
How Veterans Can Get to the Closing Table With Little to Nothing Out of Pocket
How Veterans Can Get to the Closing Table With Little to Nothing Out of Pocket
The Assumption That Is Keeping Veterans From Buying
One of the most persistent misconceptions in the homebuying process is that purchasing a home requires a substantial amount of cash upfront. For most buyers that assumption is rooted in reality. Down payments, closing costs, prepaid expenses, and other settlement charges can add up to a significant sum that takes years to accumulate.
For veterans that assumption simply does not hold. The combination of the VA loan benefit and a few strategic approaches to closing costs means that getting to the closing table with little to nothing out of pocket is not a stretch. It is a realistic and achievable outcome for veterans who understand how to use what they have earned.
Step One: Use Your VA Loan Benefit
The foundation of any low-cost closing strategy for veterans is the VA home loan benefit itself. The zero down payment feature eliminates what is typically the single largest upfront cost in any real estate transaction. On a $350,000 home a conventional buyer putting down five percent would need $17,500 before a single closing cost is paid. A VA buyer needs zero.
The absence of private mortgage insurance compounds that advantage. Conventional buyers who put down less than twenty percent pay PMI on top of their monthly mortgage payment, often adding hundreds of dollars per month to their housing cost indefinitely or until they reach sufficient equity. The VA loan has no PMI requirement. That savings begins on day one and continues for the life of the loan.
Together these two features remove the biggest financial barriers that stop most buyers from entering the market. For veterans they are baseline benefits that come with the loan program.
Step Two: Negotiate Seller Concessions
VA loan guidelines allow sellers to contribute up to four percent of the loan amount toward a veteran buyer's closing costs. On a $350,000 purchase that represents up to $14,000 that the seller can put toward the veteran's settlement expenses.
As Keith Calabro explains this is a negotiating tool that should be part of virtually every VA purchase offer strategy. Closing costs on a VA loan can include the appraisal fee, title charges, prepaid property taxes and insurance, recording fees, and other settlement expenses. A seller contribution at the level VA guidelines permit can cover all of those costs and potentially more, leaving the veteran with no out-of-pocket closing expenses at all beyond whatever they choose to bring.
In today's market where sellers are more open to concessions than they have been in several years asking for seller contributions toward closing costs is not only acceptable it is expected in a well-structured VA offer.
Step Three: Ask About Lender Credits
Lender credits are an additional tool that can reduce or eliminate remaining closing costs that seller concessions do not cover. In exchange for accepting a slightly higher interest rate on the loan the lender applies a credit toward the borrower's closing costs at settlement. The higher rate means a modestly higher monthly payment but the upfront cash requirement drops accordingly.
This strategy works particularly well for veterans who have a realistic expectation of refinancing within a few years. If rates continue to move and a VA IRRRL refinance becomes attractive down the road the slightly higher rate accepted in exchange for lender credits today becomes a temporary cost rather than a permanent one. The cash preserved at closing stays in the veteran's pocket in the meantime.
Step Four: Confirm Your Funding Fee Exemption
The VA funding fee is typically the largest single closing cost in a VA loan transaction. It is a one-time fee paid to the Department of Veterans Affairs and while it can be rolled into the loan amount it still adds to the total cost of the transaction in a meaningful way.
Veterans with a service-connected disability rating are exempt from the VA funding fee entirely. This exemption is one of the most financially significant benefits available to disabled veterans and one that is sometimes overlooked in the closing cost conversation. Confirming your disability rating and its impact on the funding fee before the loan closes is a critical step that Keith Calabro prioritizes with every veteran client.
For a veteran with a disability rating the removal of the funding fee eliminates the largest single closing cost from the equation, which combined with seller concessions and lender credits can make a zero-cash closing genuinely achievable.
What These Four Strategies Look Like Together
Stacked together these four approaches create a closing cost picture that is dramatically different from what most buyers face. Zero down payment. Seller concessions covering closing costs up to four percent of the loan amount. Lender credits absorbing any remaining expenses. Funding fee eliminated for veterans with a disability rating.
The result is a veteran who closes on a home with little to nothing due at the settlement table. Not through a workaround or an unusual circumstance but through the deliberate and strategic use of benefits and tools that veterans have earned through their service and that a knowledgeable loan officer knows how to deploy.
Make Sure Your Team Knows How to Use What You Have Earned
The difference between a veteran who closes with thousands of dollars out of pocket and one who closes with almost nothing frequently comes down to the team they are working with. These strategies are not complicated but they require a loan officer who understands VA guidelines thoroughly and structures each transaction with the veteran's full range of benefits in mind from the beginning.
Keith Calabro is a military veteran and VA loan specialist who works with veteran buyers to structure purchases that maximize every available benefit and get clients to closing with as little out of pocket as possible. Reach out to Keith Calabro to find out what a fully optimized VA closing could look like for your specific situation.
Sources
VA.gov MilitaryOneSource.mil ConsumerFinancialProtectionBureau.gov NAR.realtor MortgageNewsDaily.com