Housing Assistance Payment (HAP) Ireland 2026

Housing Assistance Payment (HAP) in Ireland

HAP is Ireland's main social housing support for people renting privately. The local authority pays your rent directly to your landlord — and you can work full-time while receiving it. Here is who qualifies, how limits work, and how to apply.

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Housing Assistance Payment (HAP) Ireland 2026 — At a glance

Administered by
Local authority
Work restriction
None — full-time work allowed
Payment goes to
Landlord (directly from LA)
Means-tested
Yes (differential rent)
Housing list required
Yes
HRC required
Yes

Key facts — HAP 2026

Administered by Local authority Not the Dept. of Social Protection
How payment works LA pays landlord directly You pay differential rent to the LA
Work restriction None Full-time work allowed
Requirement Must be on housing list
Landlord must agree Yes Landlord signs LA agreement
HRC required? Yes

How HAP works — step by step

  1. Get on the social housing list

    Apply to your local authority for social housing support. You must be assessed as having a housing need (income below limits, current housing unsuitable, etc.) before you can access HAP.

  2. Find a private rental property

    You find a property yourself — HAP does not provide a property for you. The property must pass the local authority's inspection and the rent must be within the HAP limits for your area and household size.

  3. Get landlord to sign a Landlord Agreement

    Your landlord must agree to participate in HAP and sign a formal agreement with the local authority. Not all landlords agree — it is worth asking early in the rental process.

  4. Local authority pays the landlord

    The local authority pays your rent directly to the landlord every month. You pay a differential rent contribution to the local authority, based on your household income.

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You remain on the social housing waiting list while on HAP. If a local authority social housing property becomes available, you may be offered it and can choose to move from HAP to local authority housing.

HAP rent limits 2026

HAP rent limits depend on your local authority area and household size. The following are example limits for selected areas — confirm the exact limit with your local authority:

Household sizeDublin CityCork CityGalway City
Single person~€660/month~€600/month~€575/month
Couple / 1 adult + 1 child~€900/month~€800/month~€750/month
2 adults + 1–2 children~€1,200/month~€1,000/month~€950/month
2 adults + 3+ children~€1,800/month~€1,400/month~€1,300/month

If your landlord charges more than the HAP limit, you are responsible for the difference — but the Department of Social Protection has introduced a "Discretionary Payment" scheme in high-rent areas that allows local authorities to pay up to 35% above the standard limit in exceptional cases.

HAP vs Rent Supplement — the key differences

HAPRent Supplement
Administered byLocal authorityDept. of Social Protection
Payment goes toLandlord (directly from LA)Tenant (then to landlord)
Work restrictionNone — full-time work allowedMax 30 hours/week
DurationLong-term housing supportShort-term/emergency
Housing list requiredYesNo

Frequently asked questions

What is HAP in Ireland?

Housing Assistance Payment — a social housing support where the local authority pays your rent directly to a private landlord. You pay a differential rent contribution based on your income. Full-time work is allowed.

Who qualifies for HAP?

People assessed as having a social housing need by their local authority, who find a private rental property within HAP limits and whose landlord agrees to participate in the scheme.

Can I work full-time on HAP?

Yes. Unlike Rent Supplement (max 30 hours/week), HAP has no working hours restriction. Your differential rent contribution increases with income, but you keep the HAP support.

What are the HAP rent limits?

Limits vary by local authority and household size. In Dublin City, they range from approximately €660/month (single) to €1,800/month (large family). Your local authority sets the exact limits.

What is the difference between HAP and Rent Supplement?

HAP is long-term, allows full-time work, and is administered by local authorities with payment direct to landlords. Rent Supplement is short-term, limits work to 30 hours/week, and is administered by the DSP.

Can immigrants get HAP?

Yes — Stamp 4 holders, refugees and those with subsidiary protection who satisfy the HRC can qualify, provided they also qualify for the local authority social housing list.

How do I apply for HAP?

First apply for social housing support at your local authority. Once on the housing list and assessed as eligible, apply for HAP when you find a private rental property within the limits.

Common misunderstandings about HAP
  • HAP is not a cash payment — the local authority pays your landlord directly. You pay a differential rent contribution to the local authority based on your income.
  • You must find the property yourself — HAP does not allocate housing. You find a private rental and ask your landlord to participate.
  • Not all landlords accept HAP — you need your landlord's agreement before applying. It is illegal for a landlord to refuse solely on the grounds that rent will be paid by a local authority, but some do refuse.
  • Being on HAP does not remove you from the social housing waiting list — you remain on the list and may still be offered local authority housing in the future.
  • If the rent exceeds the HAP limit, you are responsible for the top-up difference — the local authority only covers up to the HAP threshold for your area and household size.
  • HAP and Rent Supplement are completely different schemes — administered by different bodies with different rules, limits and work restrictions.

Official sources

This page is reviewed against official Irish government guidance and updated whenever HAP limits or eligibility rules change.

This page was reviewed against official Irish government guidance and updated to reflect current HAP eligibility rules and rent limits.

Reviewed by

Vitor Alves

Founder of D’Emilia Accounting

Tax adviser and accountant helping immigrants and businesses in Ireland.

Last reviewed: June 22, 2026 · About this site