Here's what nobody tells Florida homebuyers: the FHA vs. conventional loan debate is usually decided in the first five minutes of a real conversation — but most buyers spend weeks paralyzed by internet rabbit holes, lender-speak, and competing opinions from people who've never closed a loan in Hillsborough County.
Most people think it comes down to one magic number: their credit score. Pick a number above some invisible line, they assume, and conventional is automatically the answer. Below that line, FHA wins by default. The truth is messier, more interesting, and honestly more useful than that.
In Florida, the choice between FHA and conventional is shaped by factors that are genuinely different from the rest of the country: hurricane-zone property requirements, condo approval hurdles, a large pool of self-employed buyers, and county-level loan limits that swing dramatically from Hendry County to Monroe County. A framework built on national averages will steer you wrong.
Joe Pistone & Team have closed loans across all 67 Florida counties. This guide is built from those real conversations. We're going to tell you what each loan actually requires, where each one breaks down in Florida, and which one wins for three specific buyer profiles. No hedging, no generic disclaimers in place of real information. By the end, you'll know which loan is right for your situation — or you'll know exactly what questions to ask your lender.
Let's start with the five-second answer, then go deeper.
The 5-Second Answer: FHA vs. Conventional Florida 2026
Below is the honest side-by-side. No rates — rates change daily and belong in a conversation with your loan officer, not a blog post. What matters for your decision is everything else.
| Factor | FHA Loan | Conventional Loan |
|---|---|---|
| Min. Down Payment | 3.5% (580+ credit) or 10% (500–579 credit) | 3% (HomeReady/HomePossible) or 5% standard Flexible |
| Min. Credit Score | 580 for 3.5% down; 500 with 10% down More lenient | 620 minimum; meaningfully better pricing at 680+ |
| Mortgage Insurance | MIP: upfront 1.75% + annual (often for life of loan) | PMI: monthly only, cancels at 80% LTV Cancellable |
| FL Loan Limit (Single-Family) | $541,287 baseline; up to $990,150 in Monroe, Miami-Dade, Collier | $832,750 baseline conforming limit (2026) Higher limit |
| Property Requirements | Stricter — must meet HUD Minimum Property Standards; roof, mechanicals, safety flagged | Less restrictive; appraisal-based, fewer cosmetic flags |
| Condo Approval | FHA-approved condo list only (limited in FL) | Fannie Mae warrantable condo rules — broader options More inventory |
| Self-Employed / Complex Income | 2-year tax return average, standard underwriting | Same 2-year average, but bank statement options available via non-QM overlay |
| Who It's For | First-time buyers with 580–659 credit; limited down payment; distressed properties | Buyers with 620+ credit; stronger equity position; condos; higher loan amounts |
Now let's go deeper on each. The table tells you what; the sections below tell you why it matters in Florida specifically.
FHA Loan Florida 2026: Who It's For and What to Watch
The Federal Housing Administration doesn't lend money. It insures lenders against default, which is why it can offer more lenient credit standards than conventional financing. That insurance comes with a cost — the Mortgage Insurance Premium — but for buyers who need it, FHA financing opens doors that would otherwise be closed.
Who genuinely benefits from FHA in Florida
FHA makes the most sense for buyers with credit scores between 580 and 659, buyers who have had a recent bankruptcy or foreclosure and are re-entering the market, and buyers with high debt-to-income ratios who can't quite clear the conventional bar. If you're putting 3.5% down on a $350,000 townhouse in Tampa with a 610 credit score, FHA is almost certainly your path — and that's not a consolation prize, it's the right tool for the job.
FHA county loan limits in Florida
For 2026, the HUD FHA loan limit for most Florida counties is $541,287 for a single-family home. That's the baseline. However, Florida has several high-cost counties where limits are significantly higher:
- Monroe County (Florida Keys): up to $990,150
- Miami-Dade County: up to $621,000+
- Collier County (Naples area): elevated limits reflecting local median home values
- Most other FL counties: $541,287 baseline
If you're looking at a home priced above those thresholds, FHA simply won't cover the loan — you'll need conventional or a jumbo product regardless of your credit profile.
Hurricane-zone property flags
This is where FHA creates friction that many Florida buyers don't anticipate. FHA requires homes to meet HUD Minimum Property Standards — and in Florida's hurricane-heavy market, appraisers are trained to flag issues that would sail through a conventional appraisal. Common flags: missing or non-functional hurricane shutters where local code requires them, roof damage or age concerns, compromised screen enclosures on pool homes, and structural concerns in older construction. These aren't necessarily deal-killers, but they require seller repairs or escrow holdbacks before the loan can close. In a competitive Florida market, sellers often resist FHA offers for exactly this reason.
FHA condo approval rules in Florida
Florida has one of the largest condo markets in the country — and one of the most complicated FHA condo landscapes. For an FHA loan to work on a condo, the entire development must be on the HUD-approved condominium list. Approval requires meeting thresholds around owner-occupancy rates, HOA financial health, delinquency rates, and commercial space limitations. Many Florida condo communities — especially in South Florida — are not FHA approved, either because they haven't applied, they've failed re-certification, or the owner-occupancy ratio doesn't qualify. If you're buying a condo in Florida, check the HUD approved list before you fall in love with a unit. For condos that aren't on the list, conventional is typically the only conforming option.
Conventional Loan Florida 2026: The Case for Going Conventional
Conventional loans follow Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac guidelines — and in 2026, those guidelines are more buyer-friendly than they've been in years. The 2026 conforming loan limit for Florida is $832,750 for a single-family home — up from $806,500 in 2025, a 3.26% increase. That's a meaningful jump that expands access to conventional financing for buyers in mid-range and move-up markets across the state.
Who conventional is built for
Conventional lending rewards buyers who bring a stronger financial profile: credit scores of 680 or above, documented income, and at least 5% down. The better your profile, the more conventional advantages compound. If you're a W-2 employee with a 720 credit score and 10% saved, conventional will almost certainly cost you less over the life of the loan than FHA — primarily because of how mortgage insurance works (more on that in the next section).
Why 5% down can beat 3.5% down long-term
Counter-intuitive but true: putting 5% down on a conventional loan can end up cheaper than 3.5% down on FHA — even though you're bringing more cash to closing. The reason is mortgage insurance. With conventional, PMI is temporary. It cancels automatically when your loan balance reaches 80% of the original home value. With FHA and less than 10% down, MIP stays for the life of the loan. On a 30-year mortgage, that's a meaningful gap in total cost. We'll break this down conceptually in the next section.
When 3% conventional (HomeReady/Home Possible) wins
Both Fannie Mae's HomeReady and Freddie Mac's Home Possible programs allow qualified buyers to put down just 3% on a conventional loan — matching FHA's lowest down payment while keeping conventional's PMI structure. These programs have income limits (generally tied to area median income), but for first-time buyers in markets like Jacksonville or Lakeland who fall within those limits and have 620+ credit, a 3% conventional can be more affordable than FHA over time. The PMI still cancels; the FHA MIP wouldn't. See our conventional loan guide for Jacksonville for market-specific details.
The PMI vs MIP Difference: Why It Changes Everything
This is the section that shifts most buyers' decisions. Once you understand how mortgage insurance works differently between the two loan types, the math often becomes clear.
How FHA MIP works
FHA Mortgage Insurance Premium comes in two parts. First, an upfront MIP of 1.75% of the loan amount is charged at closing — on a $400,000 loan, that's $7,000 either paid in cash or rolled into the loan balance. Second, an annual MIP is collected monthly throughout the life of the loan. For most FHA loans with less than 10% down originated after June 2013, the annual MIP continues for the entire 30-year term. It does not automatically cancel when you cross the 80% LTV threshold the way conventional PMI does. The only exit strategies are: refinance into a conventional loan once you've built enough equity, or make a down payment of 10% or more at origination — in which case MIP cancels after 11 years.
How conventional PMI works
Private Mortgage Insurance on a conventional loan is a monthly cost that protects the lender when you put down less than 20%. Unlike FHA MIP, conventional PMI is governed by the Homeowners Protection Act, which gives you two important rights: automatic cancellation when your loan balance reaches 78% of the original purchase price (based on scheduled payments), and the right to request cancellation at 80% LTV based on current value — potentially accelerated by appreciation or extra payments. When the insurance cancels, it's gone. No refinancing required. In Florida's appreciating markets, some buyers hit that 80% LTV threshold faster than the original schedule projected.
The conceptual math
Think of it this way. On a $400,000 purchase at 3.5% down FHA: you pay the 1.75% upfront premium plus an annual premium on a loan you'll carry for the life of the loan — unless you refinance. On a $400,000 purchase at 5% down conventional: you pay monthly PMI until you reach 80% LTV, then it's over. The crossover point where conventional becomes cheaper despite the higher down payment depends on your specific credit score (which affects PMI pricing), your home's appreciation rate, and how long you plan to keep the loan. In most Florida scenarios Joe Pistone & Team model, a buyer with a 680+ credit score crosses that threshold within 5–8 years. That's thousands of dollars in mortgage insurance savings — not counting the equity they've built. Talk to Joe's team about your specific numbers at (941) 260-3051 or explore the Match Report tool to see a personalized breakdown.
Three Honest Scenarios: Which Loan Wins for You
Generic frameworks only get you so far. Here are three buyer profiles that Joe Pistone & Team see regularly across Florida. In each case, the "right" answer is different — and the reasoning matters more than the conclusion.
With a 624 credit score and just 3.5% to put down, conventional is technically available but comes with elevated PMI costs at that credit tier. FHA's more lenient credit pricing means a lower effective cost even with MIP factored in. The buyer plans to stay in the home 7+ years and will refinance to conventional once they've built equity and improved their credit profile — a well-worn path that Joe's team structures from day one.
This buyer has a 735 credit score and 12% available. At that credit tier, conventional PMI is priced attractively — meaningfully lower than FHA MIP on an equivalent loan. Add the fact that conventional PMI cancels at 80% LTV while FHA MIP would run the life of the loan, and the five-year cost comparison isn't close. The Sarasota conventional loan path saves this buyer significantly more money. If they had exactly 15%, Joe's exclusive no-PMI program eliminates mortgage insurance entirely.
Self-employed buyers face the same underwriting rules on both loan types — two years of tax returns, business financials, and documented income averaging. Neither FHA nor conventional gives a free pass on income documentation. However, with a 698 credit score and 10% down, conventional pricing is favorable at this tier. One wrinkle: if this buyer's taxable income is significantly reduced by business deductions, they may need to explore bank statement programs (non-QM) rather than agency financing regardless of loan type. The Jacksonville conventional loan page covers self-employed qualification in more detail.
Credit below 660 with minimal down payment → FHA is usually better. Credit above 680 with 5%+ down → conventional usually wins. Credit between 660–680 with 5%+ down → run both scenarios, the answer depends on your specific PMI quote vs. FHA MIP. Self-employed → same rules, just more documentation either way. Condo in Florida → check FHA approval status first; if it's not on the list, you need conventional.
The Dealbreakers: When Florida Breaks the Rules
Florida has a handful of property situations that disqualify both FHA and conventional financing — or force a specific choice. Know these before you make an offer.
- Non-warrantable condos: These are condo developments that fail Fannie Mae's warrantability standards — typically because a single entity owns more than 10% of units, investor concentration is too high, or the HOA is in litigation. Non-warrantable condos can't be financed with FHA or conventional. They require portfolio loans or non-QM products, which means different qualification standards. This is increasingly common in South Florida.
- HOA financial issues: FHA has stricter HOA financial health requirements than conventional. If the association has underfunded reserves (below 10% of annual budget) or has too many delinquent dues, FHA financing may be blocked — even if the specific unit would otherwise qualify. Conventional is less restrictive but still requires a review. In Florida's post-Surfside-reform environment, HOA documentation requirements have tightened significantly for both loan types.
- Hurricane shutters and windstorm compliance: In certain Florida counties and coastal areas, properties are required by local code to have functioning windstorm protection. FHA appraisers in hurricane-prone counties are trained to flag this; missing or non-functional shutters can condition the FHA appraisal and delay or kill the deal. Conventional appraisers may note it but often don't condition on it the same way.
- Septic systems and well water: FHA requires that septic systems be inspected and functioning, and that well water meet potable standards with a water quality test. Conventional loans handle these more flexibly — inspections may be required only if the appraiser notes a visible defect. In rural Central and North Florida where septic and well systems are common, this can be a meaningful differentiator.
- Investor-heavy developments: Both FHA and conventional limit investment unit concentration in condo projects, but the thresholds differ. FHA is more restrictive. If a development in a vacation-rental market like Kissimmee has a high percentage of non-owner-occupied units, FHA may be unavailable while conventional might still work — if the development otherwise meets warrantability standards.
Find Your Loan Match — Not Just a Loan
The FHA vs. conventional decision isn't made in a spreadsheet. It's made in a conversation where someone who has closed loans in your specific Florida county runs both scenarios side by side with your real numbers — your credit score, your down payment, the property type, and how long you plan to stay. That's what Joe Pistone & Team do for every buyer.
Start with the Match Report — a free, personalized tool that compares FHA and conventional for your specific situation and identifies which programs you qualify for. No credit pull, no commitment.
Get Your Personalized FHA vs. Conventional Match
Tell Joe Pistone & Team your situation — credit, down payment, property type, Florida county — and get a side-by-side breakdown with real numbers. No sales pitch. Just clarity.
Or call directly: (941) 260-3051 · joe.pistone@ccm.com