FHA Purchase Loan — 500 Score Qualifies, 580 Gets You 3.5% Down
The short answer: an FHA purchase loan lets you buy a home with as little as 3.5% down at a 580 credit score, or 10% down starting at a 500 credit score. FHA purchase loans are open to first-time home buyers and repeat buyers alike, cover 1–4 unit owner-occupied properties, and can be paired with down payment assistance up to 5% of the purchase price offered directly by Mortgage-World.com. No hard credit pull is required to see where you stand. Mortgage-World.com (NMLS #1630225) is a licensed mortgage broker in New Jersey, Connecticut, and Florida.
Minimum Score
to Qualify
Minimum Down
at 580+ Score
Down Payment
Assistance Available
Unit Owner-Occupied
Properties
Your Answer Right Here
What Is an FHA Purchase Loan — and Should You Use One?
An FHA purchase loan is a government-backed mortgage insured by the Federal Housing Administration that lets buyers purchase a primary residence with a lower credit score and smaller down payment than most conventional loans require. The rules are straightforward: a credit score of 500 to 579 qualifies with 10% down, and a score of 580 or higher drops that down payment to 3.5%. First-time buyers and repeat buyers are both eligible. You do not need a perfect financial history, a large savings account, or a long tenure at your job to qualify, though lenders do verify a two-year work history and require the property to meet HUD minimum standards.
The reason most buyers choose an FHA purchase over a conventional loan comes down to access. If your credit score is below 620, your options on the conventional side narrow quickly, and the pricing that remains often carries a higher rate or additional fees. FHA pricing is more predictable at lower scores, and the down payment floor is genuinely low. A buyer purchasing a $350,000 home with a 580 score needs just $12,250 down before assistance, and Mortgage-World.com offers down payment assistance directly covering up to 5% of the purchase price, which can reduce out-of-pocket cash at closing to nearly nothing for qualified borrowers. For the full picture on what FHA requires, see HUD’s Section 203(b) single-family insurance program page, which is the statutory home of the standard FHA purchase loan. Mortgage-World.com (NMLS #1630225) is a licensed mortgage broker in New Jersey, Connecticut, and Florida, and we can walk you through your numbers before a single hard pull hits your credit. Call 888.958.5382 or start your application online.
At a Glance
FHA Purchase Loan — 2026 Program Snapshot
All three FHA purchase paths available through Mortgage-World.com (NMLS #1630225), compared side by side.
| FHA Purchase Path | Minimum Credit Score | Minimum Down Payment |
|---|---|---|
| Standard FHA Purchase | 500 (10% down) or 580+ (3.5% down) | 10% at 500–579; 3.5% at 580+ |
| FHA First-Time Home Buyer | 500 (10% down) or 580+ (3.5% down) | Same tiers as standard FHA purchase |
| FHA with Down Payment Assistance | 580 | As low as $0 out of pocket; up to 5% of purchase price covered |
| Eligible Properties | 1–4 unit owner-occupied primary residence; FHA-approved condos and PUDs | |
| Maximum Loan Amount (2026) | Varies by county; national floor $524,225 / ceiling $1,209,750 for high-cost areas | |
| Maximum DTI (Standard) | 43% back-end ratio; up to 56–57% with compensating factors and AUS approval | |
| MIP (Mortgage Insurance Premium) | Upfront MIP 1.75% of loan amount; annual MIP 0.55% for most 30-year loans | |
| States Licensed | New Jersey, Connecticut, Florida | |
Why Buyers Choose FHA
Why an FHA Purchase Loan Makes Sense in 2026
The housing market has not gotten easier for buyers with less-than-perfect credit, and FHA purchase loans remain the most direct path to homeownership when conventional financing either isn’t available or comes with pricing penalties that don’t make sense. Here is why buyers across New Jersey, Connecticut, and Florida consistently choose FHA when they purchase.
Lower Credit Score Requirements Than Conventional
Conventional loans backed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac technically allow scores as low as 620, but pricing at that level often includes significant loan-level price adjustments that raise your effective rate. FHA pricing does not work that way. The mortgage insurance cost is fixed by HUD, not by your credit score tier, which means a buyer at 600 and a buyer at 740 pay essentially the same MIP rate. That predictability makes FHA the more cost-effective choice for a large segment of buyers who could technically qualify for both. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s FHA loan overview explains this comparison well if you want a neutral third-party breakdown.
Lower Down Payment, Especially Paired with Assistance
A 3.5% down payment on a $350,000 home is $12,250. Mortgage-World.com offers down payment assistance directly covering up to 5% of the purchase price, structured as part of the FHA loan rather than a separate grant program. For a buyer at that price point, the assistance could eliminate the down payment entirely, leaving only closing costs to cover. Gift funds from family members are fully allowed and can also be used toward the down payment at any credit score tier. Full details on how assistance is structured are on our FHA down payment assistance page.
More Flexible Debt-to-Income Underwriting
FHA allows a back-end debt-to-income ratio of 43% as a standard ceiling, but with strong compensating factors like cash reserves, a long employment history at the same employer, or minimal payment shock from rent to mortgage, automated underwriting can approve DTI ratios of 56 to 57%. That flexibility accommodates buyers with student loans, car payments, or other recurring obligations that would push them out of range on a conventional loan. It also helps self-employed buyers and those with income from multiple sources, where the two-year average calculation often works in their favor.
First-Time Home Buyers and Repeat Buyers Both Qualify
There is a common misconception that FHA is only for first-time buyers. It is not. FHA requires that the property you are purchasing be an owner-occupied primary residence, but there is no rule limiting how many times you have owned before. If you sold a previous home and are buying again, or if you are purchasing a second primary residence after a life change, an FHA purchase can work as long as you meet the credit, income, and property requirements. Our FHA first-time home buyer guide walks through the full process from pre-approval to closing for buyers who are new to the purchase side.
Full Qualification Picture
FHA Purchase Loan — 2026 Requirements Checklist
Credit, Income, Down Payment, and Property in One Place
These are the underwriting standards Mortgage-World.com (NMLS #1630225) applies for FHA purchase borrowers in New Jersey, Connecticut, and Florida in 2026.
- 500–579 FICO: 10% minimum down payment, automated underwriting only
- 580+ FICO: 3.5% minimum down payment, full program access
- Below 500 FICO: not eligible for FHA purchase financing
- Qualifying score = lowest middle score across all borrowers on the loan
- No minimum score to begin a preliminary review with Mortgage-World.com
- Minimum 3.5% at 580+ score; minimum 10% at 500–579
- Down payment assistance up to 5% of purchase price available from Mortgage-World.com
- Gift funds from family, employer, or approved organization fully allowed
- 60-day account history required for personal savings
- Seller can contribute up to 6% of purchase price toward closing costs
- Two-year employment history required; gaps must be documented
- W-2, self-employed, 1099, and retirement income all acceptable
- Standard back-end DTI: 43% without compensating factors
- With AUS approval and compensating factors: up to 56–57% DTI allowed
- Co-borrower income can be added to strengthen the file
- 1–4 unit owner-occupied primary residence only
- FHA appraisal required; property must meet HUD minimum property standards
- FHA-approved condos and PUDs eligible
- Investment properties and vacation homes not eligible
- Homes needing repairs may use a 203(k) rehab loan instead
Three Key Advantages
What Makes an FHA Purchase Different from Conventional
FHA mortgage insurance is priced the same regardless of whether your credit score is 600 or 740. Conventional loans add risk-based pricing adjustments that can meaningfully raise your rate at lower score ranges, making FHA the better financial choice for a large share of buyers.
Mortgage-World.com offers down payment assistance directly as part of the FHA loan structure, covering up to 5% of the purchase price for qualified borrowers. No separate grant application, no waitlist, and no additional approval process layered on top of your FHA underwriting.
FHA allows sellers to contribute up to 6% of the purchase price toward the buyer’s closing costs. Combined with down payment assistance from Mortgage-World.com, some buyers close with very little money out of pocket relative to the home price they are purchasing.
Related Resources
Related Mortgage Pages
An FHA purchase turns on credit, cash, and the property. These pages cover each.
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