FHA Loans

One-line summary: Government-insured loans designed for borrowers who need lower down payments and more flexible credit qualifying than conventional financing requires, popular for first-time buyers and for borrowers rebuilding credit.

Best for

First-time homebuyers, borrowers with credit scores below conventional minimums, and buyers who don’t have a 20% down payment saved. Also useful for borrowers with higher debt-to-income ratios who don’t qualify for conventional financing at the same purchase price.

Key terms (typical)

AttributeTypical Range
Eligible properties1–4 unit primary residences
Down paymentAs low as 3.5% with an established 580+ credit score
Credit score580 minimum (some lenders 600+); below 580 may require 10% down
Loan limitsVary by county, ranging from a floor of $541,287 up to a ceiling of $813,050 in major Texas metropolitan counties
Mortgage insuranceUpfront MIP (1.75% financed into the loan balance) plus annual MIP for the life of the loan on standard 30-year terms
Term15 or 30 years fixed; some ARM options
Debt-to-incomeUp to 50% or higher with compensating factors
Property conditionFHA appraisal requires the home meet minimum property standards

Why borrowers choose this program

  • Low down payment. 3.5% down means a $300,000 home can be bought with $10,500 down, substantially less than conventional’s typical 5–20%.
  • Flexible credit qualifying. FHA accepts credit scores down to 580 (sometimes lower with compensating factors), opening the door for borrowers who don’t fit conventional credit boxes.
  • Gift funds allowed. The entire down payment can come from gift funds from a family member, employer, or approved source.
  • Assumable. FHA loans can be assumed by a qualified buyer, useful if rates have risen by the time you sell.

Considerations

  • Mortgage insurance is permanent on most loans. Unlike conventional PMI, FHA’s annual MIP typically stays for the life of the loan (or 11 years if you put 10%+ down). Many FHA borrowers refinance into conventional once they have 20% equity to drop the MIP.
  • Property must meet FHA standards. Homes with significant deferred maintenance, structural issues, or safety hazards won’t pass FHA appraisal. For fixer-uppers, the FHA 203(k) renovation loan exists for this exact reason.
  • Loan limits cap proceeds. FHA loan limits vary by county and are below conventional jumbo limits in many areas. For higher-priced homes, conventional or jumbo financing may be required.

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