.
Separate emergency repairs from benefit review
If there is immediate danger, call emergency services, the utility, code enforcement, or a licensed contractor first. These programs can reduce cost after eligibility review, but most do not approve work retroactively.
Source: ProFix Editorial Team. Last updated 2026-06-09. This guide is informational and does not replace program eligibility review, license verification, legal advice, tax advice, or emergency response.