Buying a house in 2026 is harder than it was in 2019 and easier than it was in 2023. Rates have settled in the 6–7% range, inventory has thawed, and seller concessions are back. That doesn't make it cheap; it just makes it possible to plan around.
This guide walks the entire process in order, with the numbers that actually matter at each step.
What changed in 2026
- Rates plateaued. 30-year fixed sits in the 6.0–7.0% band. Refinancing later is more realistic than expecting a sub-5% purchase rate.
- Inventory recovered. Supply is the highest it's been since 2019, which means you can negotiate again.
- Seller concessions came back. 2-1 buydowns, closing-cost credits, and rate buydowns are common in slower markets.
The full process in order
- Check your credit. 740+ gets you the best rate; 620 is the FHA floor.
- Build a down payment + closing-cost fund. 3.5–20% down plus 2–4% closing costs.
- Get pre-approved with three lenders within 14 days.
- House-shop within 90% of pre-approval. The buffer is for taxes and surprises.
- Make an offer with a real estate agent who works for buyers.
- Inspect, appraise, close. 30–45 days from offer to keys.
1. The pre-approval — best done before you tour anything
A pre-approval from a lender tells you the maximum loan amount, the actual rate you qualify for, and the realistic monthly payment. Mortgage brokers can shop multiple lenders for you. Local credit unions and online lenders like Better and Rocket are worth comparing for the same loan.
The trade-off: pre-approvals expire after 60–90 days, so don't get one until you're seriously shopping.
2. The down payment math — best for not getting house-poor
Conventional loans want 20% down to skip PMI. FHA loans accept 3.5% with PMI for the life of the loan. VA loans, if you qualify, are 0% down with no PMI. The lower your down payment, the higher your monthly cost — both from the larger loan and the insurance.
The honest version: 5–10% down is the most common in 2026 for first-timers, and that's fine if you can comfortably handle the resulting payment.
3. The inspection and walkthrough — best money you'll spend
A $400–$600 inspection saves $20,000 mistakes. Bring a checklist: roof age, HVAC age, water heater, electrical panel, plumbing, foundation cracks, drainage. Sewer scopes are $200 and worth it on any home over 30 years old.
The trade-off: in hot markets, sellers sometimes demand inspection waivers. Walk away. The home that needs you to waive inspection is the one you most need to inspect.
Comparison: loan types in April 2026
| Loan |
Min down |
Min credit |
Best for |
| Conventional 30-yr |
3–20% |
620 |
Strong credit, long-term hold |
| FHA |
3.5% |
580 |
Lower credit, smaller down |
| VA |
0% |
580 |
Eligible veterans / active duty |
| USDA |
0% |
640 |
Rural areas |
| Conventional 15-yr |
5–20% |
620 |
High income, fast payoff |
Common mistakes to avoid
Stretching to the max pre-approval. Banks approve based on debt-to-income, not on how much oxygen you'll have left for groceries. Aim for a payment under 25% of gross.
Forgetting closing costs. Add 2–4% of purchase price for closing costs, plus moving, plus immediate repairs. Budget $5–10k beyond the down payment.
Falling for "no closing costs." The lender rolls them into the rate. You pay either way.
FAQ
Should I wait for rates to drop?
You can refinance the rate. You can't refinance the price. If you find a house that fits your budget at today's rate, buying makes sense.
How much house can I afford?
Total housing cost (PITI + HOA) under 28% of gross income, total debt under 36%. Most people are happiest when housing is closer to 22–25%.
First-time buyer programs — worth it?
Often yes. Most states offer down payment assistance and closing-cost grants. Search "[your state] first time home buyer program" before applying anywhere else.
Where to go next
For related guides see How to improve your credit score fast in 2026, Best mortgage refinance rates in 2026, and Best home insurance in 2026.