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Mortgage-World.com Mortgage-World.com
  • Purchase
    • FHA Loans
    • Conventional Loans
    • No Income Verification Loans
    • Bank Statement Loans
    • DSCR Loans
    • Down Payment Assistance Loans
    • First Time Home Buyer Loans
    • Asset Only Loans
    • Doctor Loans
    • Jumbo Loans
    • VA Loans
    • USDA Loans
    • Construction-to-Permanent
    • Home Possible Loans
    • Get Pre-Approved
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    • VA Refinance
    • VA IRRRL
    • USDA Streamline Refinance
    • Divorce Refinance
  • CREDIT SCORE
    • FHA Credit Score Requirements
    • FHA Below 580 Credit Score
    • Minimum Credit Score to Refinance
    • Mortgage Pre-Approval with Bad Credit
    • FHA Bankruptcy Guidelines
    • Denied a Mortgage? We Can Help
  • ABOUT US
    • Christopher Luis
    • Julia Luis
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Transfer FHA Loan — how FHA loan assumptions work, who qualifies to assume an FHA mortgage, and how buyers take over a seller’s existing FHA loan and rate, offered by Mortgage-World.com (NMLS #1630225). Licensed mortgage broker in New Jersey, Connecticut, and Florida, FL License MLB1987.

Transfer FHA Loan - Mortgage-World.com NMLS 1630225

Licensed Mortgage Broker  ·  NJ  ·  CT  ·  FL  ·  NMLS #1630225

Transfer FHA Loan — How To Assume A Seller’s FHA Mortgage And Rate

FHA allows you to transfer an FHA loan. It’s called an FHA loan assumption, and it lets a qualified buyer step into the seller’s existing FHA mortgage — same loan, same rate, same remaining balance — instead of applying for brand-new financing. You’ll still need to qualify with the loan’s servicer at a 580 credit score or higher, and cover the gap between the loan balance and the purchase price, but if the seller’s rate is well below today’s, that gap is usually worth closing. Here’s exactly how a transfer works, who qualifies, and what it can save you.

See If I Qualify To Assume
Call 888.958.5382

★ Updated July 2026  |  FHA Loan Assumptions & Transfers  |  Purchase & Divorce/Estate Transfers  |  Licensed in NJ, CT & FL  |  NMLS #1630225

Get My FHA Assumption Quote — Free

580 Score
Minimum Credit Score
To Assume An FHA Loan
Same Rate
Buyer Keeps The
Seller’s Original Rate
Seller Released
From Liability Once
The Transfer Closes
45–75 Days
Typical Servicer
Approval Timeline
Mortgage-World.com NMLS #1630225 | Licensed Mortgage Broker | 888.958.5382


Your Answer Right Here

Can You Transfer An FHA Loan? Yes — Here’s How

FHA loans are assumable, a feature almost no conventional loan offers. A buyer can be substituted onto the seller’s existing FHA mortgage, keeping the same rate, term, and balance, instead of that loan being paid off at closing. The seller is fully released from the debt once the assumption is approved and closed, and the buyer becomes the sole borrower going forward. The trade-off: the buyer still has to qualify under current FHA rules and cover the difference between what’s owed and what the home is selling for. Below, we walk through the mechanics, the two types of assumptions FHA recognizes, who qualifies, and why this has become one of the most requested calls I get in 2026.

Assumption Type Lender Approval Required? Available On Seller Released From Liability?
Creditworthiness Assumption Yes — full underwriting FHA loans closed after Dec. 1, 1986 Yes, once approved and closed
Simple Assumption No Only FHA loans originated before Dec. 1, 1986 No — original borrower stays liable

Figures are illustrative as of July 2026, not a quote or commitment to lend. Actual eligibility depends on the servicer, your credit, and the loan’s specific terms. Call 888.958.5382 or apply online for your real numbers.

I’m Chris Luis, Broker/Owner of Mortgage-World.com (NMLS #1630225), and I’ve placed loans since 2002. I bring up FHA assumptions constantly right now because so many sellers out there closed their loans back when rates were two to three points lower than they are today. A buyer who can step into that rate instead of taking new financing is holding onto real, ongoing savings, and it’s my job to walk both sides through it correctly.


What It Actually Is

Same FHA Loan, Different Borrower

Almost every FHA loan written today is assumable, and that’s baked directly into the loan itself. When you transfer an FHA loan, the buyer doesn’t get a new loan number or a new rate pegged to whatever the market is doing on closing day. They take over the seller’s loan exactly as it sits: same servicer, same remaining balance, same rate, same years left on the term. The only thing that changes is whose name is on the note.

That’s different from a normal purchase, where the seller’s loan is paid off at closing and the buyer’s new loan is priced at that week’s rate. With an assumption, the seller’s loan simply continues, uninterrupted, under new ownership. FHA allows this on nearly all loans closed since December 1, 1986, which covers the overwhelming majority of FHA mortgages in existence today.

There are two flavors FHA recognizes. A creditworthiness assumption is used on almost every current transfer: the buyer applies, gets underwritten, and gets approved by the servicer before closing, and once it closes, the original borrower is released entirely. A simple assumption skips lender approval, but only applies to older FHA loans from before December 1, 1986, and leaves the original borrower on the hook if the new owner defaults. For anything closed in recent decades, it’s a creditworthiness assumption, full stop.


How The Process Works

How An FHA Assumption Actually Works

The process starts with the loan’s current servicer, not a new lender pulled off the street. Every FHA loan is assigned to a servicer, and only that servicer can review and approve an assumption. We contact them directly, confirm the loan is eligible, and request their assumption package, since every servicer has its own forms and timeline for this.

From there, the buyer goes through a real underwriting file: credit, income, assets, and debt-to-income ratio, evaluated against current FHA guidelines, same as any other FHA application. A 580 credit score is the FHA floor, though a servicer can layer its own overlays on top, and the buyer has to intend to occupy the home as a primary residence, since that’s a baseline FHA requirement on the underlying loan.

The part that catches people off guard is the gap. If the home sells for more than the remaining loan balance, and it usually does, the buyer brings that difference to the table in cash or arranges a second mortgage to cover it. A $380,000 home with a $260,000 assumable balance leaves a $120,000 gap that has to be funded before the assumption makes financial sense.

Once the servicer approves the file, the transfer closes, title moves to the buyer, the seller is formally released from the note, and the loan continues on its original schedule under the buyer’s name. Plan on 45 to 75 days from application to closing, since assumption departments move slower than a standard purchase underwriting team.

TRANSFERFHA LOANMortgage-World.com — Licensed Mortgage Broker — NMLS #1630225SAME RATE  ·  SAME BALANCE  ·  SAME REMAINING TERMThe buyer steps onto the seller’s existing FHA mortgage instead of getting a new oneStep 1 — Confirm EligibilityWe contact the loan’s currentservicer to confirm the FHA loanqualifies for a transferEligible on nearly all FHA loansStep 2 — Buyer UnderwritingBuyer’s credit, income, and DTIare reviewed by the servicer againstcurrent FHA guidelines580 minimum credit scoreStep 3 — Fund The GapBuyer covers the differencebetween the loan balance and thepurchase price, cash or financingWhere the real math happensStep 4 — Close & ReleaseTitle transfers, seller is releasedfrom the note, and the loan continuesunder the buyer’s nameTypically 45–75 days totalBest suited for loans with a rate well below today’s market rateApplies to FHA loans closed after December 1, 1986 — the majority in existence todayCall 888.958.5382  |  Apply Online  |  NMLS #1630225Mortgage-World.com  ·  Licensed Mortgage Broker in New Jersey, Connecticut & Florida
Transferring an FHA loan means the buyer assumes the seller’s existing rate, balance, and term through FHA’s assumption process — NMLS #1630225 | Find out if a loan you’re eyeing is assumable


Who Actually Qualifies

Who Actually Qualifies

Two parties have to clear a bar here: the loan itself, and the buyer stepping onto it. The loan needs to be FHA-insured and closed after December 1, 1986, which describes the vast majority of FHA loans on the books today, so that’s rarely the sticking point. The buyer is where the real qualification happens. A 580 credit score is the FHA floor, though servicers sometimes set a higher internal bar, and income and existing debt need to support the payment under a standard debt-to-income calculation, just like any FHA approval.

The buyer also has to plan to occupy the home as a primary residence, since that’s tied to the loan itself. And because the seller is asking to be released from a debt they’re personally responsible for, the buyer’s file gets a genuinely thorough review.


Why Buyers And Sellers Both Want This

Why Assuming An FHA Mortgage Helps Both Sides

An assumption isn’t the right move for every purchase, but when the numbers line up, it solves problems a brand-new loan simply can’t.

Benefits For Buyers
  • Inherit a rate from years ago instead of today’s market rate
  • Lower total closing costs than a brand-new FHA loan
  • Skip re-shopping the market for a new rate lock
  • Shorter remaining term, since the clock keeps running from origination
  • A real negotiating advantage when comparing homes for sale
Benefits For Sellers
  • A below-market rate becomes a genuine selling point
  • Full release from the loan once the assumption closes
  • Can attract buyers priced out at current market rates
  • No obligation to pay off the loan before closing
  • Can help a listing stand out against new-rate financing


How To Get Started

Three Steps To Assume The Loan

1. Confirm The Loan Is Assumable

We contact the servicer directly to confirm the FHA loan qualifies for a creditworthiness assumption.

2. Run The Buyer’s Numbers

We review the servicer’s requirements and figure out how the gap between price and loan balance gets funded.

3. Submit, Approve, And Close

Once the servicer approves the file, the transfer closes, the seller is released, and the loan continues under the buyer’s name.

A few independent sources are worth reading for the underwriting detail. HUD’s FAQ on FHA loan assumptions covers eligibility for creditworthiness versus simple assumptions. HUD’s Single Family Housing Policy Handbook 4000.1 lays out the servicer’s underwriting standards. For a plain-language explanation of assumable mortgages, the CFPB’s guide is a solid independent resource.

Related Resources

Related Mortgage Pages

An FHA loan assumption pairs with these programs. Here is what to compare.

→
FHA Loans
3.5% down with flexible credit — scores from 500.
→
FHA Refinance
Streamline and standard FHA refinance options.
→
New Jersey FHA Loan
FHA guidelines and limits for NJ buyers.
→
Get Pre-Approved
Find out exactly what you qualify for — free, no obligation.

What Clients Say

Real Reviews From Our Clients

Here’s what a few of our clients said about working with Mortgage-World.com.

★★★★★
“Chris Luis is the BEST mortgage broker on this planet! If you’re looking to buy a home, definitely give him a call. Chris will go above and beyond to try to help you!”
— Tanya W.
★★★★★
“I had an opportunity to work with Chris when I did my refinancing. I would highly recommend his services to anyone. He was efficient, helpful and very prompt in responding.”
— Aurora T.
★★★★★
“Julia Luis has been very professional and has been very helpful during the process! Anyone looking for someone to assist them in their future adventures needs to have her on your side! Thank you for being there for me!!”
— Joel F.

Read more from our clients: Read More Reviews →


Common Questions Answered

Common Questions About FHA Assumptions

Can you transfer an FHA loan to another person?
Yes. Nearly all FHA loans closed after December 1, 1986 are assumable, meaning a qualified buyer can take over the seller’s mortgage, rate, and balance, once the servicer approves the transfer.
What credit score do I need to assume an FHA loan?
FHA sets a 580 minimum credit score for a creditworthiness assumption, though the loan’s servicer can apply its own additional requirements on top of that minimum.
Does the seller stay responsible for the loan after a transfer?
No, not on a creditworthiness assumption. Once the servicer approves the buyer and the transfer closes, the seller is released from the debt. Only an older simple assumption, limited to loans before December 1, 1986, leaves the original borrower liable.
How long does it take to transfer an FHA loan?
Most assumptions take about 45 to 75 days from application to closing, since a loan’s servicer typically has a smaller assumption department than a standard purchase underwriting team.
What happens if the home costs more than the remaining loan balance?
The buyer covers that difference separately, in cash or through additional financing such as a HELOC, since the assumption only transfers the existing loan balance, not the full purchase price.
Which states does Mortgage-World.com handle FHA loan transfers in?
We’re a licensed mortgage broker in New Jersey, Connecticut, and Florida, and we help buyers and sellers work through FHA loan assumptions across all three states.

Thinking About Transferring An FHA Loan?
Send us the loan details and we’ll tell you quickly whether it’s assumable and what the numbers look like for you.
Apply Now
Call 888.958.5382

Chris Luis, Broker/Owner, Mortgage-World.com, NMLS #1630225

Written By: Chris Luis — Broker/Owner, Mortgage-World.com — NMLS #1630225
I’ve been placing loans since 2002, and FHA assumptions have gone from a rare curiosity to one of the first questions I get on almost every FHA listing. Getting the servicer’s requirements and the gap financing right, in that order, is what gets a transfer to close. Mortgage-World.com has operated as a licensed mortgage broker since 2017, serving New Jersey, Connecticut, and Florida.

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