Home/Real Estate & Homeownership/FHA vs Conventional Loan: Which Is Better for You?
DigitalWealthSource ยท April 2025

FHA vs Conventional Loan: Which Is Better for You?

FHA vs conventional mortgage โ€” complete 2025 comparison with real cost math. Which saves more money over the life of the loan? The answer depends on your credit score, down payment, and timeline.

โœ๏ธ Written by DigitalWealthSource
๐Ÿ” Reviewed by Derek Giordano ยท Sources verified
๐Ÿ“… February 2025
โฑ๏ธ 10 min read
โœ… Fact-checked
๐Ÿ“‘ On This Page โ–พ
The Core Tradeoff The Mortgage Insurance Math โ€” Where FHA... When FHA Is the Right Choice When Conventional Is the Right Choice

Core Tradeoff

FHA loans are government-backed and easier to qualify for โ€” lower credit scores, higher debt-to-income ratios, smaller down payments. Conventional loans are not government-backed and require better credit โ€” but they're often cheaper long-term, especially if you can put down 20%.

FeatureFHA LoanConventional Loan
Minimum down payment3.5% (580+ credit) / 10% (500-579)3% with some programs
Minimum credit score580 for 3.5% down (some lenders: 500)620 minimum; 740+ for best rates
Mortgage insuranceMIP for life of loan (if <10% down)PMI removed at 20% equity
Loan limit (2025, most areas)$524,225$766,550 (conforming)
Interest rateSlightly lower typicallyVaries; 740+ score gets best
Debt-to-income limitUp to 57% in some cases43% standard; 50% with compensating factors

Mortgage Insurance Math โ€” Where FHA Loses

The biggest FHA drawback: if you put less than 10% down, you pay the Mortgage Insurance Premium (MIP) for the entire life of the loan. MIP is 0.55% of the loan annually โ€” on a $350,000 loan, that's $1,925/year, $160/month, forever. With a conventional loan, PMI disappears when you hit 20% equity โ€” often 7-10 years into the loan.

โš ๏ธ The True Cost of Lifetime MIP

$350,000 FHA loan at 3.5% down over 30 years: MIP for life = $57,750 total. Same loan refinanced to conventional after reaching 20% equity at year 8: MIP paid = $15,400. The savings of refinancing out of FHA early: $42,350. For people who plan to own long-term, improving credit and refinancing to conventional โ€” or putting 10% down on FHA to eliminate lifetime MIP โ€” dramatically reduces total cost.

FHA Is the Right Choice

  • Credit score below 660 โ€” FHA rates are more competitive at lower scores
  • High debt-to-income ratio that conventional lenders won't approve
  • You plan to sell or refinance within 5-7 years (before MIP adds up)
  • You need the more flexible qualification standards to get into a home now

Conventional Is the Right Choice

  • Credit score 700+ โ€” conventional rates become very competitive
  • You can put 20% down and avoid PMI entirely
  • You plan to own long-term (PMI removal saves significantly vs. lifetime MIP)
  • The home exceeds FHA loan limits in high-cost areas
๐Ÿ“š Related
โš ๏ธ Important Disclosure
DigitalWealthSource publishes educational financial content. Nothing on this site constitutes personalized financial, tax, legal, or investment advice. Every person's financial situation is unique. We strongly encourage consulting with a qualified financial advisor, CPA, or attorney before making significant financial decisions. Content is provided for informational and educational purposes only.
Sources: HUD: FHA Loans
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Written & reviewed by Derek Giordano
Derek reviews all content on DigitalWealthSource. Background in business marketing with hands-on experience in debt payoff, homebuying, tax strategy, and long-term investing. Our methodology โ†’
Independently Researched & Fact-Checked
All figures cited to official government data, regulatory filings, and peer-reviewed research. No sponsored content.
📖 Sources & References
  1. FHA Loan Requirements. HUD/FHA. https://www.hud.gov/buying/loans
  2. Conventional Loan Requirements. Fannie Mae. https://singlefamily.fanniemae.com/originating-underwriting
  3. Private Mortgage Insurance. CFPB. https://www.consumerfinance.gov/ask-cfpb/what-is-private-mortgage-insurance-en-122/
  4. Mortgage Data (HMDA). CFPB. https://www.consumerfinance.gov/data-research/hmda/
  5. FHA Single Family Housing Policy Handbook. HUD. https://www.hud.gov/program_offices/housing/sfh/handbook_4000-1
  6. Primary Mortgage Market Survey. Freddie Mac. https://www.freddiemac.com/pmms