The VA home loan benefit is one of the most financially significant benefits a veteran earns through service. It allows you to purchase a home with no down payment, no private mortgage insurance (PMI), and competitive interest rates. Yet most veterans either don't know it exists, don't know how to use it correctly, or lose thousands of dollars by not understanding how it works.
No down payment saves $20,000-$60,000 upfront on a typical home purchase. No PMI saves $150-$400 per month compared to a conventional loan with less than 20% down. Over a 30-year loan, the PMI savings alone can exceed $100,000. This benefit is earned — use it.
Who Qualifies
Generally, veterans who served 90 days of active duty during wartime, 181 days during peacetime, or 6 years in the National Guard or Reserve qualify. The full eligibility requirements are complex — the fastest way to confirm eligibility is to request your Certificate of Eligibility (COE) through va.gov or have a VA-approved lender pull it directly.
The Certificate of Eligibility (COE)
The COE is what proves your VA loan eligibility to lenders. You can get it three ways: through your va.gov account (instant in most cases), through a VA-approved lender (they can pull it electronically), or by mailing VA Form 26-1880. Get your COE before you start house hunting — it adds credibility to your offer and sellers take VA-backed buyers more seriously when you have it in hand.
VA Funding Fee
The VA does not lend money directly — it guarantees a portion of the loan, which lets lenders offer better terms. In exchange, there is a one-time funding fee added to the loan. For first-time use with no down payment: 2.15% for regular military, 2.3% for Reserves/Guard. For subsequent use: 3.3%. The fee can be rolled into the loan or paid at closing.
Funding fee waiver: Veterans with a service-connected disability rating of 10% or more have the funding fee completely waived. Surviving spouses of veterans who died in service or from service-connected disability also qualify for the waiver. This saves $5,000-$15,000 on a typical home purchase. Confirm your waiver status before closing.
VA Loan Limits and Entitlement
Since the Blue Water Navy Vietnam Veterans Act of 2020, there are no VA loan limits for veterans with full entitlement. You can borrow any amount the lender approves with no down payment requirement. If you have used your VA loan benefit before and still have an outstanding VA loan, you may have reduced entitlement — but bonus entitlement often still allows a no-down-payment purchase depending on the county loan limit.
The VA Loan Process Step by Step
VA Loan vs Conventional Comparison
| Feature | VA Loan | Conventional (3% down) | Conventional (20% down) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Down payment | $0 | $12,000 (on $400K) | $80,000 (on $400K) |
| PMI | None ever | $150-300/month | None |
| Funding fee | $8,600 (2.15%, rolled in) | None | None |
| Interest rate | Typically lowest available | Standard market rate | Standard market rate |
| Credit requirement | Typically 620+ (varies by lender) | 620+ | 620+ |
| Debt-to-income | More flexible | 43% typical max | 43% typical max |
IRRRL - VA Loan Refinance
If you already have a VA loan, the Interest Rate Reduction Refinance Loan (IRRRL) lets you refinance to a lower rate with minimal paperwork, no appraisal in most cases, and a funding fee of only 0.5%. If rates drop after your purchase, this is the fastest way to lower your payment.
Know All Your VA Benefits Before Buying
The home loan is one of dozens of benefits you may be entitled to. The VA benefits checklist covers everything from healthcare to education to the home loan — make sure you're claiming it all.
View Complete Benefits Checklist