[ section 8 · Florida FMR ]

section 8 rents
in florida.

HUD Fair Market Rents across 1,391 Florida ZIP codes for FY2026. the median 2-bedroom runs $1,860/mo and the median 3-bedroom $2,420/mo — with 3-bedroom rents spanning $1,200 to $4,820/mo depending on the ZIP.

statewide median

FMR by bedroom.

median Fair Market Rent across all Florida ZIPs, by unit size (FY2026).
bedroomsmedian FMR / mo
studio / 0 BR$1,470
1 BR$1,590
2 BR$1,860
3 BR$2,420
4 BR$2,860

3-bedroom FMR ranges from $1,200 to $4,820/mo across Florida ZIP codes — Small Area FMRs vary widely within a single metro.

top metros

where the rents are.

the Florida HUD areas with the most covered ZIPs, with 2-bedroom and 3-bedroom FMRs.
metro / areaZIPs2 BR3 BR
Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater207$1,990$2,540
Orlando-Kissimmee-Sanford147$2,000$2,510
Miami-Miami Beach-Kendall119$2,440$3,130
Fort Lauderdale81$2,330$3,210
Jacksonville73$1,670$2,060
West Palm Beach-Boca Raton69$2,250$2,920
North Port-Bradenton-Sarasota59$2,050$2,660
Palm Bay-Melbourne-Titusville44$1,710$2,330

SAFMR = ZIP-level variation. HUD sets Small Area Fair Market Rents by ZIP in many of these metros, so two homes in the same city can carry very different voucher ceilings.

the underwriting

the DSCR math at florida's median rent.

a worked example — assumptions stated, not hidden. run your exact numbers in the calculator.

At the median 3-bedroom Section 8 rent of $2,420/mo, the maximum PITIA that still clears a 1.20 DSCR is $2,017/mo. Assuming ~25% of that payment goes to property taxes and insurance, the maximum principal & interest is $1,513/mo — which supports roughly a $227,000 loan at 7% over 30 years, or about a $303,000 purchase at 75% LTV.

median 3 BR rent$2,420/mo
max PITIA @ 1.20 DSCR$2,017/mo
max P&I (~75% of PITIA)$1,513/mo
supported loan (7% / 30yr)$227,000
implied price (75% LTV)$303,000

Assumptions: 1.20 DSCR floor, ~25% of PITIA for taxes + insurance, 7.0% 30-year fixed, 75% LTV. Your taxes, insurance, rate, and LTV will differ — run your exact numbers in the DSCR calculator.

FAQ

Florida Section 8, answered.

the four questions investors ask before underwriting a Florida voucher deal.
Florida FMR —
What is the Section 8 rent for a 3-bedroom in Florida?
The median 3-bedroom Fair Market Rent in Florida is $2,420/mo (FY2026). It varies by ZIP — from $1,200 to $4,820/mo across the state under HUD's Small Area FMR schedule.
Florida FMR —
How are Fair Market Rents set in Florida?
HUD publishes Fair Market Rents (and Small Area FMRs by ZIP where applicable) annually — these are the FY2026 figures. Local public housing authorities then set voucher payment standards at 90–110% of FMR, and rent reasonableness versus comparable local units still applies before a lease is approved.
Florida FMR —
Which Florida metros have the highest Section 8 rents?
Fort Lauderdale leads at $3,210/mo for a 3-bedroom, followed by Miami-Miami Beach-Kendall at $3,130/mo.
Florida FMR —
Does Section 8 rent in Florida cover a DSCR loan?
At the median 3-bedroom rent of $2,420/mo, the maximum PITIA at a 1.20 DSCR is $2,017/mo. Assuming ~25% goes to taxes and insurance, that supports roughly a $227,000 loan at 7% over 30 years — about a $303,000 purchase at 75% LTV.
live · all 50 states

FMR on every florida listing.

Verleon AI overlays HUD Fair Market Rents on every active listing in Florida — and all 50 states — so you see the Section 8 ceiling and DSCR before you make an offer. See the Section 8 investing guide or the FMR-by-state overview.

Data source: HUD FY2026 Fair Market Rents (Small Area FMRs where published), snapshot 2026-07-14. Payment standards vary by public housing authority (typically 90–110% of FMR). Figures are for research and do not guarantee approved rent on any specific unit.

Not investment advice. Verleon AI provides analytical tooling for real-estate professionals. Underwriting outputs (DSCR, cap rate, Section 8 FMR estimates, scores) are modeled from public and licensed data and are not a substitute for independent due diligence, legal counsel, lender pre-approval, or licensed appraisal. Past performance is not indicative of future results.