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House of Hope Housing LLC provides supportive, independent living environments without medical or personal care services—just a place to call home.

Head Quarter

3500 Lenox Rd NE Suite 1500 Atlanta, GA 30326

Email Address

support@hohhousing.com

Telephone

888-305-3844

About Us

A home, not a facility.

About Us

A home, not a facility.

We believe everyone deserves a place to feel safe, valued, and supported. Our mission is to create a true home environment—not an institution—for individuals who need stability and compassion in their lives.

Why We Started

In 2019, we opened our first home with one mission: “Be the bridge between despair and dignity for those abandoned by systems. Today, we stand as advocating guardians of basic human sanctuary—because housing isn’t charity. It’s justice!

Values

We don't rent rooms—we cultivate family. Veterans share coffee with seniors. Returning citizen helping neighbors tend gardens together. Case managers aren't staff—they're housemates who've walked similar paths. Our homes thrive on Peace of Mind.

Independence Required

All residents must be physically and mentally capable of living without assistance. You are responsible for your own

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Features

What We Provide

We offer more than just a place to stay—we provide a safe, supportive environment where individuals can reclaim stability, dignity, and peace of mind.

Housing Only

Eligibility

Amenities

Requirements:

Special Offers

Compassionate Housing Options for Unique Needs

While we do not provide medical or personal care, we understand that every resident’s situation is different. That’s why House of Hope Housing LLC offers flexible, compassionate housing solutions for individuals with specific life challenges—such as reentry, aging, or transitional living needs.

Our Story

Building More Than Housing: “A Sanctuary for Second Chances"

Why We Started:
“The Spark of Hope”

> House of Hope Housing LLC began with a moment of painful clarity. Our founder watched a decorated veteran sleep in their car outside a VA hospital.
Down the street, a senior wept while packing belongings after an eviction.
And in the shadows, a returning citizen walked free incarceration with nowhere to go but a park bench. These weren’t isolated tragedies—they were symptoms of a broken system.

> We asked a radical question: What if we stopped trying to ‘fix’ people and simply gave them what they desperately needed—a key to their own door? No bureaucracy. No pity. Just a clean room, a shared kitchen, and the dignity of self-determination.

> In 2019, we opened our first home with one mission: “Be the bridge between despair and dignity for those abandoned by systems. Today, we stand as advocating guardians of basic human sanctuary—because housing isn’t charity. It’s justice!

Our Values:

The Unshakable Foundation

1. Community: The Circle of Belonging

“We don't rent rooms—we cultivate family. Veterans share coffee with seniors. Re-entry neighbors tend gardens together. Case managers aren't staff—they're housemates who've walked similar paths. Our homes thrive on:”

  • Shared responsibility: Weekly household meetings where residents review rules.
  • Collective healing: Community meals cooked by rotating "kitchen captains".
  • Radical inclusion: “No one eats alone on holidays.”

2. Second Chances: The Unlocked Door

“We specialize in 'impossible cases'—the 70-year-old with an eviction history. The veteran with PTSD triggers. The returning citizen with no ID. Why? Because: Redemption.”

  • Less than perfect: Background checks assess safety, not morality.
  • Potential pedigree: No credit scores, no income minimums.

3. Dignity: The Right to Own Your Story

In-house inspections. In-house chaperones. No fluorescent-lit cafeterias. We reject institutional models because:

  • Privacy is sacred: Locking doors, personal refrigerators, no bed checks.
  • Autonomy is non-negotiable: Come/go freely, control your own meds, manage your money.
  • Your past stays yours: We never require therapy or “progress reports”.

"A home, not a facility."

4. Courage: The Will to Correct Broken Systems

We operate independently by choice—not to evade responsibility, but to:

  • Preserve affordability: Licensing fees would triple rents.
  • Resist dehumanization: No mandatory drug tests or life-skills classes.
  • Protect privacy: No government databases tracking residents.