
You Do Not Need 20 Percent Down to Buy a Home: Three Tips Every First-Time Buyer Needs to Know
You Do Not Need 20 Percent Down to Buy a Home: Three Tips Every First-Time Buyer Needs to Know
The Biggest Myth Keeping First-Time Buyers on the Sidelines
One of the most persistent and costly misconceptions in the homebuying process is the belief that you need 20 percent down to purchase a home. For a median-priced home that number can feel so large that buyers put off the conversation entirely assuming homeownership is years away. In reality the path to your first home may be significantly closer than you think and it starts with understanding what your actual options are.
Here are three strategies that first-time buyers are using right now to get into homes with far less upfront cash than they assumed was required.
Tip One: Use a Low Down Payment Loan Program
The 20 percent down requirement is not a rule. It is a threshold associated with avoiding private mortgage insurance on conventional loans and it is far from the only option available to buyers.
FHA loans allow buyers to purchase with as little as 3.5 percent down. Conventional loans through programs designed for first-time buyers can require as little as 3 percent down. On a $300,000 home the difference between saving 20 percent and saving 3 percent is the difference between needing $60,000 and needing $9,000. That gap changes how long it realistically takes to be ready to buy.
Beyond FHA and conventional options there are two zero down payment programs worth knowing about. VA loans are available to eligible veterans, active duty service members, and qualifying surviving spouses and require no down payment at all. USDA loans are available for properties in eligible rural and many suburban areas and also require zero down payment for qualifying borrowers.
As Keith Calabro explains comparing FHA and conventional options side by side is important because the right choice depends on your specific credit profile, income, and financial goals. The loan that looks better on paper is not always the one that makes the most financial sense for a specific buyer and having a lender who knows how to run that comparison properly makes a real difference in the outcome.
Tip Two: Use Down Payment Assistance
Down payment assistance programs exist at the state, county, and local level across the country and many first-time buyers either do not know they exist or assume they would not qualify without ever checking.
These programs provide funds that can cover some or all of the down payment requirement for eligible buyers. Some are structured as grants that do not need to be repaid. Others are structured as forgivable loans that disappear after a set period of time in the home. The eligibility requirements vary by program but commonly include income limits, purchase price limits, and the requirement that the buyer complete a homebuyer education course.
If a buyer qualifies for a low down payment loan program and also qualifies for down payment assistance the two can work together to reduce or eliminate the cash needed for the down payment entirely. That combination is exactly the kind of strategic layering that gets first-time buyers into homes sooner than they thought possible.
Working with a lender who has access to and knowledge of the available down payment assistance programs in your area is essential because not every lender participates in every program. Knowing which programs are available and which ones a specific buyer qualifies for requires both access and expertise.
Tip Three: Ask for Seller Concessions to Cover Closing Costs
Even with a low down payment or down payment assistance there are still closing costs that need to be accounted for in the transaction. Closing costs typically include appraisal fees, title charges, prepaid property taxes and insurance, and other settlement expenses that can add up to several thousand dollars.
In the current market seller concessions are a realistic and regularly successful ask on the right properties. A seller who is motivated to close can contribute toward the buyer's closing costs as part of the negotiated terms of the purchase. That contribution reduces the cash the buyer needs to bring to closing and keeps money in the buyer's hands after the transaction rather than moving it to the settlement table on day one.
As Keith Calabro points out if you do not ask you do not get. Seller concessions are available in today's market depending on the property and the seller's situation. A buyer who does not ask for them leaves money on the table that was there for the taking. A lender who helps structure the offer to include a seller concession request in a way that is competitive and realistic is part of what makes the difference between capturing that benefit and missing it.
The Right Lender Makes All Three Work Together
Each of these three strategies has meaningful value on its own. When they are combined strategically around a specific buyer's situation and a specific property the cumulative effect can be the difference between homeownership feeling years away and closing on a home in the near future.
Making these strategies work together requires a lender who has access to the programs, knows how to compare the options, understands the down payment assistance landscape in your area, and knows how to structure an offer that captures seller concessions without weakening the competitive position of your bid.
Keith Calabro works with first-time buyers to put together exactly this kind of strategic plan and to find the combination of tools that gets them into a home sooner than they thought was possible. Text Keith Calabro at 401-578-0356 or use the link in his bio to schedule a call and find out what your path to homeownership actually looks like right now.
Sources
ConsumerFinancialProtectionBureau.gov HUD.gov USDA.gov VA.gov MortgageNewsDaily.com