

When your income comes from benefits instead of a job, one line on a rental or loan application can stop you cold: “attach your two most recent pay stubs.” You don’t have pay stubs. You never will, at least not from this income. And for a second it feels like the system assumes people like you don’t count.
You do count, and your income counts too. Benefit payments are steady, predictable, and often more reliable than a paycheck, since they don’t disappear when a company has a bad quarter. The trick is knowing which document proves each type of benefit, how to get it fast, and how to hand it over so a landlord or lender says yes without a fuss. That’s exactly what this guide walks through. If you’re staring down that pay-stub box right now, here’s the reassuring part: there are plenty of documents that prove income without a single pay stub, and the one you need is usually a free download away.
Strip away the jargon and proof of income is just any credible document showing you receive enough money, regularly enough, to cover what you’re applying for. For a salaried worker that’s a pay stub. For you, it’s an official letter or statement from whoever pays your benefit. These carry real weight because they come straight from the source, whether that’s the Social Security Administration, the VA, or your state.
Most benefit income is what the tax world calls “unearned income.” That label doesn’t make it any less real to a landlord or a lender. What they care about is the amount, that it arrives on a schedule, and that it’ll keep coming. Your job is to show all three.
This one trips up almost everyone, so let’s clear it up before anything else. When you were first approved for benefits, you got an award letter. It’s the original notice confirming you qualified and what you’d be paid at the time. The problem is it can be years old, which makes some landlords and lenders wave it off as outdated.
What they usually want instead is a current benefit verification letter, sometimes called a budget letter or proof of income letter. It’s the same idea, reissued with today’s numbers, and you can pull a fresh one whenever you need it. So if an application gets rejected because your award letter looked stale, you didn’t do anything wrong. You just need the current version, and it takes minutes to get.
Benefit type | Document to use | Where to get it | How fast |
Social Security retirement | Benefit verification letter | my Social Security account online | Instant download |
SSDI (disability) | Benefit verification letter | my Social Security account online | Instant download |
SSI | Benefit verification letter | my Social Security online, or by phone | Instant, or 10 days by mail |
VA benefits | VA benefit summary letter | VA.gov letters page | Instant download |
Unemployment | State benefits statement | Your state unemployment portal | Usually instant |
Workers’ comp | Award or wage-replacement letter | Your claims administrator | Varies |
Pension | Pension statement or 1099-R | Plan administrator | Varies |
For both retirement and Social Security Disability Insurance, one document does the heavy lifting: the benefit verification letter from the SSA. It states who you are, that you receive benefits, and your monthly amount, and it’s widely accepted for housing, loans, and mortgages. It even shows your gross monthly benefit alongside the net after any Medicare premium comes out, so a reviewer sees the real number that lands in your account.
Here’s how to get yours, fastest option first:
Pull the letter close to when you apply, not months ahead, so the numbers read as current.
Supplemental Security Income works the same way for proof purposes. The SSA’s benefit verification letter covers SSI right alongside retirement and disability, so you request it through the exact same channels above. One small heads-up: for SSI, some updates and requests need a quick phone call rather than the fully online path, so if the website won’t let you finish, that 1-800 number is your backup.
If you’re a veteran, your proof lives on VA.gov rather than with Social Security. Download your VA benefit summary letter, sometimes called your VA award letter, from the VA letters page. It confirms your benefit status and monthly amount and works as income verification for renting or borrowing.
One important distinction if a home loan is your goal: the benefit summary letter is not the same as your Certificate of Eligibility for a VA loan. The COE comes from a separate housing tool on VA.gov. If you’re renting or applying for a regular loan, the benefit summary letter is what you want.
Unemployment. Your state unemployment office can produce an official statement showing your weekly amount and how long you’re set to receive it. Landlords accept these, but since the benefit is temporary, expect to pair it with savings or another income source to cover the full lease term.
Workers’ compensation. If a work injury put you on wage-replacement benefits, your claims administrator can give you a letter spelling out the payments. Like unemployment, it’s usually time-limited, so plan to show how you’ll bridge any gap once it ends.
Pensions. A pension statement from your plan administrator lays out your regular monthly payment, and your annual 1099-R backs it up as a yearly record. Together they paint a clean picture of steady retirement income.
Most landlords screen income against the rent, usually wanting your monthly income at roughly three times the rent. Your benefit letter answers the “how much” question. To make the application bulletproof, hand over the documents landlords actually accept for an apartment as a small packet rather than a single sheet.
The strongest packet pairs your benefit verification letter with two or three months of bank statements showing the deposits landing right on schedule. That combination does something powerful: the letter says what you’re owed, and the statements prove it actually shows up. A reviewer who might squint at one document relaxes when both tell the same story.
Lenders lean on the same benefit letter, and here there’s a quiet advantage worth knowing. Because benefits like SSDI, SSI, and VA disability are typically tax-free, some lenders will “gross up” that income, treating it as worth more than its face value since you keep all of it. That can lift the income they credit you with and help you qualify for more. It’s lender-dependent, so ask whether they do it.
For a bigger loan or a mortgage, bring the fuller file lenders expect. This rundown of the documents a lender may want covers the rest, and your benefit letter plus bank statements sit right at the center of it. Veterans eyeing a home should remember the separate COE step covered above.
Even with the right paperwork, you may hit a landlord or lender who hesitates at benefit income. Don’t take it as a no. Try these, roughly in order:
Can I use my award letter as proof of income? You can try, but a current benefit verification letter is safer. Award letters can be years old, and some reviewers reject them as outdated. Pull a fresh letter instead; it only takes a few minutes.
Is disability income enough to rent an apartment? Yes, if it meets the landlord’s income-to-rent ratio, usually about three times the monthly rent. Prove it with your benefit letter plus recent bank statements, and add a cosigner or larger deposit if you fall short of the ratio.
How do I get a benefit verification letter? The fastest way is your my Social Security account online, where you can download it instantly. You can also call the SSA at 1-800-772-1213 or request one by mail, which arrives within about 10 business days.
Do landlords accept SSI or SSDI as income? They should. Both are legitimate, verifiable income, and the SSA’s benefit verification letter documents them. Some landlords are just unfamiliar with the letter, which is why pairing it with bank statements showing the deposits helps so much.
Benefit income is real income, and proving it comes down to one move: get the current letter from whoever pays you, not the old award letter, and pair it with bank statements showing the money arrive. Social Security, SSDI, and SSI all run on the SSA’s benefit verification letter, downloadable in minutes online. Veterans pull a benefit summary letter from VA.gov. Unemployment, workers’ comp, and pensions each have their own statement. Hand it over as a small packet, be upfront, and a fixed income stops being the thing that holds up your application and becomes just another way to get approved.
This article is general information, not financial or legal advice. Benefit rules and figures change, so confirm current details with the SSA, the VA, or your state agency before you apply.