Texas FHA Loan Requirements (2026 Guide)
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For many buyers in The Lone Star State, the FHA loan is the practical route to a first home: 3.5% down, credit scores from 580, and 2026 FHA loan limits that run from the national floor of $541,287 as high as $649,750 in Travis County.
Here is what matters for an FHA loan in Texas — the county-by-county limits, the TDHCA programs that can cover your down payment, and the local costs that affect how much you qualify for.
Key Takeaways
- Texas 2026 FHA loan limits range from $541,287 in standard counties to $649,750 in Travis County.
- FHA minimum down payment is 3.5% with a 580+ FICO score, or 10% with a 500-579 FICO score.
- Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs (TDHCA) pairs FHA financing with state-specific down payment assistance u2014 see programs below.
- FHA requires both an upfront mortgage insurance premium (1.75% of loan amount) and an annual MIP that stays for the life of the loan at 3.5% down.
- FHA loans are owner-occupied only u2014 you must move in within 60 days of closing and live in the property for at least one year.
2026 FHA Loan Limits in Texas
In 2026, Texas FHA loan limits for a single-family home range from $541,287 up to $649,750 in Travis County.
The Federal Housing Administration sets county-level FHA loan limits each calendar year based on local median home prices. For 2026, every U.S. county falls into one of three tiers: the national ‘floor’ of $541,287 for a one-unit property, the national ‘ceiling’ of $1,249,125 in high-cost areas, or a ‘between’ tier set at 115% of the local median home price. Here is how Texas’s counties fall across those tiers.
Most Texas metropolitan counties sit in the ‘between’ tier, where limits scale with the local median home price. Travis County, for example, has a 2026 single-family FHA limit of $649,750.
Counties at the FHA floor of $541,287 include Harris, Bexar, Fort Bend — these are typically lower-cost or rural counties where local median prices fall below the threshold for an elevated limit.
Limits scale up for multi-unit properties: a 4-unit property in a ceiling county can borrow up to $2,402,625, while a 4-unit property in a floor county is capped at $1,041,125. Always confirm your specific county’s limit with HUD’s lookup tool before making an offer.
FHA Requirements for Texas Borrowers
To qualify for an FHA loan in Texas, you need a credit score of at least 580 for 3.5% down (or 500-579 with 10% down), a debt-to-income ratio generally under 43%, two years of steady employment, and the home must be your primary residence.
FHA sets its core eligibility rules at the federal level through HUD, so a Texas borrower meets the same baseline criteria as a borrower in any other state. What changes from state to state is how those rules interact with local home prices, property taxes, and the down payment assistance offered by Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs (TDHCA). Here is how the FHA requirements apply specifically in Texas:
- Credit score: FHA allows 580 for 3.5% down (or 500-579 with 10% down), but most Texas lenders apply an overlay around 620-640 for automated approval. If your score sits between 580 and 620, look for a Texas lenders that manually underwrites FHA files. If your credit is the hurdle, our guide on how to buy a house with bad credit walks through the options.
- Down payment: 3.5% of the purchase price. On a home at Texas’s statewide median of $305,000, that is roughly $10,675 — and TDHCA assistance (covered below) can reduce or eliminate that cash requirement entirely.
- Debt-to-income ratio: Generally a 43% back-end maximum, with flexibility to 56.99% under FHA manual underwriting when compensating factors exist. As a rough illustration, a $305,000 Texas purchase with the full housing payment plus typical consumer debt would call for a household income in the neighborhood of $6,562 to stay inside the standard ratio — your actual number depends on rate, taxes, and existing debt.
- Employment history: Two years of documented work in the same field (recent graduates and career-changers can qualify with a documented path to stable income).
- Occupancy: Primary residence only — you must move in within 60 days of closing and live there at least a year. This rules out Texas vacation and investment properties unless you occupy one unit of a 2-4 unit building.
- Property condition: The home must pass an FHA appraisal covering both market value and HUD minimum property standards — a more common sticking point on older Texas housing stock than on newer construction.
Texas Down Payment Assistance Through TDHCA
Yes — TDHCA offers down payment assistance that pairs with FHA loans in Texas, including the TDHCA My First Texas Home, which can reduce or eliminate the $10,675 typically needed for a 3.5% down payment at the state median price.
Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs (TDHCA) runs the state’s primary down payment assistance (DPA) programs. Most pair directly with FHA first mortgages and can dramatically reduce the out-of-pocket cash needed to close.
- TDHCA My First Texas Home: Up to 5% of the loan amount as a deferred grant or second-lien down payment assistance, available with FHA, VA, USDA, or conventional first mortgages for first-time buyers under TDHCA income limits.
- TSAHC Home Sweet Texas Home Loan Program: Texas State Affordable Housing Corporation grants of up to 5% for down payment and closing costs; pairs with FHA financing and has no first-time-buyer requirement in some categories.
DPA programs have eligibility rules layered on top of FHA’s underwriting requirements — typically income limits tied to area median income, purchase price caps, first-time buyer requirements (with some exceptions), and homebuyer education courses. Check current eligibility on the TDHCA website before assuming you qualify.
Texas Property Tax, Insurance, and Closing Cost Context
FHA counts property taxes and homeowner’s insurance in your monthly payment, so Texas’s local tax and insurance costs directly affect how much home you can qualify for — and closing costs typically run 2% to 5% of the purchase price.
Texas has no state income tax but property taxes are among the highest in the country — effective rates run 1.6% to 2.5% in many counties. Homestead exemptions ($100,000 off school district taxable value as of 2023) reduce the bill significantly for owner-occupants. Texas also requires windstorm coverage in coastal counties through the Texas Windstorm Insurance Association (TWIA).
FHA underwriting evaluates your full housing payment — principal, interest, taxes, insurance, mortgage insurance, and any HOA dues (PITI+MI+HOA) — against your gross monthly income. In Texas, the tax and insurance components can shift your qualifying loan amount significantly, so get binding quotes for both early in the process.
Closing costs in Texas typically run 2% to 5% of the purchase price and include lender origination fees, title insurance (lender’s policy required, owner’s policy strongly recommended), appraisal ($600-$900 in most markets), recording fees, prepaid taxes and insurance for the escrow account, and the first month of mortgage insurance. FHA allows the seller to contribute up to 6% of the purchase price toward your closing costs — this is a major negotiating lever in slower markets and one of the most underused buyer-side tactics in Texas real estate transactions.
FHA vs Conventional in Texas
In Texas, FHA usually wins for credit scores below 680 or higher debt-to-income ratios, while a low-down-payment conventional loan often costs less for buyers with strong credit (700+) because conventional PMI eventually cancels and FHA mortgage insurance does not.
FHA is not always the right answer in Texas, even for buyers who qualify. Conventional loans with 3% down (Fannie Mae HomeReady, Freddie Mac Home Possible) can sometimes win for borrowers with strong credit (700+) because conventional private mortgage insurance (PMI) auto-cancels at 78% loan-to-value, while FHA MIP at the standard 3.5% down structure stays for the life of the loan. Over a 7-10 year holding period, that difference can total $15,000 to $40,000 in extra costs on a Texas purchase at the state median price.
That said, FHA usually wins in three scenarios: credit scores below 680, debt-to-income ratios above 43%, and buyers who need the most flexible underwriting (non-traditional credit, recent credit events, irregular income sources). FHA also typically offers lower rates than conventional at the same credit profile in the sub-700 FICO range.
The best approach for most Texas buyers: get quotes for both FHA and conventional from the same lender, compare the 5-year and 10-year total cost of each, and choose based on how long you plan to stay in the home.
FHA Mortgage Insurance Explained for Texas Buyers
Every FHA loan in Texas carries an upfront mortgage insurance premium of 1.75% (financed into the loan) plus a monthly premium around 0.55% per year — and at 3.5% down that monthly premium stays for the life of the loan.
FHA loans carry two separate mortgage insurance components, both paid by the borrower. Using Texas’s statewide median price of $305,000 as a working example with the minimum 3.5% down (a base loan of $294,325):
- Upfront premium (UFMIP): 1.75% of the base loan — about $5,150 on this Texas example — almost always financed into the loan rather than paid in cash, bringing the financed balance to roughly $299,475.
- Annual premium (MIP): 0.15% to 0.75% of the balance, paid monthly. At the typical 0.55% for a 30-year FHA loan at 3.5% down, that adds about $137 per month to this Texas buyer’s payment.
The decisive difference between FHA MIP and conventional PMI: at the standard 3.5% down structure, FHA MIP stays for the life of the loan, while conventional PMI automatically cancels at 78% loan-to-value. For a Texas buyer, that life-of-loan cost is the main reason to compare FHA against a low-down-payment conventional option — see our FHA vs conventional comparison for the full cost breakdown. Many Texas FHA borrowers refinance into a conventional loan 2-5 years after purchase, once they have equity and stronger credit, to shed MIP and often lower their rate.
How to Apply for an FHA Loan in Texas
To apply for an FHA loan in Texas: check your credit, get pre-approved with an FHA-approved lender, find a home that meets FHA’s property standards, complete the FHA appraisal, and close — moving in within 60 days.
- Check your credit. Pull your FICO scores from AnnualCreditReport.com. If you’re below 580, work on improving your score before applying — the difference between 579 and 580 is the difference between 10% down and 3.5% down.
- Get pre-approved. A pre-approval letter from an FHA-approved lender confirms your maximum purchase price and signals to sellers that you’re a serious buyer.
- Choose a property. The home must meet FHA’s minimum property standards. Most move-in-ready homes pass; properties with significant deferred maintenance, safety issues, or major structural problems may not.
- Order the FHA appraisal. Unlike conventional appraisals, FHA appraisals also evaluate the property’s condition. Issues flagged by the appraiser must be repaired before closing.
- Close the loan. Bring 3.5% down (or use DPA to reduce or eliminate that), pay closing costs (often partially funded by seller credits), and move in within 60 days.
Herring Bank is a direct FHA-approved lender (NMLS #415783) licensed to originate mortgages in all 50 states. Texas FHA borrowers can start pre-approval online or by calling 1-214-225-3166 to speak with a mortgage specialist. Buying near a state line? Compare FHA requirements in neighboring Oklahoma, Louisiana, and Arkansas.
Example: Texas FHA Purchase at the State Median Price
A buyer purchasing a single-family home at Texas’s statewide median price of $305,000 with FHA’s minimum 3.5% down would put $10,675 into the deal. Base loan amount: $294,325. The upfront mortgage insurance premium (1.75%) adds $5,150 financed into the loan, bringing the total financed amount to $299,475. Annual MIP at 0.55% on this loan would add roughly $137 per month to the payment. This example excludes property tax, homeowner’s insurance, and any HOA dues — all of which vary significantly by Texas county.
| County | 1-Unit Limit | 4-Unit Limit | Tier |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hays | $649,750 | $1,249,745 | Between (Local) |
| Travis | $649,750 | $1,249,745 | Between (Local) |
| Williamson | $649,750 | $1,249,745 | Between (Local) |
| Collin | $624,150 | $1,200,505 | Between (Local) |
| Dallas | $624,150 | $1,200,505 | Between (Local) |
| Denton | $624,150 | $1,200,505 | Between (Local) |
Frequently Asked Questions
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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.
