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5 ways to buy a Sonoma County home with little money down

The 20%-down rule is the most expensive myth in real estate. In a market like ours, here are five paths that get you into a home for a fraction of that — and how to tell which one is yours.

Why 20% down is a myth

Somewhere along the way, '20% down' became gospel. It's not a requirement — it's just the point where you avoid mortgage insurance on a conventional loan. Plenty of buyers in Sonoma County close every month with 3.5% down, 3% down, or nothing down at all.

Waiting to save a fifth of a North Bay home price can mean waiting years while prices and rents keep moving. The smarter question usually isn't 'how do I save 20%?' It's 'which low-down program fits my situation, and what does it actually cost me per month?'

1. FHA — 3.5% down, forgiving credit

FHA loans are the workhorse for first-time and credit-rebuilding buyers. You can put down as little as 3.5% with a credit score of 580, and the underwriting is more flexible than conventional on things like past credit hiccups and debt-to-income.

The trade-off is mortgage insurance that, on most FHA loans today, stays for the life of the loan. That's not a dealbreaker — many buyers use FHA to get in, then refinance into a conventional loan once they have equity. It's a door, not a life sentence.

2. VA — zero down for those who served

If you're a veteran, active-duty service member, or an eligible surviving spouse, the VA loan is hard to beat: no down payment, no monthly mortgage insurance, and competitive rates. There's a one-time funding fee (waived for many disabled veterans), but otherwise it's the most affordable way into a home that exists.

If you've got eligibility, start here. We see veterans talk themselves out of it because they assume it's complicated — it isn't, and the math almost always wins.

3. USDA — zero down in the right ZIP codes

This one surprises people. USDA loans offer 100% financing — nothing down — and a chunk of the areas around Sonoma County, the outer North Bay, and rural Northern California actually qualify. You don't have to buy a farm; you just have to buy in an eligible area and stay under the income limits for your household size.

If you're open to the edges of the metro rather than the core, this is worth checking before anything else. We can pull the eligibility map for a specific address in a minute.

4. Conventional 97 and HomeReady — 3% down

Conventional loans aren't just for big down payments. The Conventional 97 program lets qualified buyers put down 3%, and income-based programs like HomeReady and Home Possible do the same with a pricing break for moderate-income borrowers.

The advantage over FHA is the mortgage insurance: on conventional, it can be canceled once you reach about 20% equity, so it doesn't follow you forever. If your credit is solid, this is often the lower lifetime cost even though FHA gets more attention.

5. Down payment assistance — someone else's money

California runs several down-payment and closing-cost assistance programs, and they can be stacked with the loans above. Some are grants; some are quiet second loans you repay later or when you sell. Eligibility and funding change through the year, so the move is to check what's open at the moment you're ready to buy.

Gift funds from family count too. On most of these programs, your down payment doesn't have to come from your own savings at all — it just has to be documented.

So which one is yours?

The right path comes down to a few questions: Do you have VA eligibility? Is the home in a USDA area? Where's your credit? And how long do you plan to keep the loan before you'd refinance?

There's no universally 'best' low-down program — there's the best one for your numbers. That's a fifteen-minute conversation, and it's worth having before you fall in love with a house.

Questions

Frequently asked

Can my down payment be a gift from family?

On most of these programs, yes. Gift funds from a family member are allowed for the down payment and sometimes closing costs — they just have to be documented with a gift letter and a clear paper trail showing where the money came from.

Is FHA or conventional better for low down payment?

It depends on your credit and timeline. FHA is more forgiving on credit and starts at 3.5% down, but its mortgage insurance usually stays for the life of the loan. Conventional 3%-down programs need stronger credit but let you cancel mortgage insurance at around 20% equity, which is often cheaper over time.

Do USDA loans really require nothing down?

Yes — eligible USDA loans offer 100% financing with no down payment. The catch is location and income: the property has to be in a USDA-eligible area and your household income has to fall under the program limit for your area and family size.

Ready when you are

Find your lowest-down path.

Tell us a little about your situation and we'll show you which low-down options you qualify for — with real monthly numbers, not guesses. Call 707-595-5393.