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Arizona First-Time Home Buyer Income Limits: What Actually Determines If You Qualify

"I probably make too much for assistance" is one of the most common things first-time buyers say before they've actually checked. Most of the time, it's wrong. Income limits for Arizona first-time buyer programs are set relative to the area's median income — which in high-cost metros like Phoenix is higher than most people expect.

This page explains the structure of income limits, which programs have them, and what to actually do with that information.

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Which First-Time Buyer Programs Have Income Limits — and Which Don't?

The most important thing to get straight first:

  • FHA loans: No income limit. Any buyer who qualifies on credit and DTI can use FHA.
  • Conventional loans (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Conventional 97): No income limit on standard products. (HomeReady has an income limit at 80% AMI in some census tracts, but standard conventional does not.)
  • VA loans: No income limit.
  • USDA loans: Income limit applies — typically 115% of AMI for the area.
  • All DPA programs: Income limits apply. These include Home in Five, Home Plus, Pima Tucson Homebuyer's Solution, Arizona Is Home, Chenoa Fund, Arrive Home, and Essex/NHF.

If you're only using FHA, conventional, or VA without DPA, income does not limit your options.

How AMI Works: The Framework Behind Every Income Limit

AMI stands for Area Median Income. HUD calculates it annually for every metro area and county in the country. It represents the income at the exact midpoint of the income distribution for that geography — half of households earn more, half earn less.

DPA programs set their income limits as a percentage of AMI. Common thresholds are 80%, 100%, 120%, or 140% AMI. What that means in practice:

  • 80% AMI: Lower-income limit. More restrictive, typically for the deepest assistance programs.
  • 100% AMI: Moderate. Covers a buyer earning approximately the area's median household income.
  • 120–140% AMI: Upper-moderate. Often catches dual-income households with combined incomes that feel high but are still below the threshold.

Because AMI is set by geography, the raw dollar limit varies by county. Maricopa County's AMI is higher than a less-populated Arizona county's AMI — so the same percentage limit translates to a higher dollar figure in Phoenix than in a small town. This is why blanket statements like "the limit is $X" are misleading — the number depends on which county you're buying in and how many people are in your household.

Household Size Changes the Calculation

Most DPA programs set separate income limits for different household sizes — typically broken out for 1–2 person households versus 3+ person households. A family of 4 buying in Maricopa County will have a higher income limit than a single buyer buying in the same county.

This matters for dual-income couples buying before or after having children, because the limit for a 3-person household is meaningfully higher than for a 2-person household. Buyers who are growing families should factor this into their eligibility assessment.

The "I Make Too Much" Myth

Arizona's DPA income limits — particularly in Maricopa County — are calibrated to the local cost of living. Buyers with combined incomes that feel solidly middle-class often still qualify. Three scenarios that catch buyers by surprise:

  • Dual income, recent job changes: If one partner recently changed jobs or got a raise, income may have just moved above a limit — but some programs average the prior 2 years.
  • Self-employed income: Stated gross may be different from the qualifying income calculated from tax returns. Net income after business deductions can be significantly lower than gross revenue, which may put self-employed buyers well inside limits they assumed they'd exceeded.
  • Only one income counted: Some programs count only the income of buyers who are on the loan. If one partner is not on the mortgage, their income may not count toward the limit — or it may, depending on program rules. This needs to be verified for each specific program.

The only way to know is to run your actual numbers. Guessing based on a vague sense of "I earn too much" has kept qualified buyers out of programs that would have saved them thousands of dollars.

What to Actually Do About Income Limits

The right sequence is:

  1. Get pre-approved first. This confirms your loan program, maximum purchase price, and required down payment. It does not depend on DPA.
  2. Check DPA eligibility at the same time. Mike runs both simultaneously — the pre-approval and DPA eligibility check happen in the same conversation with the same documentation.
  3. If you're within a program's limits: DPA gets layered onto your loan and covers the down payment.
  4. If you're above all program limits: You still have your pre-approved loan. You save for the down payment normally or explore gift funds.

Buyers who try to research income limits first — before pre-approval — often get confused by outdated figures, misidentify their household size bracket, or apply the wrong county's AMI. Start the process right and check both at once.

Arizona Programs and Their Income Limit Structures

Each program's limits are set differently. Do not list specific dollar figures here — they update annually and vary by county and family size. What matters is the structure:

  • Home in Five (Maricopa County): Household income limit is $157,360 as of June 2026, with a 640 FICO minimum and assistance up to 6.5%. Has a standard tier and enhanced tier for qualified buyers.
  • Home Plus (statewide AZ): Borrower income limit is $155,386 ($146,503 with FHA, VA, or USDA loans), 620 FICO minimum, with assistance up to 5% (4% plus 1% for Active Duty and Veterans).
  • Pima Tucson Homebuyer's Solution: Limits based on Pima County AMI.
  • Arizona Is Home: Statewide, limits set against the relevant county AMI.
  • Chenoa Fund, Arrive Home, Essex/NHF: National programs with their own income limit structures — sometimes higher than local IDA limits.

National programs can be a fallback when a buyer is above local program limits but still below the national program's ceiling. Mike checks all applicable programs during the pre-approval process. Contact Mike at /contact.html or see /down-payment-assistance.html for program details.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Do FHA loans have income limits for first-time buyers in Arizona?

No, FHA loans have no income limit. Any buyer who meets the credit and debt-to-income guidelines can use FHA regardless of earnings. FHA needs a 580 credit score for 3.5% down (or 500 to 579 for 10% down) and charges a 1.75% upfront mortgage insurance premium. Income limits apply only to down payment assistance layered on top of FHA, not the loan itself.

What programs have income limits for Arizona first-time buyers?

Down payment assistance programs carry income limits: Home Plus caps borrower income at $155,386 ($146,503 with government loans), and Home in Five caps household income at $157,360 in Maricopa County. Pima Tucson Homebuyer's Solution and city programs also have limits, and USDA loans apply income limits. FHA, conventional, and VA loans have none.

What is the income limit for Home Plus and Home in Five in 2026?

Home Plus allows borrower income up to $155,386, or $146,503 when paired with an FHA, VA, or USDA loan, and it is available statewide with a 620 FICO minimum. Home in Five, available only in Maricopa County, allows household income up to $157,360 as of June 2026, with a 640 FICO minimum. You qualify for one program per purchase, not both.

What is AMI and how does it affect first-time buyer eligibility?

AMI is Area Median Income, the midpoint of household incomes in a county or metro, calculated annually by HUD. DPA programs set limits as a percentage of AMI, commonly 80%, 100%, 120%, or 140%. Higher-AMI counties have higher raw dollar limits. Maricopa County's AMI is higher than less-populated Arizona counties, so the same program percentage translates to a higher income ceiling in Phoenix.

What income is too high for Arizona DPA programs?

You are likely above the major programs once your income passes about $157,360, the Home in Five household cap in Maricopa County, or $155,386, the Home Plus borrower cap. Below those figures, many households with incomes in the $70,000 to $100,000 range still qualify. The only way to confirm is to run your actual numbers against current limits with Mike.

Should I check income limits before getting pre-approved?

No, get pre-approved first, then check DPA eligibility at the same time. Pre-approval determines your loan and budget regardless of DPA, so it costs you nothing to confirm both together. Buyers who research limits first often use outdated numbers or the wrong county's AMI and incorrectly disqualify themselves. Visit /pre-approval-vs-pre-qualification.html to understand the difference.