The household rule can confuse applicants because two people may share an address but not share a household. The reverse can also happen. A person may live with relatives and still share expenses as one household. Lifeline generally allows one benefit per household, so this issue should be reviewed before applying.
What household usually means
A household generally involves people who live together and share income and expenses. It is not always only a family unit. Roommates, tenants, relatives, students, shelter residents, and people using shared addresses may need to answer questions about whether income and expenses are shared.
When a worksheet may matter
If another adult at the same address already receives Lifeline, the applicant may need to complete household questions or a worksheet. The goal is to decide whether the applicant is part of the same economic household or a separate household. The worksheet should be answered truthfully because duplicate benefit issues can create problems later.
Examples that need careful review
- Two roommates rent separate rooms and do not share income.
- An adult child lives with parents and shares expenses.
- A person lives in a shelter or group living location.
- A tenant uses the landlord's mailing address.
- A family member receives benefits under the same address.
What to keep
Keep the household worksheet, confirmation page, provider messages, and any notes about the address situation. If the verification system asks for more information, records can help the applicant respond consistently.
After reviewing this rule, return to the eligibility notes and documents checklist.