VA Loan vs. FHA Loan: Side-by-Side Rate and Fee Comparison for 2026 - LoanKey

 LoanKey Rating: 4.7 out of 5  |  Updated April 10, 2026  |  Reviewed by LoanKey Editorial Team


VA loans and FHA loans are both government-backed mortgages, but they serve different borrowers and carry very different long-term costs. VA loans are available exclusively to eligible US veterans, active-duty service members, and qualifying surviving spouses, and they require no down payment and no monthly mortgage insurance. FHA loans are open to any qualifying US borrower and require a minimum 3.5% down payment plus both upfront and annual mortgage insurance premiums. This comparison covers current rates, upfront costs, monthly costs, loan limits, credit requirements, and the total cost difference over 30 years.

VA Loan vs. FHA Loan: Side-by-Side Rate and Fee Comparison

Current Rates: VA vs FHA - April 2026

Loan Type

Average Rate (April 2026)

Source

30-year VA fixed

6.46%

Bankrate / Fortune data April 2026

30-year FHA fixed

6.13% to 6.37%

Fortune / Freddie Mac PMMS April 9, 2026

30-year conventional fixed

6.37%

Freddie Mac PMMS April 9, 2026


VA rates run slightly higher than FHA rates on a headline basis in April 2026. However, VA loans carry no monthly mortgage insurance premium, which means the total monthly payment on a VA loan is often lower than FHA despite the higher rate. The comparison requires looking beyond the rate alone.

VA Loan vs FHA Loan: Full Side-by-Side Comparison

Factor

VA Loan

FHA Loan

Who qualifies

US veterans, active-duty, National Guard/Reserve (with service requirements), eligible surviving spouses

Any qualifying US borrower or permanent resident; no military service required

Down payment

0% (no down payment required with full entitlement)

3.5% minimum (with 580 FICO); 10% minimum (with 500-579 FICO)

Minimum FICO score

No VA minimum; lenders typically require 620

500 (FHA minimum); 580 for 3.5% down

Monthly mortgage insurance

None

Annual MIP of 0.55% divided into monthly payments (life of loan with under 10% down)

Upfront insurance cost

VA funding fee: 1.25% to 3.3% of loan amount (can be financed)

Upfront MIP: 1.75% of loan amount (can be financed)

Funding fee exemptions

Yes: disabled veterans, Purple Heart recipients, surviving spouses of veterans who died in service

No exemptions for MIP

DTI ratio limit

41% preferred; exceptions approved with strong compensating factors

43% standard; up to 50% with compensating factors

Loan limits (2026)

No limit with full entitlement; conforming limit $806,500 applies with partial entitlement

$541,287 (standard); $1,249,125 (high-cost areas)

Property requirement

VA appraisal required; stricter property standards than conventional

FHA appraisal required; FHA minimum property standards apply

Property type

Primary residence only (1-4 units)

Primary residence only (1-4 units, FHA-approved condos, certain manufactured homes)

Closing costs

1% to 6% of loan amount; seller can cover up to 4% of home value

2% to 6% of loan amount; upfront MIP can be rolled into loan

MIP/PMI removal

No MIP; no removal needed

MIP lasts life of loan (under 10% down); removed after 11 years with 10%+ down

Streamline refinance

VA IRRRL: reduced documentation, no appraisal often required

FHA Streamline: reduced documentation, rate reduction or fixed-rate conversion

Can be used multiple times

Yes; entitlement can be restored after payoff

Yes; no lifetime limit


Total Cost Comparison on a $300,000 Home Purchase

Cost Item

VA Loan (0% down)

FHA Loan (3.5% down)

Down payment

$0

$10,500

Upfront VA funding fee / FHA MIP

$6,450 (2.15%, financed)

$5,074 (1.75%, financed)

Loan amount (after financing fee)

$306,450

$294,574 (approx.)

Monthly principal and interest at rate

Approx. $1,980 at 6.46%

Approx. $1,870 at 6.13%

Monthly MIP (FHA only)

$0

$136/month (0.55% annually)

Total monthly housing payment (P+I+MIP)

Approx. $1,980

Approx. $2,006

Total MIP paid over 30 years (FHA)

$0

Approx. $48,960

VA funding fee paid once

$6,450

Not applicable

Long-term cost advantage

VA saves approx. $42,000+ in insurance costs over 30 years

FHA costs more long-term due to permanent MIP


Calculations are illustrative based on April 2026 rates. Actual costs vary by lender, credit score, property taxes, homeowners insurance, and exact loan terms. Consult a licensed mortgage professional for a personalized estimate.


VA Loan Funding Fee - 2026 Rates

Borrower Type

Down Payment

First VA Loan

Subsequent VA Loan

Regular military / veteran

0%

2.15%

3.30%

Regular military / veteran

5% to 9.99%

1.50%

1.50%

Regular military / veteran

10% or more

1.25%

1.25%

National Guard / Reserves

0%

2.40%

3.30%

Exempt borrowers (disabled veterans, Purple Heart, surviving spouses)

Any

0% (exempt)

0% (exempt)


When a VA Loan Wins

VA loans produce the lower total cost in almost every scenario for eligible borrowers. Zero down payment reduces the cash needed at closing by $10,500 to $60,000 depending on purchase price. No monthly MIP saves $136 or more per month on a $300,000 loan for the full 30-year term. Eligible disabled veterans who qualify for a funding fee exemption pay no upfront fee at all, making the VA loan essentially free of government-related costs beyond the interest rate.

When an FHA Loan Wins

FHA is the stronger choice when the borrower does not qualify for a VA loan, when the borrower has a FICO score between 500 and 619 that falls below what VA lenders typically require, or when the FHA loan structure accommodates a borrower profile that VA underwriting would reject. FHA also allows certain co-borrower structures that VA purchase loans do not support, which can help buyers who need a co-signer to qualify.

The Mortgage Insurance Gap: The Key Number to Compare

The most significant long-term cost difference between VA and FHA loans is mortgage insurance. FHA MIP at 0.55% of the loan amount per year adds $136 per month on a $300,000 loan and $1,631 per year. Over 30 years with a 3.5% down payment and no refinancing, the total FHA MIP burden exceeds $48,000. VA loans carry no equivalent ongoing charge. For eligible veterans, this is the most important number in the comparison.


LoanKey.org is an independent comparison site. Rate data sourced from Freddie Mac PMMS, Fortune, and Bankrate as of April 2026. VA loan funding fee data from the US Department of Veterans Affairs. This is not financial advice. Consult a HUD-approved lender or VA-approved lender for personalized rates.