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North Dakota Senior Assistance Programs, Benefits, and Grants (2026)

Last updated: April 29, 2026

Bottom line: North Dakota has real help for older adults, but most programs are handled by different offices. Start with 211 for local referrals, North Dakota Health and Human Services for food, Medicaid, heat, and home care, and your local housing office for rent help. This guide shows what each program may cover, who may qualify, how to apply, and what delays to expect.

Contents

  • Urgent help
  • Quick start
  • State facts
  • Money and taxes
  • Housing and repair
  • Heat and utilities
  • Health and care
  • Food and meals
  • Local resources
  • FAQs

Urgent help in North Dakota

Call 911 if someone is in danger, has a medical emergency, or may be hurt right now. Call or text 988 for suicide, mental health, or substance-use crisis support. For shelter, food, fuel, bill help, and other local referrals, FirstLink 211 can connect North Dakota callers with nearby services any time of day.

If an older adult may be abused, neglected, or financially exploited, report it through Adult Protective Services or call 1-855-462-5465 and press 2. The state says the intake line is answered weekdays from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Central Time. If the person is in immediate danger, call 911 first.

Quick start: where to ask first

Use this table to avoid calling the wrong office. Some programs share an application, but housing, taxes, veterans benefits, and Medicare counseling are separate paths.

Need Best first stop What to ask for Reality check
Food, Medicaid, heat, basic aid Use Apply for Help through ND HHS. Ask which benefits fit your age, income, bills, and household. You may need income proof and follow-up forms.
Question about a case Contact the Support Center before resubmitting papers. Ask if anything is missing or due soon. Keep names, dates, and confirmation numbers.
Home care or caregiver help Start with Adult Aging services. Ask about in-home care, meals, respite, and assessment. Some services depend on local capacity.
Rent or public housing Check HUD North Dakota for housing offices. Ask about vouchers, public housing, and open waitlists. Waitlists can be long or closed.
Medicare choices Call ND Medicare help for SHIP counseling. Ask for free plan, billing, or Extra Help counseling. Do this before plan deadlines.

North Dakota facts that affect senior help

North Dakota is spread out, so local access matters. The Census QuickFacts page lists the state population estimate at 799,358 for July 1, 2025. It also lists people age 65 and older at 17.3%, median gross rent at $954 for 2020-2024, and the statewide poverty rate at 11.1% for 2020-2024. These figures help explain why heat, transportation, food, rent, and home-care support matter in both cities and rural counties.

One practical point: a statewide program may exist, but the real service may be run by a county, tribe, housing authority, community action office, senior center, or local nonprofit. When you call, give your county, city, age, household size, and the bill or need you are trying to solve.

Money help and property tax relief

North Dakota does not have one general “senior grant” that pays every bill. Most cash-style help is tied to a specific need, such as heat, food, rent, taxes, medical costs, or a crisis.

Property tax credit for homeowners

The Homestead Credit can reduce property taxes for people who are age 65 or older, or permanently and totally disabled, and meet income rules. The Tax Commissioner says 2026 applications are due April 1 in the assessment year. The 2026 page lists a $70,000 income limit and says there is no asset limit for homeowners.

Reality check: You apply through the local assessor or county director of tax equalization, not through a federal benefits office. If you missed the deadline, ask the local assessor what to do now and set a reminder for next year.

Renter’s Refund

The Renter’s Refund is for eligible senior renters and people with permanent and total disabilities. The state says the application is available after Martin Luther King Jr. Day through May 31 each year. If 20% of annual rent is more than 4% of annual income, the refund may be up to $600.

Reality check: Keep rent receipts, lease papers, and proof of income. If you moved during the year, keep records for each place you rented.

Legal help for benefits, housing, and debt

If you face eviction, a benefits denial, debt collection, guardianship worries, or a senior-rights issue, Senior Legal Services may help older adults and low-income North Dakotans with civil legal problems. Legal offices cannot take every case, so call early and tell them any court date or appeal deadline.

Housing, rent, and home repair help

Housing help in North Dakota often comes through local housing authorities, HUD-assisted buildings, ND Housing, nonprofit providers, or rural repair programs. A senior may need to apply to more than one list.

Program What it helps with Who may qualify Where to start
Housing Choice Voucher Monthly rent help in approved private housing Low-income renters, including older adults Use HUD’s housing list and call each local office.
Public housing Lower-cost units run by local housing agencies Income-qualified renters Ask local housing offices about open lists.
ND Housing rentals HUD rental assistance contracts in select areas Low-income, elderly, or disabled renters Check ND Housing before applying.
USDA Section 504 Repair loans and grants for rural homes Very-low-income rural homeowners; grants are for age 62+ Contact USDA repair staff first.

Reality check: Rent help is not instant. Some lists close when demand is high. Ask each housing office if it has a senior, disability, homelessness, or local preference. Keep your phone and mailing address current or you may lose your place.

For a deeper housing path, GrantsForSeniors.org has a separate North Dakota housing guide. For repairs, the national home repair grants guide explains common repair programs and what to ask before hiring anyone.

Heat, utilities, phone, and energy help

Heating help is one of the most important benefit paths in North Dakota. The LIHEAP page says applications are accepted year-round and that energy emergencies include shutoff or disconnect notices, being out of deliverable fuel, and minor repairs. LIHEAP may help with heating costs and may connect households to furnace or weatherization help.

Weatherization is different from a one-time bill payment. The Weatherization program works on energy efficiency, health, and safety in eligible homes. It may help with insulation, air sealing, heating safety, and related work after an assessment.

Reality check: Do not wait until a shutoff date if you can apply earlier. If your heat is off, your fuel tank is empty, or your furnace is unsafe, call the utility or fuel dealer and the HHS Customer Support Center the same day.

Health care, Medicare, and in-home support

Older adults often need two types of health help: coverage for medical bills and support to stay at home. These are related, but they are not the same application.

North Dakota Medicaid

The Medicaid eligibility page says a person must fit a coverage group and meet program rules. Older adults may qualify through age, disability, income, long-term care need, or other coverage groups. Apply before you assume you are over the limit, especially if medical or care costs are high.

Home and community care

North Dakota’s home-care programs include Medicaid State Plan personal care, home and community-based services, Service Payments for the Elderly and Disabled (SPED), Expanded SPED, Older Americans Act services, and other supports. These programs may help with personal care, homemaker tasks, respite, meals, transportation, and case planning.

Reality check: Expect an assessment. A program may ask about bathing, dressing, transfers, meals, medication help, fall risk, memory problems, and whether unpaid help is already available.

PACE and Medicare counseling

The PACE program is for people age 55 and older who live in a service area, meet nursing-home level of care, and can live safely in the community at enrollment. It is not available in every town, so ask about service area first.

For Medicare plan questions, use free SHIP counseling through the state insurance department. North Dakota’s Medicare page says counselors help with Original Medicare, Part D, Medicare Advantage, long-term care insurance, and other Medicare issues at no cost.

For more detail, see the GrantsForSeniors.org guide to Medicare Savings in North Dakota.

Food, groceries, and senior meals

Food help may come as monthly benefits, food boxes, home-delivered meals, or local pantry food. Seniors should ask about all four, because one program may not cover enough.

Food help What it gives Who it may help Good question to ask
SNAP Monthly grocery benefits on an EBT card Income-qualified households “Can I count my medical costs?”
CSFP Monthly USDA food package Low-income adults age 60+ “Where is the nearest pickup?”
Senior meals Home-delivered or group meals Often age 60+ “Do you serve my county?”
Food pantries Groceries or food distributions Rules vary by site “Should I call before I visit?”

Apply for SNAP through the SNAP program page. For older adults, report verified medical costs because they may affect the benefit calculation. For food boxes, the CSFP program serves low-income people at least age 60. For pantry and mobile food help, check food pantry sites and call before going because hours can change.

Transportation and local resources

Transportation is a major barrier in rural counties. North Dakota DOT says its statewide transit program provides public transportation services for people who need a ride. Use Statewide Transit resources to find local providers, then ask about senior fares, wheelchair access, door-to-door help, and how many days ahead you must reserve.

Local senior centers and aging providers may offer meals, activities, benefits help, wellness checks, rides, or referrals. In Fargo and eastern counties, Valley Senior Services is a key local contact. In Grand Forks, the Grand Forks center can help connect older adults with local programs. In Minot, the Minot Commission is a common starting point for meals and senior support.

For a broader list, use the GrantsForSeniors.org pages for North Dakota AAAs and senior centers when you need nearby contacts.

Caregivers, veterans, disability, and protection

Caregivers should ask Adult and Aging Services about respite, caregiver counseling, training, and other supports. If a family member is doing daily care, use the GrantsForSeniors.org caregiver programs guide to understand which paths may pay or support family caregivers.

Veterans and surviving spouses should work with a County or Tribal Veterans Service Officer. The VSO finder can connect veterans to free help with health care, pensions, compensation, long-term care, burial benefits, and claims. GrantsForSeniors.org also has a senior veterans guide for North Dakota.

For nursing home, assisted living, basic care, or swing-bed concerns, contact the Ombudsman program. The state lists 1-855-462-5465, option 3, for ombudsman help. For disability-related benefit paths, the GrantsForSeniors.org disabled seniors guide may help.

How to start without wasting time

Start with the need that could hurt you fastest. Heat, eviction, food, medicine, abuse, and loss of care should come before long-term planning. Then make one folder for proof papers and one page for call notes.

  • Write the need in one sentence: “I need help paying my heating bill,” or “I need help bathing safely at home.”
  • Know your county: Many referrals depend on where you live.
  • Ask for the right program: Say “LIHEAP,” “SNAP,” “Medicaid,” “home-care assessment,” “rent voucher,” or “Renter’s Refund.”
  • Ask what is missing: Do not guess. Ask the worker to name each missing paper.
  • Keep proof: Save letters, screenshots, confirmation numbers, and names.

Phone scripts you can use

For 211: “I am a senior in [city or county], North Dakota. I need help with [food, rent, heat, rides, or shelter]. Can you give me the closest programs, phone numbers, and hours?”

For ND HHS: “I am [age]. My household has [number] people. I need help with [SNAP, Medicaid, LIHEAP, or home care]. What application should I use, and what proof do you need first?”

For housing: “I am a senior renter in [city]. Are your voucher or public housing waitlists open? Do you have a senior or disability preference? How do I keep my application active?”

For Medicare help: “I need free SHIP counseling. I want help checking my Medicare plan, drug costs, and whether I may qualify for Extra Help or a Medicare Savings Program.”

Documents and proof checklist

Proof Why it matters Where often used
Photo ID and address Shows identity and North Dakota residence Most applications
Income proof Shows Social Security, pension, wages, or other income SNAP, Medicaid, tax relief, housing
Utility bills Shows heating cost, shutoff risk, or fuel need LIHEAP and weatherization
Lease or tax bill Shows rent, home ownership, or property tax Housing, Renter’s Refund, Homestead Credit
Medical costs May affect SNAP or Medicaid rules SNAP and health programs
Discharge papers Shows military service Veterans benefits

Common delays and reality checks

  • Housing lists: A program can be real and still have no open slots right now.
  • Rural access: Some services cover a wide area but run only on certain days.
  • Medical assessments: Home-care programs may require both money rules and care-need rules.
  • Tax deadlines: Property tax and renter programs have filing windows. Late filing can mean waiting.
  • Phone changes: If an agency mails a notice and cannot reach you, your case may close.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Do not pay a fee to someone who promises a “senior grant.” Official benefit applications do not require a grant finder.
  • Do not ignore letters from HHS, housing, Social Security, Medicare plans, or the tax office.
  • Do not apply for only one housing list if other lists are open nearby.
  • Do not leave medical costs off a SNAP application if you are elderly or disabled.
  • Do not wait for a shutoff, eviction, or caregiver crisis before asking for help.

What to do if denied, delayed, or overwhelmed

If you are denied, read the notice. It should say why you were denied and how to appeal or ask for review. If the reason is missing paperwork, send the exact proof requested and keep a copy. If the decision seems wrong, ask about the appeal deadline the same day you receive the notice.

If you are delayed, call and ask, “What is the next action needed on my case?” If you are overwhelmed, ask 211, a senior center, a family member, a library worker, legal aid, or a local Human Service Zone office to help you organize papers and make calls.

Related North Dakota guides

These GrantsForSeniors.org guides may help with more detailed steps. Use them after you know which need is most urgent.

Resumen en español

Las personas mayores en North Dakota pueden pedir ayuda para comida, calefacción, renta, Medicaid, Medicare, cuidado en casa, transporte, impuestos de propiedad y apoyo local. Si necesita ayuda rápida, llame al 211. Si hay peligro inmediato, llame al 911. Para crisis de salud mental, llame o mande texto al 988. Para beneficios como SNAP, Medicaid o LIHEAP, contacte a North Dakota Health and Human Services. Para vivienda, llame a la autoridad de vivienda local. Guarde pruebas de ingresos, renta, facturas, gastos médicos y cartas que reciba.

About this guide

We check this guide against official government, local agency, and trusted nonprofit sources. GrantsForSeniors.org is independent and is not a government agency.

Program rules, funding, and eligibility can change. Always confirm details with the official program before you apply.

See something wrong or outdated? Email info@grantsforseniors.org with corrections.

Last updated: April 29, 2026 May 1, 2026

Next review: August 1, 2026

Frequently asked questions

What is the fastest way to find senior help in North Dakota?

Call 211 for local referrals. For SNAP, Medicaid, LIHEAP, and some home-care paths, contact North Dakota Health and Human Services. For rent help, call local housing authorities.

Does North Dakota have property tax help for seniors?

Yes. Eligible homeowners may use the Homestead Property Tax Credit. Eligible renters may use the Renter’s Refund. Both have rules, deadlines, and proof requirements.

Where do seniors apply for heating help?

Apply for LIHEAP through North Dakota Health and Human Services. If heat is shut off, fuel is gone, or you have a disconnect notice, say it is an energy emergency.

Can seniors get help staying at home instead of moving to a nursing home?

Possibly. North Dakota has Medicaid home and community-based services, personal care, SPED, Ex-SPED, PACE, and Older Americans Act services. Eligibility depends on income, care needs, location, and assessment results.

Who can help with Medicare plan questions?

North Dakota SHIP counselors can give free Medicare counseling. They can help with Original Medicare, Part D, Medicare Advantage, billing issues, and plan choices.

What should I do if my application is denied?

Read the notice, check the reason, and ask about the appeal deadline. If the problem is missing proof, send the exact document requested and keep a copy.


About the Authors

Analic Mata-Murray
Analic Mata-Murray

Managing Editor

Analic Mata-Murray holds a Communications degree with a focus on Journalism and Advertising from Universidad Católica Andrés Bello. With over 11 years of experience as a volunteer translator for The Salvation Army, she has helped Spanish-speaking communities access critical resources and navigate poverty alleviation programs.

As Managing Editor at Grants for Seniors, Analic oversees all content to ensure accuracy and accessibility. Her bilingual expertise allows her to create and review content in both English and Spanish, specializing in community resources, housing assistance, and emergency aid programs.

Yolanda Taylor
Yolanda Taylor, BA Psychology

Senior Healthcare Editor

Yolanda Taylor is a Senior Healthcare Editor with over six years of clinical experience as a medical assistant in diverse healthcare settings, including OB/GYN, family medicine, and specialty clinics. She is currently pursuing her Bachelor's degree in Psychology at California State University, Sacramento.

At Grants for Seniors, Yolanda oversees healthcare-related content, ensuring medical accuracy and accessibility. Her clinical background allows her to translate complex medical terminology into clear guidance for seniors navigating Medicare, Medicaid, and dental care options. She is bilingual in Spanish and English and holds Lay Counselor certification and CPR/BLS certification.