VA Loan vs. Conventional Loan: Which Is Better for Veterans?

6 min read ·  Reviewed May 1, 2025

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For most veterans, the VA loan wins. No down payment, no private mortgage insurance, competitive interest rates, and flexible qualification standards – the VA loan is the most borrower-favorable mortgage product available. The one cost is the VA funding fee (0.50%-3.30%), but even including that fee, VA typically produces lower total cost than conventional for veterans who stay in the home for 3 or more years.

There are specific situations where conventional beats VA: when a property does not meet VA minimum standards, when a veteran needs to finance a second home or investment property, or when they want to avoid VA appraisal requirements. Understanding these exceptions helps veterans optimize their financing decisions.

Key Takeaways

  • VA loans require no down payment and no PMI - the two largest recurring costs eliminated by one loan program.
  • VA loan rates are typically 0.25-0.50 points lower than conventional for the same borrower.
  • The VA funding fee (0.50-3.30%) is the primary VA cost - veterans with 10%+ disability rating are exempt.
  • VA is primary residence only; conventional can finance second homes and investment properties.
  • On a 3+ year hold, VA almost always produces lower total cost than conventional for eligible veterans.
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The Core Financial Difference: One-Time Fee vs. Monthly Insurance

The most financially important difference between VA and conventional is how they handle mortgage insurance. Conventional loans with less than 20% down require private mortgage insurance at rates typically ranging from 0.5–1.5% of the loan amount annually, depending on LTV and credit score. On a $350,000 loan with 5% down at 0.80% PMI: $2,333/year ($194/month). This continues until the loan balance reaches 78% of the original purchase price — typically 8–12 years through amortization and appreciation.

VA replaces PMI with a one-time funding fee. At first-time use with 0% down: 2.15% of the loan = $7,525 on a $350,000 purchase, usually financed into the loan balance rather than paid upfront. The funding fee adds approximately $50/month to the payment for 30 years — compared to conventional PMI of $194/month for 10+ years.

The comparison over 10 years: conventional PMI $194/month × 120 months = $23,280. VA funding fee: $7,525 (total, paid once, amortized over life of loan). VA saves $15,755 in insurance-equivalent costs over a 10-year hold, not counting the VA rate advantage. The gap widens every year that conventional PMI continues — until PMI cancels. After PMI cancels (at 78% LTV), conventional’s advantage over the remaining funded-fee balance begins to narrow. But for the 8–12 years most veterans realistically hold a home before selling or refinancing, VA’s insurance structure produces substantially lower total cost.

The funding fee exemption makes VA even more compelling: any veteran receiving VA disability compensation at any percentage is permanently exempt from the funding fee. A 10% disabled veteran’s VA loan has literally zero insurance cost — comparing to conventional PMI of hundreds of dollars per month for a decade. For disabled veterans with any rating, VA is not just better than conventional — the financial gap is enormous.

Interest Rate Comparison: The LLPA Advantage

VA-guaranteed loans typically price within 0.125–0.375% of conventional conforming rates for well-qualified borrowers. But VA has no Loan Level Price Adjustments — a veteran with 640 FICO receives the same VA rate as one with 780 FICO from the same lender. Conventional LLPAs at 640 with 95% LTV add approximately 2.5% in pricing, translating to roughly 0.50% in rate premium. At 680, LLPAs add approximately 1.75% in pricing — about 0.35% rate premium.

Rate comparison at 680 FICO on a $350,000 purchase:

  • VA (0% down, 2.15% fee financed): Loan $357,525. Rate 6.875% (no LLPAs). P&I $2,348/month. No PMI.
  • Conventional 5% down: Loan $332,500. Rate 7.25% (6.875% + LLPA of ~0.375% at 680/95%). P&I $2,269. PMI 0.75%: $207/month. P&I + PMI: $2,476/month.
  • VA saves $128/month at 680 FICO. Over 8 years before PMI would typically cancel: $12,288 in total savings. Plus VA preserves the $17,500 down payment capital.

Rate comparison at 740 FICO:

  • VA: Same as above — $2,348/month P&I, no PMI.
  • Conventional 5% down: Rate 6.875% (minimal LLPA at 740). P&I $2,212. PMI 0.55%: $152/month. P&I + PMI: $2,364/month.
  • VA saves $16/month at 740. Much less compelling from a monthly payment standpoint — but VA still requires $0 down vs. $17,500 for conventional.

VA’s rate advantage over conventional is strongest below 700, where LLPAs are most punitive. Above 740, the payment gap narrows to near-parity. But even at parity on rate, VA’s absence of PMI makes it the financially superior choice for any veteran who doesn’t have 20% to put down.

Down Payment: The Capital Preservation Argument

VA requires zero down payment on any purchase amount for veterans with full entitlement. The capital preservation argument is the strongest case for VA over conventional 20% down — not that VA has a lower payment (conventional 20% down does have a lower payment), but that VA allows you to deploy $70,000 in capital differently.

On a $350,000 Texas purchase: VA buyer uses $0 down. Conventional 20%-down buyer uses $70,000. The VA buyer can invest that $70,000 in a diversified portfolio. At 7% annual return: $70,000 grows to approximately $137,700 over 10 years — generating $67,700 in returns. The conventional buyer’s $70,000 is in home equity earning the home’s appreciation rate. At 5% annual Texas home appreciation: $350,000 grows to $570,000, with equity growing from $70,000 + amortization to approximately $320,000. That home equity returned $250,000 over 10 years — significantly more than $67,700 from market investment of the same $70,000.

The comparison favors home equity in appreciating Texas markets at normal appreciation rates — which is why the argument for VA’s capital preservation is strongest for veterans who wouldn’t invest the down payment productively anyway, or who don’t have $70,000 liquid (the most common case). For the typical veteran who has adequate income but hasn’t accumulated a large down payment, VA’s zero-down path to homeownership accelerates entry into Texas’s appreciating market by years.

VA Property Requirements vs. Conventional Flexibility

VA Minimum Property Requirements create transaction friction that doesn’t exist with conventional financing. VA appraisers evaluate properties against safety, soundness, and sanitation standards — meaning properties with failing systems, structural concerns, or active pest evidence receive MPR conditions that must be resolved before closing. Sellers who won’t repair can kill the transaction.

Common Texas MPR issues: roofs with less than 2 years estimated remaining life (hail damage is endemic), non-functioning HVAC (critical in Texas heat), foundation settlement (expansive clay soil issues throughout North Texas, Central Texas, Houston area), and active wood-destroying insect evidence. In Texas’s stock of older urban and suburban homes, MPR conditions are common. In competitive markets, some sellers specifically decline VA offers because they know MPR conditions are likely and want to avoid the repair negotiation.

Condo financing adds another VA-specific constraint: condominiums must be on VA’s approved project list (searchable at vip.vba.va.gov). Unapproved projects require a VA review process taking 30–60 days that may be declined if the project has excessive investor concentration, active litigation, or inadequate reserves. Conventional financing is available on any condo meeting Fannie Mae’s standards (with possible non-warrantable designation at certain thresholds) — the VA approval requirement creates a separate constraint that conventional buyers don’t face.

For veterans targeting renovated, newer, or move-in-ready properties in Texas, VA MPR requirements rarely create problems. For veterans targeting distressed or older properties at below-market prices precisely because of condition, VA’s MPRs can be an obstacle. Understand your target property type before committing to a program.

When Conventional Makes More Sense for a Veteran

Despite VA’s advantages, specific scenarios favor conventional even for eligible veterans:

Preserving entitlement for a larger future purchase: A veteran purchasing a $400,000 Texas home with 20% down on conventional preserves full VA entitlement for a future purchase. Five years later, purchasing a $1.2 million Austin or DFW property with zero down using VA’s no-limit full-entitlement policy generates dramatically better economics than trying to fund a 20% down payment on a $1.2 million home. The arithmetic: use conventional now on a smaller purchase; save VA for the bigger one where zero-down value is highest.

Property that won’t pass VA MPRs and seller won’t repair: If you’re purchasing a distressed property at a significant discount because of condition issues, and the seller is pricing the discount in and refusing to make repairs, VA MPR conditions become an obstacle that conventional financing doesn’t share. Conventional with a larger down payment can proceed where VA cannot.

Non-warrantable condo or investment property: VA requires primary residence occupancy and condo project VA approval. Investment property financing requires conventional or portfolio products — VA is unavailable by program design regardless of veteran status.

20%+ down available with 740+ FICO: At 740+ score with 20% down, conventional minimal LLPAs, no PMI, and a lower loan amount (without funded fee) can produce a lower total monthly cost than VA. The gap is small — VA funding fee of 2.15% adds approximately $50/month to a $350,000 loan — but it’s real. For a veteran who genuinely has 20% liquid, the decision is closer than the standard “VA is always better” narrative suggests. Model your specific scenario.

The Texas Vet Loan: Federal VA Plus State Subsidy

Texas veterans have access to a benefit that veterans in most other states don’t: the Texas Veterans Land Board (VLB) Texas Vet Loan program, which provides a below-market interest rate on top of the federal VA guarantee. VLB-participating lenders offer approximately 0.25–0.50% below current market VA rates, funded through VLB bond issuances. For veterans with 30%+ service-connected disability rating, an additional rate reduction applies.

On a $400,000 Texas purchase loan, a 0.375% rate subsidy from the Texas Vet program saves approximately $85/month. Over 10 years: $10,200 in interest savings. Over 30 years: $30,600. The Texas Vet Loan stacks on top of federal VA benefits — one closing, one application process at a VLB-participating lender, both rate advantages applied simultaneously. Herring Bank participates in the VLB program; Texas veterans can access both federal VA benefits and the VLB rate subsidy through a single Herring Bank VA loan transaction. Contact our mortgage team to confirm current VLB rates against market pricing for your loan scenario.

Long-Term Total Cost Comparison: Texas-Specific Numbers

$350,000 Texas purchase, first VA use, 720 FICO. Texas property taxes 1.9%, insurance $3,200/year:

VA, 0% down: Loan $357,525 (fee financed). Rate 6.875%. P&I $2,348. No PMI. Taxes $554. Insurance $267. Total PITI $3,169/month.

Conventional, 5% down ($17,500): Loan $332,500. Rate 6.875% (minimal LLPA at 720, 95% LTV ≈ 0.375% but mostly at par). P&I $2,184. PMI 0.60%: $166. Taxes $554. Insurance $267. Total PITI $3,171/month.

Conventional, 20% down ($70,000): Loan $280,000. Rate 6.875%. P&I $1,838. No PMI. Taxes $554. Insurance $267. Total PITI $2,659/month.

VA and conventional 5% down are virtually identical in monthly payment at 720 FICO — but VA preserves $17,500 in down payment capital. Conventional 20% down is $510/month cheaper but requires $70,000 deployed. The opportunity cost of $70,000 at 7% return is $4,900/year = $408/month. Net monthly advantage of conventional 20% down after opportunity cost: $510 – $408 = $102/month in favor of conventional. That’s $1,224/year — real but not transformative, and it assumes you’d invest the $70,000 productively rather than leaving it as house equity. For most veterans in the practical position of choosing between VA and conventional, the financial case for VA is strong at any down payment below 20%.

Side-by-side – $375,000 purchase, first-time VA use: VA: 0% down, rate 6.50%, no PMI, funding fee $8,063 financed, loan $383,063, monthly P&I $2,370. Conventional with 5% down: rate 6.875%, PMI $190, P&I $2,340 + PMI $190 = $2,530. VA saves $160/month despite the higher loan balance. PMI would cancel on the conventional loan around year 9, at which point monthly costs equalize.

Frequently Asked Questions

VA is better for most veterans in most situations. No down payment, no PMI, and lower rates typically produce lower total monthly cost and less interest paid. Exceptions apply for certain property types, investment properties, and when the property does not meet VA standards.
The VA funding fee (0.50-3.30% one-time), VA minimum property requirements that limit which properties qualify, primary residence restriction, and VA appraisal requirements that can delay closings or require repairs.
Yes. You can have multiple simultaneous VA loans with remaining entitlement. You can use VA to buy a new primary residence while keeping your current home as a rental.
Rarely. The funding fee is one-time; PMI is recurring. On a 3+ year hold, PMI savings almost always exceed the funding fee cost. Veterans with 10%+ disability rating are exempt from the fee entirely.
Yes. Veterans can use conventional for second homes, investment properties, or when a property does not meet VA standards, while holding a VA loan on their primary residence.
No VA loan limit for veterans with full entitlement since 2020. Veterans can borrow any amount without a down payment. Limits apply only to veterans with reduced entitlement from a prior outstanding VA loan.
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This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or tax advice. It is not a commitment to lend. Loan programs, rates, and eligibility requirements are subject to change without notice. Consult a qualified professional before making financial decisions.