VA or FHA, which one is better for military buyers
If you have VA eligibility, the VA loan wins for almost everyone, and it usually is not close. Both programs were built to make qualifying easier, but only one of them lets you buy with nothing down and no monthly mortgage insurance, and over the life of a loan that difference can add up to $40,000 or more over a 30-year loan. We offer both programs, so this is not a sales pitch, it is just what the math says when we run the two side by side for a Veteran.
That said, the FHA loan is a good program for buyers who do not have VA eligibility, and there are a few narrow situations where it is worth a look. Let us walk through where the two actually differ.
The down payment difference
A VA loan with full entitlement requires no down payment at all, on any price the lender approves you for. An FHA loan requires 3.5% down with a 580 or higher credit score, and 10% down below that. On a $300,000 home that is $10,500 out of pocket before you even get to closing costs, money a VA buyer can leave in savings or use to strengthen the rest of the offer.

Of course, you can put money down on a VA loan if you want to, and it even lowers your funding fee when you put down 5% or more. The point is that the VA makes it your choice while FHA makes it a requirement.
Mortgage insurance is where FHA gets expensive
This is the difference most buyers feel every single month. FHA charges an upfront mortgage insurance premium of 1.75% of the loan amount, then a monthly premium on top of it, and with the minimum down payment that monthly charge stays for the life of the loan. The only way out of it is refinancing out of FHA entirely.
A VA loan has no monthly mortgage insurance at all. There is the one-time funding fee, 2.15% on a first use with nothing down, but it can be rolled into the loan, and Veterans with a service-connected disability rating of 10% or more pay no funding fee whatsoever. One cost is one-time and waivable, the other shows up on every statement for as long as you hold the loan. Our VA funding fee chart breaks down every funding fee scenario.
A side-by-side on a $300,000 home
The pattern is easy to see. FHA asks for cash upfront and a monthly premium forever, while the VA loan asks for a one-time fee that many Veterans do not pay at all.
When FHA actually makes sense
If you do not have VA eligibility, FHA is often the best path to buying with 3.5% down, and that is exactly who the program serves well. We also occasionally see situations where a co-borrower structure or a specific property fits FHA guidelines more cleanly. For an eligible Veteran buying a home to live in, though, we almost never run the numbers and find FHA on top.
If you are already in an FHA loan and have VA eligibility you never used, it is worth a conversation, because refinancing into a VA loan can remove that monthly mortgage insurance for good. Our VA refinance page covers the options, and we can compare your current payment against a VA payment in one call.
VA vs FHA questions we hear most
Is a VA loan always cheaper than FHA?
For an eligible Veteran, almost always. The combination of $0 down, no monthly mortgage insurance, and competitive rates is hard for any program to beat. The rare exceptions involve unusual property or co-borrower situations, and we will tell you honestly if your file is one of them.
Can I refinance my FHA loan into a VA loan later?
Yes, if you have VA eligibility you can refinance from FHA into VA and drop the monthly mortgage insurance permanently. Keep in mind the VA IRRRL streamline is only for existing VA loans, so coming from FHA uses the standard VA refinance path with full documentation.
Do sellers avoid VA offers?
That reputation is outdated. VA appraisals and timelines now run close to conventional, and we close most VA loans in 2 to 3 weeks, faster than many lenders close anything. A strong pre-approval letter from a lender who actually closes VA loans on time does more for your offer than the loan type hurts it.
Does FHA mortgage insurance ever go away on its own?
With the minimum down payment it lasts the life of the loan, and with 10% or more down it still runs for years. Most FHA borrowers get rid of it by refinancing, which is exactly why we suggest eligible Veterans skip the monthly premium from day one.
If you are weighing the two programs, send us the FHA quote you are looking at and we will run the same purchase as a VA loan, side by side with real numbers. Give us a call at 800-697-4371 or fill out our online pre-qualification form, and fifteen minutes is usually all the comparison takes.
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