Conventional vs. FHA is Florida's most common mortgage decision — and most buyers make it without seeing the actual numbers. This guide runs a real side-by-side cost comparison on a $400,000 Florida home over 5 years, covering down payments, monthly payments, mortgage insurance costs, and total out-of-pocket spend. You'll see exactly when conventional wins, when FHA wins, and what Joe Pistone's exclusive 15% down no-PMI program does to the equation.
I'm Joe Pistone, Originating Branch Manager at CrossCountry Mortgage (NMLS# 2087918). I originate both conventional and FHA loans across all 67 Florida counties — and I'll give you an honest comparison, not a sales pitch for one or the other. The right answer depends on your credit score, down payment, and income profile.
The Quick Snapshot: Conventional vs. FHA at a Glance
| Feature | Conventional Loan | FHA Loan |
|---|---|---|
| Min. Credit Score | 620 (680+ preferred) | 580 (500 with 10% down) |
| Min. Down Payment | 5% | 3.5% (with 580+ credit) |
| Upfront Insurance | None | 1.75% of loan (financed) |
| Annual Insurance | PMI (cancels at 80% LTV) | MIP (~0.55%/yr, life of loan) |
| Max DTI | 43–45% | Up to 57% (with strong file) |
| Loan Limits (Most FL Counties) | $806,500 (conforming, 2026) | $524,225 (standard, 2026) |
| Property Condition | More flexible | Stricter — must meet HUD standards |
| Gift Funds | Allowed with restrictions | 100% gift allowed |
| Joe's 15% No-PMI Option | Yes — exclusive program | Not available (MIP is mandatory) |
The Core Difference: PMI vs. MIP
The single biggest factor in the conventional vs. FHA cost comparison is mortgage insurance — and how long you pay it.
Conventional PMI
- Required when down payment is less than 20%
- Rates range from 0.17% to 1.70% annually, based on credit score and LTV
- Cancels at 80% LTV — you can request it, or it drops automatically at 78%
- No upfront PMI charge at closing
- With Joe's 15% no-PMI program — zero PMI, ever
FHA MIP
- Required on all FHA loans, regardless of down payment
- Upfront MIP: 1.75% of the loan amount — typically financed into the loan balance
- Annual MIP: Approximately 0.55% per year (on 30-year loans with 3.5% down, 2026 rates)
- If your down payment is less than 10%: MIP lasts the life of the loan — it never cancels
- If your down payment is 10% or more: MIP cancels after 11 years
This lifetime MIP on FHA loans is the defining disadvantage for most Florida buyers who can qualify for conventional. Over 10–15 years, the total MIP paid on an FHA loan often exceeds $30,000–$50,000 on mid-priced Florida homes.
5-Year Cost Comparison: $400,000 Florida Home
Below are three scenarios for a $400,000 Florida home purchase. We'll compare FHA (3.5% down), conventional with 5% down and PMI, and Joe's 15% down no-PMI program. All scenarios use a 720 credit score for the rate assumption. Rates are illustrative at 7.00% for conventional and 6.75% for FHA (FHA rates are typically slightly lower, but MIP erases the benefit).
Scenario A: FHA Loan — 3.5% Down
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Purchase Price | $400,000 |
| Down Payment (3.5%) | $14,000 |
| Base Loan Amount | $386,000 |
| Upfront MIP (1.75%) | $6,755 (financed into loan) |
| Total Loan Balance | $392,755 |
| Monthly P&I (6.75%) | $2,548 |
| Monthly MIP (~0.55%/yr) | ~$180/mo |
| Total Monthly Payment | ~$2,728/mo |
| 5-Year MIP Total (60 mo.) | ~$10,800 |
| Cash at Closing | ~$14,000 + closing costs |
| 5-Year Total Out-of-Pocket (excl. closing) | ~$163,680 + $6,755 upfront MIP |
Scenario B: Conventional — 5% Down with PMI
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Purchase Price | $400,000 |
| Down Payment (5%) | $20,000 |
| Loan Amount | $380,000 |
| Upfront PMI | $0 |
| Monthly P&I (7.00%) | $2,529 |
| Monthly PMI (~0.60%/yr) | ~$190/mo |
| Total Monthly Payment | ~$2,719/mo |
| 5-Year PMI Total (60 mo.) | ~$11,400 |
| Cash at Closing | ~$20,000 + closing costs |
| 5-Year Total Out-of-Pocket (excl. closing) | ~$163,140 |
Scenario C: Joe's 15% Down No-PMI Conventional
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Purchase Price | $400,000 |
| Down Payment (15%) | $60,000 |
| Loan Amount | $340,000 |
| Upfront PMI / MIP | $0 |
| Monthly P&I (7.00%) | $2,262 |
| Monthly PMI | $0 |
| Total Monthly Payment | $2,262/mo |
| 5-Year Insurance Total | $0 |
| Cash at Closing | ~$60,000 + closing costs |
| 5-Year Total Payments (excl. closing) | ~$135,720 |
The Full Side-by-Side Summary
| Factor | FHA 3.5% Down | Conv. 5% + PMI | Joe's 15% No PMI |
|---|---|---|---|
| Down Payment | $14,000 | $20,000 | $60,000 |
| Upfront Ins. Cost | $6,755 (financed) | $0 | $0 |
| Monthly P&I | $2,548 | $2,529 | $2,262 |
| Monthly Insurance | $180 MIP | $190 PMI | $0 |
| Total Monthly | ~$2,728 | ~$2,719 | $2,262 |
| Insurance Cancels? | Never (if <10% down) | Yes — at 80% LTV | Never charged — $0 |
| 5-Yr Insurance Total | ~$10,800 + $6,755 upfront | ~$11,400 | $0 |
| 5-Yr Total Payments | ~$163,680 + MIP | ~$163,140 | ~$135,720 |
All figures are illustrative using a $400,000 home, 720 credit score, 7.00% conventional rate, 6.75% FHA rate. Taxes, insurance, and HOA fees are not included — these apply equally to all loan types. Actual rates and costs vary. Contact Joe Pistone for a personalized quote.
When Conventional Wins Over FHA
- Credit score is 680 or above
- You can put 5–20%+ down
- You want PMI to eventually cancel
- Joe's 15% no-PMI program is available to you
- You're buying above the FHA limit ($524,225)
- Property has minor condition issues FHA won't approve
- You're buying a second home or investment property
- Credit score is below 660
- Down payment is under 5%
- DTI is above 45%
- 100% gift funds for down payment
- Recent bankruptcy (shorter waiting period)
- Recent foreclosure (<3 years)
- Conventional doesn't approve your file
The nuance: for buyers with credit scores in the 660–679 range, the comparison gets closer. FHA rates tend to be more forgiving of lower scores than conventional pricing, which uses a tiered pricing model (LLPA adjustments) that increases rates meaningfully for every 20-point credit score band below 740. In this credit range, run both scenarios with Joe before deciding.
I originate both FHA and conventional loans and have no financial incentive to push you toward one over the other. For most Florida buyers with credit above 680, conventional is the clear winner — especially with my 15% no-PMI option. For buyers with credit in the 580–659 range, FHA may be the only viable path or the cheaper option. Call me at (941) 260-3051 and I'll run the real numbers for your scenario — no charge, no commitment.
FHA vs. Conventional for Self-Employed Florida Buyers
Self-employed borrowers in Florida sometimes assume FHA is easier to qualify for. In practice, both loan types require 2 years of self-employment income documentation — tax returns, profit & loss statements, and business bank statements. The primary advantage of FHA for self-employed buyers is the higher DTI allowance (up to 57% in strong files vs. 43–45% for conventional), which can help if your income-to-debt ratio is tight after business deductions.
If you're self-employed and exploring FHA, read the FHA loan guide for self-employed Florida borrowers for documentation requirements and strategies to maximize qualifying income.
For the complete breakdown of FHA loan requirements in Florida, including credit, DTI, and property standards, see FHA loan requirements for Florida homebuyers.
Get Your Personalized Conventional vs. FHA Comparison
Joe runs side-by-side numbers for your actual credit score, down payment, and purchase price — free, no credit pull, no commitment. Apply and get a callback in 60 seconds.
Joe Pistone, NMLS# 2087918 · CrossCountry Mortgage · Licensed in Florida · All 67 Counties
Frequently Asked Questions: Conventional vs. FHA in Florida
Conventional or FHA — Let Joe Run Your Numbers
Apply in minutes and Joe personally calls you within 60 seconds — or $500 off your closing costs. Get a real side-by-side comparison for your actual credit score and purchase price.
Joe Pistone · NMLS# 2087918 · CrossCountry Mortgage · (941) 260-3051