Address match
Use the place where service will be used. Apartment, shelter, campus, shared-household, and temporary-address applications may need clearer address proof or a household worksheet.
Eligible Bourg residents can compare Lifeline-supported phone service options, check required proof, and choose a provider that serves their address.
Check If You Qualify →Bourg is home to 2,010 residents. As a small town, many households in the Bourg area may qualify for Lifeline-supported service.
For Bourg, treat the application like an address-level service check, not a citywide promise. Use the same address on the National Verifier, provider form, and uploaded proof. Compare at least two providers for coverage at your home and travel locations, and keep a copy of your proof documents before submitting.
Nearby communities like New Orleans, Baton Rouge, Shreveport may have different carrier options, so confirm the provider serves your exact Bourg ZIP code.
You may qualify for Lifeline phone service in Bourg if your household can document participation in an accepted assistance program or meet the income guideline:
Even if you don't participate in any of the programs above, Bourg residents whose household income is at or below 135% of the Federal Poverty Guidelines may still qualify. For a household of one, that's approximately $20,325/year; for a household of four, approximately $41,625/year. See full income limits →
Phone availability, model, shipping, and upgrade terms depend on the provider and your address.
Compare monthly voice and text allowances before choosing a Lifeline provider.
Data amounts, speeds, hotspot terms, and network coverage vary by provider plan.
Check activation steps, SIM/eSIM support, replacement rules, and annual renewal reminders.
Lifeline-authorized providers may serve the Bourg area, but coverage, phone terms, monthly data, and support rules vary by address. Compare provider disclosures before enrolling:
Provider availability in Bourg can change by ZIP code and service address. Use the provider's official disclosures to confirm the plan, device terms, coverage, and renewal rules before submitting documents.
Confirm you meet program or income requirements. You'll need a valid Louisiana address and proof of participation in a qualifying program or proof of income.
Apply online in just a few minutes. Have your benefit letter, EBT card number, or income documentation ready. The National Verifier will confirm your eligibility.
If approved, follow the provider's shipping, SIM/eSIM, and activation instructions. Delivery timing, device model, and replacement support are controlled by the provider, not by the Lifeline program itself.
Before submitting a Lifeline application from Bourg, match the service address, proof document, and provider coverage check. The National Verifier can approve eligibility, but the carrier still controls device inventory, SIM activation, shipping method, replacement fees, and whether the plan is available at the exact address.
Use the place where service will be used. Apartment, shelter, campus, shared-household, and temporary-address applications may need clearer address proof or a household worksheet.
Upload the full benefit letter, income record, or identity document. Cropped screenshots, expired letters, missing dates, and mismatched names are common causes of delays.
Run the provider coverage check for the Bourg address before choosing a plan. Lifeline approval does not guarantee every carrier has signal, device stock, or the same data allowance in every ZIP code.
Keep the application ID, provider confirmation, device or SIM instructions, port-in notes, and annual recertification messages in one folder. If service stops, a phone is lost, or a provider asks for more proof, these records help resolve the account without starting over.
Do not choose a provider from a headline alone. A strong offer can still be a poor fit if the network is weak at the service address, the phone is backordered, the SIM requires extra activation steps, or the support team cannot resolve port-in questions quickly.
Do not upload partial proof. Reviewers need the applicant name, program name, active date, agency name, and address details when those fields apply. If the household recently moved, use the newest address document and keep the previous address handy in case the verifier asks for history.
Do not ignore recertification. Lifeline accounts can be paused when annual notices are missed. Save notices from the National Verifier and the carrier, then set a personal reminder before the renewal window so service does not stop unexpectedly.