Why the Loan Program You Choose Matters More Than You Think

Most first-time buyers focus almost entirely on finding the right house. The loan program — which one, through which lender, with which assistance layered on top — feels like the confusing part you’ll figure out when you get there. But the loan program you choose shapes everything: how much cash you need to close, what your monthly payment looks like, how competitive your offer appears to sellers, and how much financial cushion you have left after moving day.

In Northern Colorado specifically, where entry-level prices have risen significantly over the past several years, the difference between using the right program and just defaulting to whatever your bank offers can be $10,000 to $30,000 in upfront costs — or the difference between qualifying and not qualifying at all.

“The first-time buyers I see struggle aren’t the ones who couldn’t afford a home. They’re the ones who didn’t know what help was available — and ended up on the sidelines longer than they needed to be.”
— Bre Carpenter

Here is every major program available to Colorado first-time buyers in 2025, explained clearly and honestly — with what it actually delivers, what the catches are, and who it’s best suited for.

CHFA — Colorado Housing and Finance Authority

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CHFA First-Time Buyer Programs
Colorado’s primary state-level resource for first-time buyers — below-market rates and down payment help
State Program

CHFA — the Colorado Housing and Finance Authority — is the starting point for most first-time buyer conversations in Colorado, and for good reason. It is the state’s primary resource for making homeownership more accessible, and it offers two distinct types of assistance that can be used separately or together.

CHFA First Mortgage: CHFA partners with approved lenders to offer first mortgage loans at below-market interest rates for qualifying buyers. These aren’t available through every lender — only CHFA-approved ones — which is one reason working with a local Colorado lender matters so much. The below-market rate can translate to meaningful savings over the life of your loan compared to what you’d get through a conventional retail lender.

CHFA Down Payment Assistance: This is the feature most first-time buyers come to CHFA for. Qualifying buyers can receive a second mortgage of up to 4% of their first mortgage amount to help cover the down payment and sometimes closing costs. This second mortgage carries a low fixed interest rate and is repaid over time — it is not a grant, but the monthly addition to your payment is typically modest and the upfront benefit is significant.

Down Payment Assist
Up to 4%
Who Qualifies
First-time buyers*
Min. Credit Score
620+

Who qualifies: CHFA defines a first-time buyer as someone who has not owned and occupied a primary residence in the past three years. This means if you owned a home years ago but have been renting since, you may still qualify. Income limits and purchase price limits apply and vary by county — in Larimer County (covering Fort Collins, Loveland, and Berthoud), limits are generally calibrated to local market conditions. The most current figures are available through a CHFA-approved lender.

Important note for NoCo buyers: Not every lender offers CHFA products. Finding a local Colorado lender who is CHFA-approved and experienced with these programs is one of the most important early steps in your home buying process. Bre can refer you to trusted local lenders who work with CHFA regularly.

✓ Best for: Colorado buyers who need down payment help, have a 620+ credit score, and fall within CHFA’s income limits for their county

FHA Loans — Low Down Payment, Flexible Credit

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FHA Loan
Federal Housing Administration — 3.5% down, credit scores as low as 580
Federal Program

FHA loans are federally backed mortgages insured by the Federal Housing Administration — and they are consistently one of the most popular first-time buyer loan products in Northern Colorado. The reasons are straightforward: the down payment minimum is 3.5% (lower than most conventional options), and the credit score floor is 580 — significantly more flexible than conventional lending.

Min. Down Payment
3.5%
Min. Credit Score
580
Mortgage Insurance
Required

What FHA covers: On a $450,000 home — close to Northern Colorado’s median — a 3.5% down payment is $15,750. That’s a meaningful reduction from the 5% to 10% many buyers assume is the floor. FHA loans are widely available through most lenders, including local Colorado lenders, credit unions, and banks.

The catch — mortgage insurance: FHA loans require two types of mortgage insurance: an upfront mortgage insurance premium (UFMIP) of 1.75% of the loan amount, which is typically rolled into the loan, and an annual MIP (mortgage insurance premium) paid monthly. Unlike conventional PMI, FHA mortgage insurance on loans with less than 10% down generally remains for the life of the loan — it doesn’t automatically drop off when you reach 20% equity. This is the most important cost consideration when comparing FHA to conventional options.

FHA + CHFA: FHA loans can be paired with CHFA down payment assistance — a common combination in Northern Colorado that allows buyers to use an FHA first mortgage and a CHFA second mortgage together, further reducing out-of-pocket costs.

✓ Best for: First-time buyers with credit scores in the 580–680 range, limited savings for a larger down payment, or those who want maximum lender flexibility

VA Loans — Zero Down for Veterans and Military

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VA Loan
U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs — zero down, no PMI, for eligible military buyers
Military Benefit

The VA loan is one of the most powerful home financing tools in existence — and one of the most consistently underused by eligible buyers who simply don’t realize what they’re entitled to. If you are a veteran, active-duty service member, or the surviving spouse of a service member, the VA loan should be the first program you look at, not an afterthought.

Down Payment
0%
Mortgage Insurance
None (no PMI)
Min. Credit Score
Lender-set (~580+)

What makes VA loans exceptional: Zero down payment. No private mortgage insurance. Competitive interest rates — often lower than conventional market rates. No prepayment penalty. And the VA loan benefit can be used multiple times, not just for a first purchase. The only upfront cost specific to VA loans is the VA funding fee (typically 1.25% to 3.3% of the loan amount, which can be rolled into the loan), and this fee is waived entirely for veterans with a service-related disability.

In Northern Colorado: VA loans are an excellent fit for buyers in communities like Fort Collins, Loveland, Windsor, and Berthoud — and in a competitive NoCo market, a VA offer from a financially strong buyer is competitive. Some sellers have misconceptions about VA loans being slower or harder to close, but an experienced VA lender and a knowledgeable buyer’s agent can address this effectively.

How to check eligibility: Eligibility is determined through a Certificate of Eligibility (COE), which your lender can typically obtain on your behalf. Generally, veterans who served 90 consecutive days during wartime or 181 days during peacetime qualify, as do National Guard and Reserve members who have served six years or been called to active duty.

✓ Best for: Any eligible veteran, active-duty service member, or surviving spouse — this benefit exists specifically for you and consistently outperforms all other programs on total cost

USDA Loans — Zero Down in Eligible Northern Colorado Areas

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USDA Rural Development Loan
Zero down payment for buyers purchasing in USDA-eligible areas — some NoCo communities qualify
Rural Program

The USDA Rural Development loan is another zero-down-payment option that many Colorado buyers don’t know to look for — because they assume “rural” means remote farmland. In practice, some surprisingly accessible Northern Colorado communities and addresses qualify for USDA financing, including areas in and around Berthoud and parts of rural Weld and Larimer County.

Down Payment
0%
Mortgage Insurance
Low annual fee
Income Limit
115% of AMI

Two qualifying requirements: USDA loans have both a property eligibility requirement (the home must be in a USDA-designated eligible area) and a buyer income limit (generally up to 115% of the area median income for your household size and county). Both must be satisfied. The USDA updates its eligible area maps periodically, so a specific address that qualified a year ago should be confirmed as still eligible by a USDA-approved lender.

USDA vs. VA: If you’re eligible for VA, use VA — it’s a better program in most respects. But for buyers who aren’t VA-eligible and are purchasing in a qualifying area, USDA’s zero-down option is a legitimate and underused path to homeownership that deserves serious consideration.

How to check USDA eligibility: The USDA’s eligibility map is publicly available at eligibility.sc.egov.usda.gov. Enter a specific property address to check whether it qualifies. Your lender can also run this check during the pre-approval process.
✓ Best for: Buyers purchasing in USDA-eligible areas (check the map for specific addresses), within income limits, who are not VA-eligible

Conventional Loans — 3% and 5% Down Options

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Conventional 97 and HomeReady / Home Possible
As little as 3% down for buyers with strong credit — PMI drops off at 20% equity
Conventional

Conventional loans are not government-backed — they follow Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac guidelines — and they typically require stronger credit than FHA or VA loans. But for buyers who qualify, they offer important advantages, including PMI that automatically terminates when you reach 20% equity (unlike FHA mortgage insurance), and no requirement to use a specific lender type or program.

Min. Down Payment
3%
Min. Credit Score
620–640
PMI
Drops at 20% equity

Conventional 97: Fannie Mae’s conventional 97 program allows first-time buyers (defined as someone who has not owned a home in the past three years) to put as little as 3% down. Credit score minimums typically start at 620 to 640. PMI is required until you reach 20% equity — but unlike FHA, it’s cancellable.

HomeReady and Home Possible: These are income-based conventional programs from Fannie Mae (HomeReady) and Freddie Mac (Home Possible) that offer reduced PMI rates and 3% down for buyers at or below 80% of area median income. They also allow non-borrower household income to be considered in qualifying — which can help buyers in multigenerational households. Both are paired with homebuyer education requirements.

Conventional vs. FHA in the NoCo market: For buyers with a 680+ credit score and at least 5% to put down, conventional is often the smarter long-term choice because of cancellable PMI and generally lower overall mortgage insurance costs. For buyers with lower credit scores or less saved, FHA’s flexibility typically wins. A local lender can run side-by-side payment comparisons to show you exactly how the numbers look for your specific situation.

✓ Best for: First-time buyers with 620+ credit score (ideally 680+), stable income, and 3–10% saved — especially those who want PMI to eventually drop off

Local Colorado City and County Programs

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City and County First-Time Buyer Programs
Fort Collins, Loveland, and Larimer County periodically offer their own assistance — ask specifically
Local Programs

Beyond the state and federal programs above, several Northern Colorado cities and counties maintain their own first-time buyer assistance programs — and these are frequently the least-known and most underutilized resources available. Fort Collins, Loveland, and Larimer County have all offered locally funded down payment assistance and affordable homeownership programs at various times.

These programs vary significantly in their availability, funding levels, income limits, and eligibility requirements — and they change. A program that was active last year may have exhausted its funding; a new one may have been launched. The best way to stay current is to work with a local Northern Colorado lender who actively tracks what’s available and asks about local programs as part of the pre-approval process.

Important: Local programs often have limited funding and are awarded on a first-come, first-served basis. If you’re aware a local program exists, the time to apply is before you find a home — not after you’re under contract. Bre can connect you with local lenders who stay current on what’s available in Fort Collins, Loveland, and the surrounding NoCo communities.
✓ Best for: Any first-time buyer in Fort Collins, Loveland, or Larimer County — always ask your lender specifically about current local programs

How to Layer Programs for Maximum Benefit

One of the things most buyers don’t realize is that several of these programs can be combined — and that stacking them is often how first-time buyers in Northern Colorado dramatically reduce what they bring to closing.

🏛️ FHA + CHFA Down Payment Assist

One of the most common combinations in NoCo. Use an FHA first mortgage (3.5% down) paired with CHFA’s second mortgage (up to 4% of first mortgage) to cover some or all of the down payment. Result: significantly reduced or even eliminated out-of-pocket down payment for qualifying buyers.

📄 Conventional + CHFA

CHFA down payment assistance is also compatible with qualifying conventional first mortgages. For buyers with stronger credit who prefer conventional over FHA, this combination still delivers meaningful down payment help without government-backed mortgage insurance permanence.

🏛️ CHFA + Local City Program

In some cases, buyers can layer a local city or county program on top of a CHFA loan — stacking two sources of assistance. Eligibility requirements for each program must both be met. This combination typically requires advance planning and a lender experienced in coordinating multiple assistance sources.

🎖️ VA — No Layering Needed

VA loans are already the most generous single program — zero down, no PMI, competitive rates. Eligible veterans typically don’t need to layer additional assistance because the VA loan itself delivers more than the combined value of most stacked programs. Use your benefit as intended.

The key to layering successfully: Not all lenders know how to combine programs, and not all combinations are permitted by every program’s guidelines. Working with a local Colorado lender who specializes in first-time buyer programs is essential for making layering work — and for making sure the combination doesn’t create compliance issues that derail your closing.

All Colorado First-Time Buyer Programs — Side by Side

Program Min. Down Min. Credit PMI / MIP Income Limit Best For
CHFA (+ DPA) Varies by first loan type 620 Depends on first loan Yes — by county Buyers needing down payment help
FHA Loan 3.5% 580 Yes — life of loan (<10% down) No Lower credit, less savings
VA Loan 0% Lender (~580+) No PMI No Eligible veterans and military
USDA Loan 0% 640 (typical) Low annual fee Yes — 115% AMI Eligible rural areas, income-qualified
Conventional 97 3% 620–640 Yes — cancellable at 20% No Stronger credit, cancellable PMI
HomeReady / Home Possible 3% 620 Reduced — cancellable at 20% Yes — 80% AMI Moderate-income buyers, multigenerational
Local City/County Programs Varies Varies Depends on first loan Yes — varies NoCo buyers — ask your lender

All program details are approximate and subject to change. Income limits, purchase price caps, and credit requirements vary by county and lender. Always confirm current program terms with a qualified Colorado lender before making financial decisions.

How to Get Started in Northern Colorado

Knowing the programs exist is the first step. Here’s how the process actually unfolds for first-time buyers in Fort Collins, Loveland, Windsor, Berthoud, Greeley, Johnstown, and Timnath:

1
Check Your Eligibility — Before Anything Else

Pull your credit reports from all three bureaus. Know your scores. Calculate your income and approximate savings. If you’re a veteran, locate your discharge documentation. This information is what lenders need to determine which programs you actually qualify for — and knowing it in advance makes the pre-approval conversation faster and more productive.

2
Talk to a Local Colorado Lender — Not a National Call Center

CHFA programs are only available through CHFA-approved lenders. Local Colorado city and county programs are often only known to lenders who actively work in those markets. A local lender who specializes in first-time buyers will run your scenario through multiple programs simultaneously — comparing FHA vs. conventional, layering CHFA assistance, checking USDA eligibility for your target address — and show you exactly what each option looks like in monthly payment terms. Bre refers every first-time buyer to trusted local Northern Colorado lenders who do this work every day.

3
Attend a First-Time Buyer Class — Ideally Before You Start Shopping

CHFA requires a homebuyer education course for most of its programs, and several other programs strongly recommend it. Bre holds free bi-monthly first-time home buyer classes in Northern Colorado that cover the full process — financing, the search, making offers, inspections, and closing — so you walk into your first home tour already knowing what’s coming. Attending before you start shopping puts you in a fundamentally stronger position than buyers who are learning as they go.

4
Get Pre-Approved — for the Right Program

Pre-approval is not the same as pre-qualification. A full pre-approval involves a credit pull, income verification, and a formal assessment of your eligibility for the specific program you’re using. In Northern Colorado’s market, submitting an offer with a strong pre-approval letter from a local lender — not a pre-qualification from a national online lender — meaningfully strengthens your offer in sellers’ eyes.

5
Start Your Home Search — with a Local Agent Who Knows These Programs

Not all homes are eligible for all loan programs. FHA loans have property condition requirements. USDA loans require the property to be in an eligible area. VA loans have their own property standards. Working with a buyer’s agent who understands these constraints means you won’t fall in love with a home that doesn’t work for your financing — and that your offers are structured correctly for the program you’re using from day one.

Frequently Asked Questions

The questions Colorado first-time buyers ask most often about loan programs:

Is CHFA down payment assistance a grant or a loan?
CHFA’s down payment assistance is structured as a second mortgage — not a grant. It is a separate loan with its own interest rate (typically low and fixed) that is repaid over time alongside your first mortgage. The monthly payment on the second mortgage is usually modest relative to the benefit it provides upfront, but it does add to your total monthly housing cost. Some buyers confuse CHFA with grant programs, which do exist in some markets but typically come with stricter income limits, smaller amounts, and more limited availability. A CHFA-approved lender can show you exactly what the second mortgage payment looks like for your specific loan amount.
Can I use a gift for a down payment in Colorado?
Yes — most major loan programs allow gift funds for the down payment, though the documentation requirements vary. FHA loans allow the entire down payment to come from a gift from an acceptable source (typically a family member), accompanied by a signed gift letter confirming the funds are not a loan. Conventional loans also allow gift funds, with some programs requiring that the buyer contribute a minimum from their own funds when putting less than 20% down. VA and USDA loans also allow gifts under their respective guidelines. If you’re planning to use gift funds, let your lender know early — they need to see the gift documented in your bank statements before closing, and a paper trail matters.
What credit score do I need to buy a home in Colorado?
The minimum depends on the program. FHA loans allow as low as 580 with 3.5% down, or 500 with 10% down (though many lenders set their own minimums higher, often 600 to 620). CHFA programs require a minimum of 620. Conventional loans typically require 620 to 640 as a floor, with better rates available for scores above 740. VA loans don’t have a VA-set minimum, but most VA lenders require at least 580 to 620. If your credit score is below 620, working with a HUD-approved housing counselor or a credit-building program before starting your home search can meaningfully improve your options and your interest rate.
How long does it take to get pre-approved in Colorado?
With a local Colorado lender and your documents in order, a full pre-approval can typically be completed in 1 to 3 business days. The documents you’ll need: recent pay stubs (typically two months), W-2s and tax returns from the past two years, bank statements (typically two to three months for all accounts), and a government-issued ID. If you’re self-employed, additional documentation including profit and loss statements may be required. Having these ready before you call the lender cuts the timeline significantly. Pre-approval letters are typically valid for 60 to 90 days, after which they may need to be updated.
What is homebuyer education and is it required for Colorado programs?
Homebuyer education is a course — either in-person or online — that walks first-time buyers through the full process of purchasing a home: budgeting, financing, the search process, contracts, inspections, and closing. CHFA requires completion of a CHFA-approved homebuyer education course before closing on a CHFA-assisted loan. HomeReady and Home Possible conventional programs also require it. Even when it’s not required, completing a homebuyer education course before your search is one of the highest-value things a first-time buyer can do. Bre holds free bi-monthly first-time buyer classes in Northern Colorado that cover all of this material — and attending before you start shopping means you’re fully prepared from day one, not learning on the fly.
Can I buy a home in Northern Colorado with no money down?
Yes — there are two legitimate paths to zero down payment in Northern Colorado. The first is a VA loan, available to eligible veterans and active-duty military with no down payment and no PMI. The second is a USDA Rural Development loan, available for properties in USDA-eligible areas (some Northern Colorado communities qualify) for buyers within income limits. For buyers who don’t qualify for either program, layering CHFA down payment assistance with an FHA loan can reduce out-of-pocket costs dramatically — in some cases covering most or all of the down payment, though closing costs will still need to be funded unless the seller agrees to cover them via concessions.
Should I use an online lender or a local Colorado lender?
For first-time buyers using state and local assistance programs in Northern Colorado, a local Colorado lender is almost always the better choice. CHFA loans are only available through CHFA-approved lenders — national online platforms may not be on the approved list. Local city and county programs are typically only known to lenders actively working in those markets. Local lenders also have existing relationships with Northern Colorado title companies, appraisers, and real estate agents — which means smoother communication and fewer surprises during the transaction. Beyond program access, sellers and listing agents in NoCo markets consistently view pre-approval letters from known local lenders more favorably than letters from unfamiliar national platforms, which can affect how your offer is received in a competitive situation.

The Bottom Line for Colorado First-Time Buyers

The programs exist. The help is real. The barrier for most first-time buyers in Northern Colorado isn’t that homeownership is out of reach — it’s that they didn’t know what was available, didn’t find the right lender to explain it, and ended up either waiting longer than necessary or spending more than they needed to at closing.

Understanding your program options before you start your search changes the entire trajectory of the process. You walk into a lender conversation knowing what to ask for. You know your realistic budget. You know how much cash you actually need to bring to the table. And you know which homes are and aren’t eligible for the financing you’re using before you fall in love with one that isn’t.

That knowledge is the foundation. Everything else — the search, the offers, the inspections, the closing — is a lot more manageable when the financial piece is clear from the start.

BC

Bre Carpenter — Northern Colorado Realtor

Bre Carpenter is a licensed real estate agent with The Carpenter Collective, serving buyers and sellers in Fort Collins, Loveland, Windsor, Berthoud, Greeley, Johnstown, Timnath and surrounding Northern Colorado communities. With 6 years of local market experience and over 80% of her business dedicated to first-time buyers, she holds free bi-monthly first-time buyer classes and connects every buyer to trusted local Colorado lenders from day one. Questions? Reach out at 303.549.1503 or Bre@TheCarpenterCollective.com.

Ready to Find Out Which Program Is Right for You?

Let’s talk through your situation — your credit, your savings, your target neighborhood — and figure out exactly which Colorado loan programs give you the best path to your first home in Northern Colorado. Free conversation, no obligation, no jargon.

Book a Free Conversation with Bre

Or reach out directly: 303.549.1503 · Bre@TheCarpenterCollective.com