FHA loan in Arizona — full breakdown for first-time buyers
FHA loans are the most popular path for AZ first-time buyers who don't have 20% to put down + don't qualify for VA. Here's how they actually work in 2026.
FHA basics for AZ buyers
| Feature | FHA (2026) |
|---|---|
| Minimum down payment | 3.5% |
| Minimum FICO | 580 with 3.5% down; 500 with 10% down |
| 2026 AZ FHA loan limit (most counties) | $498,257 |
| 2026 Maricopa FHA loan limit | $562,350 |
| Upfront Mortgage Insurance Premium (UFMIP) | 1.75% of loan amount (financeable) |
| Annual MIP | 0.55% (typical) for life of loan |
| DTI guideline | 43% standard; up to 56% with compensating factors |
| Primary residence required | Yes (within 60 days) |
Why FHA is popular with AZ first-time buyers
- Low down payment. 3.5% is achievable for many savers
- Flexible credit. 580 FICO opens the door; some lenders work below that
- Forgiving on past credit events. 2 years after Chapter 7 BK; 3 years after foreclosure
- Higher DTI tolerance. Up to 56% in some scenarios
- Stacks with AZ DPA (Home Plus, Home In Five Advantage, Pathway)
Why FHA's "forever MIP" matters
FHA's biggest cost concern: monthly MIP doesn't drop off the loan automatically. If you put less than 10% down, the MIP is for the life of the loan (until you refinance or sell).
On a $400K FHA loan, the monthly MIP is roughly $183/month. Over 30 years = $66,000+ in extra cost vs a no-MIP loan.
How to escape FHA's MIP: Refinance to conventional once you've built 20% equity (typically 5-10 years of normal appreciation in AZ). The savings on monthly MIP often justify the refi cost.
FHA vs other AZ loan options for first-time buyers
FHA vs VA
If you're a veteran, VA almost always wins. $0 down vs 3.5%. No monthly MI vs 0.55% for life. Lower funding fee (waived for disability) vs FHA's 1.75% UFMIP.
FHA vs Conventional 3% down
Conventional 3% down is available to first-time buyers with 620+ credit. Comparison:
- Conventional 3% down advantages: No upfront mortgage insurance fee. PMI drops at 78% LTV (typically 9-12 years).
- FHA advantages: Accepts lower credit (580 vs 620). More lenient on past credit events.
For credit 620+, conventional 3% down usually wins. For credit 580-619, FHA is your option.
FHA vs USDA
If you're buying in a USDA-eligible AZ area (rural / small-town) + under income limits, USDA may win — $0 down + lower monthly fee.
FHA real cost example — $400K Phoenix home
Buyer: 640 FICO, $80K income, $400K Phoenix home.
| Cost component | Amount |
|---|---|
| Purchase price | $400,000 |
| Down payment (3.5%) | $14,000 |
| Base loan amount | $386,000 |
| UFMIP (1.75% financed) | $6,755 |
| Total loan amount | $392,755 |
| Monthly P&I at file-specific pricing / 30yr | $2,517 |
| Monthly MIP (0.55%) | $180 |
| Maricopa property tax (0.51%) monthly | $170 |
| Insurance monthly | $125 |
| Total monthly PITI + MIP | $2,992 |
| Cash needed at closing (down + closing costs) | ~$24,000 |
For $80K income: front-end DTI = 45% (above 28% comfort but workable for FHA with compensating factors).
AZ-specific FHA considerations
AZ home inspections + FHA appraisal requirements
FHA requires MPR (Minimum Property Requirements) inspection alongside the appraisal. Common AZ items: working A/C with cooling capability, termite warranty, sound roof, defensible space in wildfire areas.
AZ FHA loan limits by county (2026)
- Maricopa County (Phoenix metro): $562,350
- Pima County (Tucson): $498,257
- Pinal, Mohave, Coconino, etc.: $498,257
AZ FHA + DPA pairing
FHA loans stack cleanly with all major AZ DPA programs. See the full AZ DPA + FHA stacker guide.
FHA pitfalls to avoid
- Buying at the FHA limit. If you're at $498K (most AZ counties) or $562K (Maricopa), you're at the FHA ceiling. Slight overage means switching to conventional jumbo or compromising on the home.
- Forgetting to plan for MIP exit. Most FHA borrowers refi to conventional within 5-10 years. Build that into your long-term mortgage plan.
- Underestimating AZ summer utility costs. Phoenix electric June-September: $250-$450/month. Budget separately from PITI.
- Skipping the home inspection. FHA appraisal does property checks but isn't a full inspection. Get a separate buyer-paid inspection ($350-$600).
How to apply for FHA in AZ
- Pull credit reports + verify 580+ FICO (or 500+ with 10% down ready)
- Save 3.5% down + 2-3% closing costs (or use DPA to bridge)
- Get pre-approved with an FHA-active AZ lender
- Identify target neighborhoods + price range
- Write offers + close on the right home
Mike handles AZ FHA loans regularly. Free pre-qualification, no fees. Contact or call (480) 296-6513.