How much down payment for a house depends far less on a magic percentage than on the loan you choose and the math you can actually live with. In 2026, the honest answer for most buyers lands somewhere between roughly 3 and 20 percent — and the "right" number is the one that keeps your monthly payment survivable without draining your emergency fund. Let us break down what each option really costs.
What changed in 2026
None of the rules flipped overnight, but the context sharpened. Mortgage rates have spent the last few years well above the near-zero era, so the tradeoff between a bigger down payment (lower balance, less interest) and keeping cash liquid (flexibility, buffer) feels more consequential than it did in 2021. Home prices in many metros stayed high, which means 20 percent of a purchase price is a genuinely large number. Meanwhile, low-down-payment programs — conventional 3 percent, FHA 3.5 percent, and zero-down VA and USDA loans — are all still on the table. Verify current rate ranges and program limits before you budget; they move faster than headlines.
The 20 percent rule was never a law
Somewhere along the way, "put 20 percent down" hardened into folklore. It was never a legal requirement. The number matters for exactly one reason: on a conventional loan, hitting 20 percent equity lets you avoid private mortgage insurance (PMI). That is the whole magic. If you put down less, you pay PMI until you reach that threshold, then you can request removal. So treat 20 percent as a PMI-avoidance target, not a minimum entry fee. Plenty of people buy responsibly with far less.
What each loan type actually requires
| Loan type |
Typical minimum down |
Mortgage insurance |
Best for |
| Conventional |
~3% |
PMI until ~20% equity, then removable |
Decent credit, wants flexibility |
| FHA |
~3.5% |
MIP, often for the life of the loan |
Lower credit or thin savings |
| VA |
0% |
None (one-time funding fee) |
Eligible veterans, service members |
| USDA |
0% |
Guarantee fee |
Buyers in eligible rural areas |
| Conventional (20% down) |
20% |
None |
Lowest payment, no PMI |
These figures are directional. Exact minimums depend on your credit score, property type, and individual lender overlays, so confirm with a lender before you commit to a number.
The real cost of a smaller down payment
A smaller down payment is not free money — it just moves the cost around. Put less down and you borrow more, so you pay more interest over the life of the loan and usually carry PMI or MIP for a while. Put more down and you shrink the balance and the monthly payment, but you tie up cash you might need for repairs, moving, or a job gap. Two honest caveats. First, PMI is not permanent on conventional loans — it comes off, so do not treat it as a lifetime tax. Second, do not romanticize a huge down payment if it leaves you with no reserves; a paid-down house you cannot afford to repair is its own kind of trap.
How to decide, and what to skip
Work backward from the monthly payment you can comfortably carry, not from a percentage. Run the numbers two ways — a small down payment plus PMI versus a larger one without — and see which total payment fits your budget. Then keep three to six months of expenses in reserve after closing. That cushion is non-negotiable; if a bigger down payment would wipe it out, put less down and keep the cash.
Skip the instinct to raid retirement accounts to reach 20 percent. Pulling from a Roth or 401(k) usually costs far more in lost compounding than you save in PMI, which is temporary anyway. If the real choice is "delay the purchase a year to save more" versus "gut your retirement now," delaying almost always wins.
FAQ
Is 20 percent down still required in 2026?
No, and it never was. It only matters because 20 percent lets you skip PMI on a conventional loan. Many buyers use 3 to 5 percent programs instead.
How much down payment for a house do I need with average credit?
Often as little as around 3 percent on a conventional loan or 3.5 percent on FHA, subject to your lender. Stronger credit widens your options and lowers your rate.
Does a bigger down payment lower my interest rate?
Sometimes modestly, and it always lowers the balance and monthly payment. But the rate effect is usually smaller than people expect; your credit score and the broader market matter more.
Can I get rid of PMI later?
On conventional loans, yes — you can request removal near 20 percent equity, and it usually drops automatically around 22 percent. FHA MIP is stickier and often requires a refinance to escape.
Where to go next
If you are deciding where to park the cash you are not putting down, or how to rebuild savings after closing, keep reading. See how high earners fund tax-advantaged accounts in Backdoor Roth IRA 2026, weigh whether automated tools fit your money in AI Investing Strategies 2026, and judge guaranteed-income products honestly in Annuities Explained 2026.