Senior benefits in Bexar County, Texas
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Local programs
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Texas programs
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Federal programs
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Categories
Local starting point
Bexar Area Agency on Aging — a division of the Alamo Area Council of Governments (AACOG); designated Area Agency on Aging under the Older Americans Act Title III for Bexar County (San Antonio); distinct from the AACOG Alamo Area AAA which serves 12 surrounding counties
210-477-3275
See which of these Bexar County programs you may qualify for.
Find my benefitsEmergency Aid
Texas Comprehensive Energy Assistance Program (CEAP) — LIHEAP
StateTexas's implementation of the federal Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) is the Comprehensive Energy Assistance Program (CEAP), administered by the Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs (TDHCA) through a statewide network of subrecipient agencies — Community Action Agencies, non-profits, and County BoCC departments — that collectively cover all 254 Texas counties. CEAP provides utility bill assistance, deposits, and energy crisis intervention (both summer cooling crisis and winter heating crisis) for low-income households. Eligibility is calculated at 150% of the Federal Poverty Income Guidelines — for 2026 that is $23,475/year for a single household and $45,600/year for a family of four. Senior-headed households receive application priority. To find the local subrecipient serving a specific Texas county, call TDHCA at 800-525-0657 or visit the TDHCA CEAP page. Each subrecipient has its own application window, document checklist, and operating hours; some operate appointment-only systems with limited weekly intake slots.
$200–$1,600/yr
Bexar County Economic & Community Development — CEAP (Texas LIHEAP)
CountyBexar County Economic & Community Development (BCECD) is the direct TDHCA-contracted Comprehensive Energy Assistance Program (CEAP) subrecipient for Bexar County — a BoCC department delivery model parallel to Dallas's DCHHS (and Harris's nonprofit BakerRipley model is the regional exception). BCECD's CEAP delivers utility bill assistance, deposit assistance, and energy crisis assistance to low-income Bexar County households. Bexar County is typically awarded $6-7 million annually in LIHEAP funding. Eligibility is set at 150% of the Federal Poverty Income Guidelines ($23,475/year single 2026). Senior-headed households receive application priority. San Antonio's hot summer climate makes COOLING-CRISIS assistance critical for Bexar County seniors — heat-related illness is a documented mortality risk. BCECD also coordinates with the Residential Energy Assistance Partnership (REAP), an additional San Antonio energy assistance program, and with the City of San Antonio Senior Services for senior-pathway intake. Apply by calling BCECD at 210-335-3666 (Mondays for appointment scheduling) or visiting BCECD at 233 N. Pecos Suite 590, San Antonio TX 78207. The BCECD office is the single intake point for both CEAP and Utility Assistance.
$200–$1,600/yr
Bexar County Community Resources — Emergency Rental, Utility, and Senior Aid
CountyThe Bexar County Community Resources program is the broader emergency safety net administered by Bexar County Economic & Community Development (BCECD) Community Impact Division, supplementing the BCECD CEAP (tx.bexar.bcecd_ceap) for households whose needs extend beyond utility emergencies. Services include: (1) emergency rental assistance for Bexar County residents facing imminent eviction; (2) utility assistance for households not eligible for or already maxed out on CEAP; (3) referrals to broader Bexar County safety-net resources including Alamo Area Resource Center (rental/utility, free legal services, Social Security filing assistance, homeless prevention, SNAP applications) and City of San Antonio Senior Services. Bexar County's Community Impact division aims to prevent service disconnection and help households become self-sufficient. The program is APPROPRIATIONS-LIMITED — Bexar County Commissioners Court sets the annual funding level, and funds can exhaust mid-fiscal-year. The utility assistance waitlist has historically been paused during high-demand periods. Apply by calling BCECD at 210-335-3666 (Mondays for appointment scheduling) or visiting the office at 233 N. Pecos Suite 590, San Antonio TX 78207. For senior-specific intake, the City of San Antonio Senior Services line (210-207-8198) provides a parallel pathway specifically designed for older adults.
$200–$2,500/yr
Employment
Senior Community Service Employment Program (SCSEP)
FederalSCSEP places low-income job seekers age 55 and older into paid part-time community service assignments at nonprofits and public agencies — schools, libraries, food pantries, senior centers, parks departments, and similar host sites. Participants typically work 20 hours per week and earn at least the federal, state, or local minimum wage (in California, $16.50/hour in 2026, which works out to roughly $17,000 per year before taxes). The placement is paired with skills training, computer literacy, resume help, and one-on-one coaching aimed at moving the participant into unsubsidized employment within the broader job market. SCSEP is administered nationally by the Department of Labor and locally by AARP Foundation, the National Council on Aging, Goodwill, the National Caucus and Center on Black Aging, and state agencies; coverage exists in every California county though slot availability and the host-site mix vary by grantee.
$15,000–$17,000/yr
Food Assistance
Congregate Meals at Senior Centers
FederalFunded under Older Americans Act Title III-C1 and run locally by Area Agencies on Aging, the Congregate Nutrition Program serves hot meals to seniors age 60 and older at senior centers, community centers, places of worship, and similar gathering sites. Most sites serve lunch on weekdays; some serve dinner or weekend meals as well. There is no income test. A voluntary contribution (typically $2–$4 per meal) is suggested but never required, and no senior is turned away for inability or unwillingness to contribute. Beyond the meal itself, sites typically offer health screenings, nutrition counseling, social activities, transportation assistance, and a built-in social network that reduces the isolation that contributes to depression and accelerated cognitive decline in older adults.
$1,000–$2,500/yr
Home-Delivered Meals (Meals on Wheels)
FederalFederally authorized under the Older Americans Act and locally operated by Area Agencies on Aging and Meals on Wheels affiliates, the Home-Delivered Meals Program brings hot or frozen meals — typically five to seven per week — to seniors age 60 and older who are homebound or have difficulty preparing meals safely on their own. There is no income test; the program is open to all qualifying seniors regardless of wealth. A voluntary contribution is suggested (a few dollars per meal) but never required, and no senior is turned away for inability or unwillingness to pay. Beyond the meals themselves, the daily home visit functions as a wellness check — drivers are trained to notice changes in health, mood, or living conditions and to alert local care coordinators when something looks wrong.
$1,500–$4,000/yr
Senior Farmers' Market Nutrition Program (SFMNP)
FederalSFMNP gives low-income seniors annual vouchers — roughly $40 per eligible person in California in 2026 — to buy fresh, unprepared, locally-grown fruits, vegetables, herbs, and honey at participating farmers' markets, roadside stands, and community-supported agriculture (CSA) programs. The federal program is funded by USDA and distributed locally by the California Department of Food and Agriculture through county and nonprofit partners (food banks, area agencies on aging, senior centers). Vouchers are typically distributed once per year between May and October. SFMNP is small in dollar value relative to other senior benefits but pairs well with CalFresh because it lets recipients buy farmers'-market produce that traditional grocery-store benefits don't always cover well.
$35–$50/yr
Health Care
CHAMPVA (Civilian Health and Medical Program of the VA)
FederalCHAMPVA is the VA's health-care program for spouses, surviving spouses, and dependent children of veterans who are rated 100% permanently and totally disabled from a service-connected condition, who died of a service-connected condition, or who died on active duty. CHAMPVA shares the cost of covered services — inpatient and outpatient care, prescriptions, durable medical equipment, mental health, and skilled nursing care — typically paying 75% of the VA-allowable amount after a small annual deductible. Once a beneficiary becomes Medicare-eligible at 65, CHAMPVA functions as a secondary payer that picks up most of what Medicare doesn't cover, including Part B coinsurance and many Part D-equivalent prescriptions. CHAMPVA is administered out of the VA Health Administration Center in Denver and is separate from TRICARE; a person eligible for TRICARE cannot use CHAMPVA.
$3,000–$15,000/yr
VA Health Care
FederalVA Health Care covers primary care, specialty care, mental health, hospital stays, prescriptions, and preventive services at the nationwide network of VA medical centers and community-based outpatient clinics. Most veterans with an other-than-dishonorable discharge are eligible to enroll. After enrollment the VA assigns the veteran a Priority Group (1 through 8) based on service-connected disability rating, special circumstances (former POW, Purple Heart, catastrophic disability), and income relative to the geographic-means-test threshold. Priority Groups 1 through 5 receive most care at no cost; higher priority groups pay copays that are still well below typical Medicare and private-insurance cost-sharing. VA Health Care does not replace Medicare for most senior veterans — most enroll in both — but it can substantially reduce out-of-pocket costs for care received at VA facilities, especially prescriptions ($0–$11 per fill versus typical Medicare Part D copays).
$5,000–$20,000/yr
Healthcare
Texas Medicaid for the Aged, Blind, or Disabled (MEPD)
StateTexas Medicaid for the Aged, Blind, or Disabled (the MEPD handbook categories at HHSC) is the SSI-related Medicaid pathway for low-income Texans who are age 65 or older, blind, or disabled and who do not require nursing home care. Eligibility is income-tested against the federal SSI Benefit Rate (FBR) — for 2026 the FBR is $967/month for an individual and $1,450/month for a couple — with a $2,000 countable-asset limit ($3,000 for a couple). Recipients who qualify for SSI cash benefits are automatically Medicaid-eligible in Texas; non-SSI applicants apply through HHSC. Medicaid covers physician visits, hospital care, prescription drugs, lab and X-ray, family planning, vision and hearing services, durable medical equipment, mental health care, and other services. For Texans who need long-term services and supports (in-home personal care, adult day care, home modifications) the pathway is STAR+PLUS (tx.star_plus). Apply at YourTexasBenefits.com, by calling 2-1-1, or by calling HHSC at 1-800-252-8263.
$4,000–$25,000/yr
Texas STAR+PLUS — Medicaid Managed Care + Long-Term Services and Supports
StateSTAR+PLUS is Texas Medicaid's managed-care program for adults age 65+ and adults with disabilities. It bundles full Medicaid medical coverage with long-term services and supports (LTSS) — the in-home personal care, adult day care, home modifications, personal emergency response systems, and respite care that keep older Texans out of nursing facilities. Members must first qualify for Texas Medicaid (typically via the tx.medicaid_abd pathway for non-LTSS members, or via the STAR+PLUS HCBS waiver for members at risk of nursing-home placement). All STAR+PLUS members are assigned a service coordinator who arranges medical care and long-term services. The STAR+PLUS HCBS (Home and Community-Based Services) waiver expands Medicaid LTSS eligibility to people whose income exceeds the regular Medicaid limit but is below 300% of the SSI Federal Benefit Rate ($2,901/month single 2026), provided they meet a nursing-facility level of care criterion. Apply through HHSC at YourTexasBenefits.com, by calling 2-1-1, or by calling HHSC at 1-800-252-8263. The STAR+PLUS HCBS waitlist (interest list) can have multi-year waits — apply early if Medicaid LTSS may be needed.
$6,000–$80,000/yr
University Health CareLink + 75% Uninsured Standardized Discount
CountyUniversity Health (operated by the Bexar County Hospital District) is Bexar County's public hospital system — operating University Hospital (a Level I trauma center and one of the largest hospitals in South Texas), the Robert B. Green Campus, and a network of community health clinics. University Health offers two stacked financial assistance benefits: (1) CareLink, the principal financial assistance program for Bexar County RESIDENTS who are uninsured or underinsured with household income AT OR BELOW 200% of the Federal Poverty Level — provides primary care, specialty care, hospital inpatient and outpatient, emergency care, prescription drugs, behavioral health, and dental services at reduced cost; (2) a UNIVERSAL 75% Uninsured Standardized Discount applied AUTOMATICALLY to ALL uninsured patients at University Health, regardless of financial need or residency — this discount is NOT means-tested and applies to non-Bexar-County uninsured patients as well. The 200% FPL CareLink threshold matches Parkland Dallas's full-care threshold (more generous than Harris Health Houston's 150% FPL gate). Income verification typically requires the most recent federal income tax return, OR three most recent paycheck stubs, OR three most recent bank statements. Apply through University Health at 210-358-3350 or via the financial assistance application at universityhealth.com. Patients may receive financial assistance up to 250% FPL on a sliding-scale basis. The Bexar County Hospital District residency requirement applies only to the CareLink program; the 75% uninsured discount has no residency requirement.
$1,500–$55,000/yr
Housing
Housing Choice Voucher (Section 8)
FederalThe Housing Choice Voucher program (commonly called Section 8) helps very-low-income households rent housing in the private market. The household generally pays about 30% of its adjusted income toward rent and the voucher covers the rest, up to a local payment standard, so housing cost scales to income instead of market rent. Unlike Section 202, a voucher is not tied to one building — it can be used at any rental whose owner accepts it and that meets program rent and quality standards, and in California source-of-income discrimination law requires most landlords to consider voucher holders. Vouchers are administered by local Public Housing Agencies, each with its own waiting list; many California PHAs maintain senior or senior/disabled preference categories. The benefit is large in high-rent California markets, but voucher waiting lists are among the longest of any benefit — frequently 5 to 10+ years, and many are closed except during brief lottery openings.
$8,000–$20,000/yr
HUD Section 202 Supportive Housing for the Elderly
FederalSection 202 funds nonprofit-owned apartment communities built specifically for low-income seniors age 62 and older, paired with on-site supportive services (a service coordinator, transportation, meal programs, light housekeeping referrals) designed to let residents age in place. Residents generally pay 30% of their adjusted income toward rent and HUD covers the rest, so the out-of-pocket housing cost scales down with income rather than tracking market rent. For a low-income senior in a high-rent California market this is one of the largest single dollar-value benefits available — but Section 202 properties are individually owned, have limited units, and almost always carry multi-year waiting lists, so it is best understood as something to get on the list for now rather than a benefit that starts quickly.
$5,000–$15,000/yr
Income Support
Supplemental Security Income (SSI)
FederalSSI is a federal monthly cash benefit for people 65 and older (or blind / disabled at any age) with very limited income and resources. It's a separate program from Social Security retirement — you can qualify for SSI even if you never worked enough to get Social Security, and many people qualify for both. In California, SSI recipients also get the State Supplementary Payment (SSP) on top, which adds several thousand dollars a year to the federal benefit. SSI is also a gateway: it can automatically open the door to Medi-Cal, CalFresh, and Extra Help.
$11,604–$17,400/yr
Medicare Savings
Extra Help (Part D Low-Income Subsidy)
FederalExtra Help (also called the Part D Low-Income Subsidy or LIS) lowers your prescription drug costs under Medicare Part D. It can pay your Part D premium, cap copays at a few dollars per prescription, and eliminate the coverage gap. The Social Security Administration estimates Extra Help is worth about $5,300 a year for people who qualify. It's frequently bundled with QMB / SLMB / QI but you can apply independently.
$4,000–$5,300/yr
Qualifying Individual (QI)
FederalQI is the top income tier of the Medicare Savings Programs. Like SLMB, it pays the Medicare Part B premium (around $185/month, roughly $2,220/year) — but for households whose income is too high for SLMB. Eligibility falls between 120% and 135% of the federal poverty level. QI funding is a federal block grant awarded on a first-come, first-served basis each calendar year, and enrollment must be renewed every year. QI is mutually exclusive with full Medi-Cal — anyone already receiving Medi-Cal benefits is not eligible for QI but typically gets the Part B premium covered by Medi-Cal directly.
$2,100–$2,220/yr
Qualified Medicare Beneficiary (QMB)
FederalQMB pays your Medicare Part A and Part B premiums, deductibles, coinsurance, and copayments. If you qualify, you should not be billed for any Medicare-covered services. It's the most generous of the four Medicare Savings Programs and is widely under-enrolled — the federal government estimates millions of eligible Americans are not enrolled.
$1,800–$2,400/yr
Specified Low-Income Medicare Beneficiary (SLMB)
FederalSLMB pays your Medicare Part B premium (currently around $175/month, ~$2,100/year) if your income is too high for QMB but still below 120% of the federal poverty level. It's the middle tier of the Medicare Savings Programs and is widely under-enrolled — when income is just above the QMB cutoff, SLMB usually applies. Asset limits are the same as QMB.
$2,100–$2,220/yr
Nutrition
Bexar Area Agency on Aging (AACOG) — Title III Senior Nutrition + Benefits Counseling
CountyThe Bexar Area Agency on Aging is the federally designated Area Agency on Aging for Bexar County under the Older Americans Act Title III, operated as a division of the Alamo Area Council of Governments (AACOG). AACOG follows the regional Council of Governments model that serves most of Texas — distinct from the nonprofit-housed models in Harris County (Houston Health Department) and Dallas County (Community Council of Greater Dallas). AACOG's Bexar AAA is DISTINCT from its Alamo Area AAA — the Alamo Area AAA covers 12 surrounding counties (Atascosa, Bandera, Comal, Frio, Gillespie, Guadalupe, Karnes, Kendall, Kerr, McMullen, Medina, Wilson) while the Bexar AAA serves only Bexar County. Services include: (1) Title III Congregate Meals at senior centers across Bexar County; (2) Home-Delivered Meals for homebound seniors age 60+; (3) Benefits Counseling — the Bexar-area State Health Insurance Assistance Program (SHIP) provider for Medicare enrollment, Medicare Advantage options, and Medicare Savings Programs; (4) Care Coordination — professional staff assess needs and arrange local resources to support independent living; (5) Caregiver Support including respite care, training, and support groups; (6) In-Home Support — short-term assistance with personal care, light housekeeping, and minor home repairs. Eligibility for Title III services is age 60+ and Bexar County residency. Family caregivers supporting someone 60+, and grandparents age 55+ raising grandchildren, are also eligible. Call AACOG Bexar AAA at 210-477-3275 (Bexar County line) or the Statewide Texas AAA line at 855-937-2372.
$1,500–$5,000/yr
Supportive Services
National Family Caregiver Support Program (OAA Title III-E)
FederalTitle III-E of the Older Americans Act funds support specifically for the family members and informal caregivers who look after an older adult — not the senior, the person caring for them. Through the local Area Agency on Aging, an unpaid family caregiver (an adult child, a spouse, or another relative) of a person 60 and older can access respite care that gives them a break, individual counseling and caregiver support groups, training on safe transfers, medication management and dementia care, information and assistance navigating other programs, and limited supplemental services like consumable supplies or minor home modifications. There is no income test for the caregiver. Caregiver burnout is one of the leading reasons a senior ends up institutionalized, so this program protects both the caregiver's health and the senior's ability to stay home.
$1,000–$5,000/yr
Older Americans Act Supportive Services (Title III-B)
FederalTitle III-B of the Older Americans Act funds a broad menu of non-medical supportive services that help seniors age 60 and older stay independent in their own homes and communities. Through the local Area Agency on Aging, eligible seniors can access subsidized or free transportation to medical appointments and grocery stores, homemaker and chore help, personal care, friendly-visitor and telephone-reassurance programs, adult day care, home repair and modification (grab bars, ramps), legal assistance for non-criminal matters like benefits appeals and consumer fraud, and case management to coordinate all of it. There is no income test, though local agencies target services to those in greatest social and economic need and a voluntary contribution may be requested. The same Area Agency on Aging that runs senior meals administers these services, so one phone call opens the door to the whole package.
$500–$3,000/yr
Tax Relief
Federal Credit for the Elderly or the Disabled (IRS Schedule R)
FederalThe Credit for the Elderly or the Disabled is a nonrefundable federal income tax credit, claimed on IRS Schedule R, for taxpayers who are age 65 or older (or who are permanently and totally disabled) and have low income. The maximum credit is $1,125 for a single filer and up to $1,500 for a married couple, but the actual amount is reduced — often to zero — by any nontaxable Social Security benefits and by adjusted gross income above a low threshold. Because the income limits have not been updated since the 1980s, the credit most often produces a real dollar benefit for low-income seniors whose income comes from small pensions or wages rather than Social Security, and for people under 65 retired on permanent disability. It is one of the most under-claimed line items on the senior tax return, in part because the seniors it targets frequently are not required to file at all.
up to $1,125/yr
Texas Over-65 Homestead Exemption + School District Tax Ceiling (Tax Freeze)
StateTexas seniors age 65 and older qualify for two stacked property tax benefits on their primary residence: (1) an additional $60,000 over-65 exemption from school district taxes that stacks on top of the base $140,000 homestead exemption, for a combined $200,000 reduction in the taxable value of the home for school district taxes; and (2) a SCHOOL DISTRICT TAX CEILING (commonly called the 'tax freeze') that locks the dollar amount of school district taxes at the level paid in the year the homeowner first qualified at age 65 — even if the home's value or the school tax rate rises in later years, the school tax bill cannot increase. The ceiling transfers proportionally if a senior moves to a new homestead. Counties, cities, and special districts MAY (but are not required to) adopt their own optional over-65 exemption (up to $10,000+) and their own tax ceiling — adoption rates and amounts vary statewide. Apply by April 30 with the county Appraisal District using Form 50-114 (Application for Residence Homestead Exemption), checking the 'Age 65 or Older' box and attaching proof of age. Late applications are accepted for up to TWO YEARS retroactively. No income test.
$600–$3,500/yr
Transportation
VIA Senior Half-Fare (Age 62+) + Free Weekend Senior Service + VIAtrans ADA Paratransit
CountyVIA Metropolitan Transit is the regional transit authority for Bexar County and San Antonio, operating fixed-route bus, VIA Primo bus rapid transit, and VIAtrans ADA paratransit. VIA's senior fare structure is distinctively generous: seniors AGE 62 AND OLDER ride for HALF FARE — a younger age threshold than the 65+ used by most peer Texas transit systems (METRO Houston, DART Dallas). Standard senior fares include a One Day Pass for $1.35 and one-way fare for 65 cents. Even more generously, seniors and limited-mobility riders can ride for ONLY 25 CENTS from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on weekdays, and FREE ALL DAY on WEEKENDS, with a VIA senior goCard ID. The senior goCard ID is FREE — seniors age 62+ qualify for one free senior goCard ID by presenting a government-issued ID with date of birth (state ID, driver's license, veteran's ID, or passport). VIAtrans is VIA's curb-to-curb ADA paratransit service for individuals who cannot use regular bus service because of a disability — eligibility is functional-ability-based per ADA criteria, not age-based. VIAtrans one-way fare is $2.00 for adults. Apply for senior goCard or VIAtrans by visiting a VIA Information Center or calling VIA Customer Information at 210-362-2020.
$400–$2,800/yr
Utility Assistance
Federal Lifeline
FederalFederal Lifeline is a Universal Service Fund program that discounts a single phone or internet (or bundled) service line by $9.25 per month for low-income households — and by up to $34.25 per month for residents of qualifying Tribal lands. Eligibility has two paths: an income test (household income at or below 135% of the federal poverty level) and a program-based path (current participation in Medicaid/Medi-Cal, SNAP/CalFresh, SSI, federal public housing assistance, or the Veterans Pension or Survivors Pension Benefit). Either path qualifies the household — both don't have to be met. The federal Lifeline discount is separate from but designed to stack with California LifeLine, so most California seniors who qualify for one will qualify for the other.
$111–$411/yr
Weatherization Assistance Program (WAP)
FederalWAP funds free home energy upgrades for income-eligible households to reduce energy bills, improve comfort, and address health-and-safety hazards. After a free professional energy audit, local providers install whatever the audit identifies — typically attic and wall insulation, air-sealing, weatherstripping, duct sealing, water-heater wraps, LED lighting, smart thermostats, refrigerator replacement (for very old high-draw units), HVAC tune-ups or replacement, ventilation upgrades, and carbon-monoxide detector installation. Average per-home investment in California ranges from $3,000 to $8,000 depending on the home's condition. WAP is open to homeowners AND renters (rental units require landlord written consent). The program is one-time per home (typically), though homes can sometimes be re-weatherized after 15 years if a new audit identifies additional measures. WAP is funded primarily by the U.S. Department of Energy with additional layered funding from HHS (LIHEAP-Wx) and state utility programs, all delivered by the same local providers.
$3,000–$8,000/yr
Veteran Benefits
VA Aid & Attendance (Improved Pension)
FederalAid & Attendance is a tax-free monthly benefit added on top of the basic VA pension for wartime veterans (or their surviving spouses) who need help with daily activities like bathing, dressing, eating, or managing medications — or who are housebound, in a nursing facility, or have very limited eyesight. The benefit is widely under-claimed because many veterans assume their non-service-connected condition disqualifies them. Eligibility requires the veteran to have served at least 90 days of active duty with at least one day during a recognized wartime period, plus income and net worth below VA limits. VA uses a special income calculation that subtracts unreimbursed medical expenses from gross income before applying the limit — so the income test here is approximate.
$12,000–$34,488/yr
Not legal or financial advice. The agency makes the final eligibility decision.
