Emergency Assistance for Seniors in Nevada

Emergency Assistance, Resources, and Programs for Seniors in Nevada (2025)

Last updated: August 2025

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What this guide covers

This is a Nevada-specific, step-by-step guide for seniors and caregivers who need urgent help with housing, food, utilities, health coverage, transportation, and legal issues. It focuses on practical steps, how to apply, what to expect, and where to get free one-on-one help from official sources.

You’ll find:

  • First steps to take in a crisis
  • State and county programs for rent, utilities, and food
  • Medicaid, Medicare, and long-term care options in Nevada
  • Transportation and home care supports
  • Veteran, LGBTQ+, tribal, and rural resources
  • Local contacts by region (Clark, Washoe, Rural/Frontier)
  • Frequently asked questions
  • A resource directory and links to official sites

Reality check: Some programs run out of funds or have waiting lists. Paperwork can be slow. If one door closes, use the backups listed here and call Nevada Care Connection or Nevada 211 to find the next option.


If you need help right now

Tip: Keep a folder or envelope with ID, Social Security card (or number), proof of address, income, and any notices (eviction, shutoff). Almost every program will ask for these.


At a glance: Who to call for what

NeedBest first call or linkWhy this helps
Any emergency911Immediate police, fire, medical response
Crisis counseling988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline — https://988lifeline.orgFree, 24/7 support; connects to local help
General assistance navigationNevada 211 — https://www.nevada211.orgFinds nearby food, housing, utility, transport help
Benefits (SNAP, Medicaid, Energy Assistance)Access Nevada (DWSS) — https://accessnevada.dwss.nv.govApply online for multiple programs
Senior options counselingNevada Care Connection — https://nevadacareconnection.orgLocal ADRC helps you compare programs and apply
Abuse/neglect/exploitationAdult Protective Services — https://adsd.nv.govInvestigates and connects to protective services
Utility bill crisisNV Energy — https://www.nvenergy.comPayment plans and assistance referrals
Gas bill crisisSouthwest Gas — https://www.swgas.com/en/nevada-assistancePrograms and referrals to local partners
Veteran supportNevada Dept. of Veterans Services — https://veterans.nv.govBenefits, claims, and crisis resources

Sources: State of Nevada Aging and Disability Services Division (ADSD) — https://adsd.nv.gov; Nevada 211 — https://www.nevada211.org; DWSS/Access Nevada — https://accessnevada.dwss.nv.gov; NV Energy — https://www.nvenergy.com; Southwest Gas — https://www.swgas.com/en/nevada-assistance; NDVS — https://veterans.nv.gov.


Housing and homelessness prevention

Housing emergencies move fast. Start with a county or city agency, then pair that with state and nonprofit help.

Key programs and contacts

What to expect: Emergency rental help depends on available funds and proof of hardship. Housing authorities manage Section 8/HCV and public housing, but waitlists may be long. Coordinated Entry is used for homelessness services; you’ll complete an assessment to match you to available options.

Steps if you received an eviction notice

  1. Do not ignore it. Read the notice for dates and court information.
  2. Call legal aid right away (free help for seniors):
  3. Apply for help: Access Nevada — https://accessnevada.dwss.nv.gov
  4. Keep attending any court hearings. Missing court can lead to faster eviction.
  5. Ask your landlord in writing for a payment plan while your applications are pending.

Reality check: Rental programs can close when funds run out. If you’re denied, ask for the denial reason in writing and show it to legal aid or Nevada Care Connection to find alternatives.

Housing help at a glance

Program/AgencyRegionWhat it offersWhere to start
Clark County Social ServiceClark CountyEmergency rent, utilities, shelter placementhttps://www.clarkcountynv.gov/government/departments/social_service/
Washoe County HSAWashoe CountyShelter/diversion, case management, rent helphttps://www.washoecounty.gov/hsa
SNRHA (Housing Authority)Clark CountySection 8/HCV, public housing (waitlists)https://www.snvrha.org
Reno Housing AuthorityWashoe CountySection 8/HCV, public housing (waitlists)https://www.renoha.org
Nevada Rural Housing AuthorityRural countiesAffordable rentals, vouchers (varies)https://www.nvrural.org
Help Hope Home (CoC)Southern NevadaCoordinated Entry for homelessnesshttps://helphopehome.org
Nevada 211StatewideShelter and rent assistance locatorhttps://www.nevada211.org

Utilities, energy, and weatherization

If you receive a shutoff notice, contact your utility the same day and apply for assistance immediately. Fees add up quickly after disconnection.

Tip: Keep recent bills, your account number, and any medical documentation that shows health risks from disconnection (e.g., oxygen, dialysis). Ask the utility about medical or critical care flags on your account.

Utility help comparison

ProgramWho runs itWhat it doesHow to apply
Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP/EAP)DWSS (State of Nevada)Helps pay power/gas; can prevent shutoffAccess Nevada — https://accessnevada.dwss.nv.gov
Weatherization Assistance Program (WAP)Nevada Housing Division (with local providers)Fixes drafts/leaks, insulation, safer appliancesStart at NHD — https://housing.nv.gov
NV Energy assistanceNV EnergyPayment plans, referrals to partner fundshttps://www.nvenergy.com
Southwest Gas assistanceSouthwest GasBill assistance and efficiency programshttps://www.swgas.com/en/nevada-assistance
PUCN consumer helpPublic Utilities Commission of NevadaComplaint resolution for utility issueshttps://puc.nv.gov

Food and nutrition

Healthy food is available through several no-cost or low-cost programs.

Reality check: Some sites require ID and proof of address for first-time visits. Call ahead to confirm hours and what to bring.

Food resources at a glance

ResourceRegionWhat it providesWhere to start
SNAP (DWSS)StatewideMonthly food benefits on EBT cardhttps://accessnevada.dwss.nv.gov
Senior meals (ADSD network)StatewideHome-delivered or group meals at centershttps://adsd.nv.gov
Three SquareSouthern NevadaPantries, senior groceries, mobile marketshttps://www.threesquare.org
Food Bank of Northern NevadaNorthern/Rural NVPantries, mobile pantry, CSFPhttps://fbnn.org
CSFP (Senior Boxes)Statewide (through partners)Monthly USDA food package for eligible seniorshttps://www.fns.usda.gov/csfp/commodity-supplemental-food-program

Health coverage, long-term care, and counseling

Home and community supports in Nevada:

  • Home- and Community-Based Services (HCBS) waivers and Personal Care Services may help you stay at home with help for bathing, meals, and more. Learn options and how to apply through Nevada Care Connection — https://nevadacareconnection.org — and Nevada Medicaid — https://dhcfp.nv.gov.

Behavioral health:

Dental help:

Reality check: Medicaid and HCBS waivers often have paperwork and waiting lists. Start early, ask which documents you need, and stay in touch with your assigned worker.

Health and advocacy help

ServiceWhat it doesWhere to start
MedicareCoverage and plan choiceshttps://www.medicare.gov
Nevada MedicaidHealth coverage incl. long-term carehttps://dhcfp.nv.gov and https://accessnevada.dwss.nv.gov
Nevada SHIPFree, unbiased Medicare counselinghttps://www.shiphelp.org
Long-Term Care Ombudsman (ADSD)Protects residents’ rights in facilitieshttps://adsd.nv.gov
Senior Medicare Patrol (SMP)Fights Medicare fraud and scamshttps://www.smpresource.org

Transportation

  • RTC of Southern Nevada (Las Vegas area): Reduced fares for seniors, paratransit (RTC ACCESS) — https://www.rtcsnv.com
  • RTC Washoe (Reno/Sparks): Reduced fares for seniors, paratransit — https://www.rtcwashoe.com
  • Medicaid Non-Emergency Medical Transportation (NEMT): Covered rides to medical appointments for eligible Medicaid members. Learn how to schedule through Nevada Medicaid — https://www.medicaid.nv.gov — or ask your Medicaid plan for the NEMT phone number.
  • Nevada 211 ride finder (regional partners, volunteer drivers in rural areas): https://www.nevada211.org

Tip: Apply for reduced-fare IDs early; it may take time to process documents and photos.


Home care, caregivers, and independence

  • Nevada Care Connection (ADRC): Free options counseling, caregiver support, and referrals — https://nevadacareconnection.org
  • Family Caregiver Support (via ADSD network): Respite, counseling, support groups — https://adsd.nv.gov
  • Assistive Technology: Nevada’s programs help seniors get devices for safety and independence. Start at ADSD — https://adsd.nv.gov — or ask Nevada Care Connection about assistive technology and device loan programs.
  • Weatherization and home safety: See Weatherization Assistance Program (above) for energy safety upgrades — https://housing.nv.gov

Reality check: Many caregiver and home care services have limited hours or waitlists. Ask about private-pay sliding scales and veteran benefits that can help fill gaps.


Legal help, consumer protection, and elder abuse

Tip: If someone pressures you to sign something quickly or pay fees up front for public benefits, walk away and call legal aid or the AG’s office.


Money help and benefits

Reality check: Benefit amounts and eligibility change. Always use the official application portals and keep copies of everything you submit.


Inclusive resources for diverse seniors

LGBTQ+ seniors

Tip: If you experience discrimination in housing or services, document what happened and contact legal aid or the AG’s Consumer Protection unit.

Veteran seniors

Tip: Aid & Attendance can help with home care or assisted living costs for eligible veterans and surviving spouses. Ask NDVS to help you apply.

Tribal elders

Tip: If you are eligible for both IHS and Medicare/Medicaid, enrolling in Medicare/Medicaid can expand your choices and help your clinic with reimbursement.

Rural and frontier seniors

Reality check: Travel distances and limited providers are common in rural counties. Ask about telehealth through your health plan and volunteer driver programs through local senior centers.


Resources by region

Clark County (Las Vegas, Henderson, North Las Vegas)

Washoe County (Reno/Sparks)

Rural/Frontier Counties


How to apply: common documents

Most programs ask for:

  • Government ID
  • Social Security number
  • Proof of Nevada residency (mail, lease, utility bill)
  • Proof of income (Social Security award letter, pension, pay stubs)
  • Recent bills (rent, utilities) and any emergency notices
  • For medical/long-term care: doctor’s notes, medication list, insurance cards

If you don’t have a document, tell the agency. They can often accept other proof or help you get replacements. For Social Security documents, visit https://www.ssa.gov.


Real-world examples


Warnings, tips, and reality checks

  • Never pay anyone to “guarantee” public benefits. Use Access Nevada and official agency numbers.
  • If a program denies you, ask for the denial in writing. You can appeal or apply to a different program.
  • Keep copies of everything you submit and note dates and names of people you speak with.
  • During extreme heat, check Nevada 211 for cooling centers and tips — https://www.nevada211.org. Heat illness can be deadly; see CDC guidance — https://www.cdc.gov/disasters/extremeheat.
  • Report scams to the Nevada Attorney General — https://ag.nv.gov — and Medicare fraud to SMP — https://www.smpresource.org.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

  1. Where do I start if I need help with more than one issue (rent, food, utilities)?
  1. Is there rental help for seniors in Las Vegas?
  1. How do I stop a power shutoff?
  1. Can I get home-delivered meals in Nevada?
  1. Where can I get unbiased Medicare advice?
  • Nevada SHIP counselors provide free, unbiased counseling. Find your local SHIP via the national locator: https://www.shiphelp.org.
  1. I think a nursing home is not treating my spouse fairly. Who can help?
  1. What help exists for veterans with long-term care costs?
  1. Is there special help for tribal elders?
  • Check with your tribe and the Inter-Tribal Council of Nevada (https://itcn.org) for Title VI elder services and nutrition programs. IHS clinic staff can guide health benefits (https://www.ihs.gov).
  1. I live in a rural county with no bus system. How do I get to appointments?
  1. How long do benefits take to process?
  • Processing times vary. Submit a complete application through Access Nevada (https://accessnevada.dwss.nv.gov), respond quickly to requests for documents, and ask for an expedited review if you have an emergency (e.g., eviction or shutoff notice).
  1. Are there programs to help with energy efficiency at home?
  1. Who do I call about fraud or scams targeting seniors?
  1. Where can I get low-cost dental care?
  1. How do I apply for SNAP and Medicaid at the same time?
  1. I’m on a fixed income. Are there property tax breaks for seniors?
  • Nevada offers certain exemptions (e.g., veteran, surviving spouse, blind). Check the Nevada Department of Taxation for statewide rules and contact your county assessor for local options: https://tax.nv.gov.

Resource tables you can print

Table 1 — Emergency and navigation

TopicAgency/LinkNotes
Emergencies911Police, fire, medical
Crisis mental health988 — https://988lifeline.org24/7 free support
Resource navigationNevada 211 — https://www.nevada211.orgFind local help
Senior options counselingNevada Care Connection — https://nevadacareconnection.orgADRC network
Benefits applicationsAccess Nevada — https://accessnevada.dwss.nv.govSNAP, Medicaid, EAP

Table 2 — Housing and rent

AgencyRegionLink
Clark County Social ServiceClark Countyhttps://www.clarkcountynv.gov/government/departments/social_service/
Washoe County HSAWashoe Countyhttps://www.washoecounty.gov/hsa
SNRHA (Housing Authority)Clark Countyhttps://www.snvrha.org
Reno Housing AuthorityWashoe Countyhttps://www.renoha.org
Nevada Rural Housing AuthorityRural countieshttps://www.nvrural.org
Help Hope Home (CoC)Southern Nevadahttps://helphopehome.org

Table 3 — Utilities and energy

Provider/ProgramWhatLink
Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP/EAP)State help paying power/gashttps://accessnevada.dwss.nv.gov
Weatherization Assistance (WAP)Energy safety/efficiency upgradeshttps://housing.nv.gov
NV EnergyPayment plans, assistance referralshttps://www.nvenergy.com
Southwest GasBill assistance programshttps://www.swgas.com/en/nevada-assistance
PUCNUtility complaintshttps://puc.nv.gov

Table 4 — Food and meals

ResourceRegionLink
SNAP (DWSS)Statewidehttps://accessnevada.dwss.nv.gov
Senior meals (ADSD network)Statewidehttps://adsd.nv.gov
Three SquareSouthern Nevadahttps://www.threesquare.org
Food Bank of Northern NevadaNorthern/Rural NVhttps://fbnn.org
CSFP (USDA)Statewide partnershttps://www.fns.usda.gov/csfp/commodity-supplemental-food-program

Table 5 — Health and protections

ServiceLink
Medicarehttps://www.medicare.gov
Nevada Medicaid (DHCFP)https://dhcfp.nv.gov
Nevada Medicaid (member info)https://www.medicaid.nv.gov
Nevada SHIP locatorhttps://www.shiphelp.org
Long-Term Care Ombudsman (ADSD)https://adsd.nv.gov
Senior Medicare Patrolhttps://www.smpresource.org
Nevada Attorney General (Consumer Protection)https://ag.nv.gov

Sources and official links (selected)


Disclaimer

Program funding, eligibility, and contact details can change. Always confirm information with the relevant agency or official website before applying or making decisions. This guide links to government and well-established organizations to help you verify current details.


About This Guide

by the GrantsForSeniors.org Editorial Team

The GrantsForSeniors.org editorial team has been building benefit and assistance resources for seniors nationwide since 2020. We research programs across all 50 states by reviewing government websites, checking agency updates, and gathering information from available sources.

Our Commitment to You:

  • Experience & Expertise: The information in this guide is compiled and reviewed by a team with experience in senior services and financial aid programs. We are committed to sharing our knowledge to help you find the support you need.
  • Authority & Trust: We rely on verified sources, including government agencies, non-profit organizations, and official program websites, to ensure the accuracy of our content. Our goal is to be a trusted authority you can rely on for credible information.
  • Clarity & Accessibility: We understand that seeking financial assistance can be challenging. This guide is designed to be clear and easy to understand, breaking down complex topics into actionable steps.

While we work hard to provide the most accurate information available, please note that program details and eligibility requirements can change. We recommend always checking with the official program source or agency website for the most current information, as we are not official agencies but rather compile available information.

  • Last Updated: August 2025
  • Sources Verified: August 2025
  • Next Review: February 2026

If you find outdated information, discover new resources, or have questions, please contact us at info@grantsforseniors.org. We’re here to help seniors find resources that can make a real difference in their daily lives.