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PMI Strategy Guide

How to Avoid PMI on a Conventional Loan in Florida (2026)

Joe Pistone, NMLS# 2087918 April 15, 2026 11 min read

Private Mortgage Insurance adds $100 to $300 per month to your payment on a $400,000 Florida home — and you receive absolutely nothing in return. It protects the lender, not you. In this guide, I'll walk you through four proven strategies to avoid PMI entirely on a conventional loan in Florida, including one option most lenders don't even offer: my exclusive 15% down, zero-PMI program that saves qualified Florida buyers $22,500 at closing compared to the 20% industry standard.

I'm Joe Pistone, Originating Branch Manager at CrossCountry Mortgage (NMLS# 2087918), licensed in Florida and closing conventional loans across all 67 counties. PMI avoidance is one of the most common questions I get — and the answer depends on your down payment, credit profile, and whether you have access to the right programs.


What Is PMI and How Much Does It Actually Cost?

Private Mortgage Insurance is a monthly premium charged on conventional loans when the borrower puts down less than 20% of the home's purchase price. The lender requires it as protection against default — but it is your money paying for their protection.

PMI rates generally range from 0.17% to 1.70% of your loan amount annually, depending primarily on your credit score and loan-to-value ratio. Here's what that translates to in real monthly dollars on Florida homes at various price points:

Home Price Down Payment (5%) Loan Amount PMI Rate (Est.) Monthly PMI Cost
$300,000 $15,000 $285,000 0.55% ~$131/mo
$400,000 $20,000 $380,000 0.60% ~$190/mo
$500,000 $25,000 $475,000 0.65% ~$257/mo
$600,000 $30,000 $570,000 0.70% ~$333/mo

And remember — PMI doesn't cancel automatically until your loan balance reaches 78% of the original purchase price through scheduled payments. On a standard 30-year amortization schedule with 5% down, that can take 10 to 12 years. The total PMI bill on a $400,000 home could easily exceed $20,000 to $25,000 over that period.


The 4 Ways to Avoid PMI on a Florida Conventional Loan

There are four legitimate strategies Florida buyers can use to avoid PMI. They are not equally accessible or equally advantageous — and one of them is available exclusively through my program at CrossCountry Mortgage.

1
Put 20% Down (The Industry Standard)

The simplest way to avoid PMI on a conventional loan is to put down 20% of the purchase price. At 80% loan-to-value, conventional lenders do not require PMI. On a $400,000 Florida home, that means bringing $80,000 to closing, plus closing costs. This is the benchmark every other strategy is measured against. Most Florida buyers with strong savings go this route — but it's a high bar that forces many buyers to delay homeownership by years to accumulate enough cash.

3
Lender-Paid PMI (LPMI) — No Monthly PMI, But a Higher Rate

Some lenders offer Lender-Paid PMI, where the PMI cost is built into a slightly higher interest rate instead of appearing as a separate monthly charge. You see no PMI line on your statement, but you are paying it through the rate — and unlike borrower-paid PMI that cancels at 80% LTV, LPMI is baked into your rate for the life of the loan. This option is more widely available than my exclusive program, but it comes at a cost in rate that typically exceeds what my 15% no-PMI program offers qualified borrowers. Always compare the all-in cost of each option.

4
Piggyback Loan (80-10-10) — Two Loans, More Complexity

An 80-10-10 loan combines a first mortgage at 80% LTV, a second mortgage (home equity loan or HELOC) at 10% LTV, and a 10% down payment. Because the first mortgage never exceeds 80% LTV, no PMI is required. The catch: you need two separate loans with two sets of closing costs, a HELOC typically comes at a variable rate, and you still need 10% down. This structure was popular before the 2008 financial crisis and has seen a modest revival — but it is significantly more complex and often more expensive in total cost than my 15% no-PMI single-loan program.


Cost Comparison: 20% Down vs. Joe's 15% No PMI vs. 10% Down with PMI

Let's compare all three realistic options on a $400,000 Florida home using a 30-year fixed conventional loan at an illustrative rate of 7.00%. The goal is to show total out-of-pocket impact at closing and over the first 5 years.

Scenario Down Payment Loan Amount Est. Monthly P&I Monthly PMI Total Mo. Payment 5-Yr PMI Total Cash at Closing
Standard 20% Down $80,000 $320,000 $2,129 $0 $2,129 $0 ~$80,000 + closing
Joe's 15% No PMI ✓ $60,000 $340,000 $2,262 $0 $2,262 $0 ~$60,000 + closing
10% Down with PMI $40,000 $360,000 $2,395 ~$195/mo $2,590 ~$11,700 ~$40,000 + closing

Rates are illustrative. Actual rates depend on credit score, loan terms, and market conditions at time of application. Contact Joe Pistone for a personalized quote.

Joe's 15% No PMI vs. Standard 20% Down
$20,000 Saved at Closing
On a $400,000 Florida home — keep that cash for reserves, renovations, or investments. Zero PMI means you also save $0 on monthly insurance vs. any lower down payment option with PMI.

When Does PMI Cancel on a Conventional Loan?

If you take a conventional loan with borrower-paid PMI, federal law (the Homeowners Protection Act) gives you the right to request PMI cancellation once your loan balance reaches 80% of the original purchase price. The lender must automatically cancel PMI when you reach 78% LTV based on the scheduled amortization — not market value.

This matters because appreciation doesn't help you get there faster without a formal appraisal and lender approval. On a $400,000 home with 10% down, reaching 80% LTV through normal payments on a 30-year loan takes approximately 7–9 years. With 5% down, it's closer to 10–12 years.

That's the core reason my 15% down no-PMI program is so powerful — there is no waiting period, no cancellation request, no appraisal needed. You simply never pay PMI. From day one to the final payment, your statement shows $0 in mortgage insurance.


PMI vs. FHA MIP: An Important Distinction

Many Florida buyers consider FHA loans as an alternative when they can't hit 20% down on a conventional loan. But FHA loans carry Mortgage Insurance Premium (MIP) — and MIP is significantly more punishing than PMI in most scenarios.

  • FHA Upfront MIP: 1.75% of the loan amount added to your balance at closing. On a $400,000 FHA loan, that's $7,000 tacked on before you make a single payment.
  • FHA Annual MIP: Currently 0.55% per year (with 3.5% down, 30-year term) — never cancels if your down payment was under 10%.
  • Conventional PMI: Cancels at 80% LTV. With my 15% down program — zero, ever.

For borrowers with credit scores above 680, a conventional loan with my 15% no-PMI program almost always beats FHA both at closing and over the life of the loan. FHA loans have MIP instead of PMI — here's a full comparison of how they work.

Veterans should also know: VA loans never have PMI of any kind — no monthly premium, no upfront insurance cost — for eligible service members and surviving spouses.

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The Bottom Line: Joe's 15% No-PMI Program Is Florida's Best PMI Workaround

Of the four strategies to avoid PMI, only one saves you significant cash at closing and eliminates the monthly PMI payment and keeps you on a single, clean conventional loan. That's my 15% down no-PMI program. It's the reason I built this site. Call me at (941) 260-3051 to find out if you qualify.


Who Qualifies for Joe's 15% Down No-PMI Program?

This is not a government program — it's a specialized conventional loan structure available through CrossCountry Mortgage. General qualification guidelines include:

  • Minimum credit score: 620 (higher scores unlock better rates)
  • Down payment: Exactly 15% of the purchase price
  • Debt-to-income ratio: 43–45% or below (varies by file strength)
  • Documentation: W-2 income, self-employed docs, or other verifiable income
  • Property types: Primary residences, second homes, and investment properties (program availability varies by property type)
  • Loan limits: Must fall within conforming loan limits ($806,500 for most Florida counties in 2026)

The best way to confirm eligibility is a 5-minute call. I'll review your credit, income, and target purchase price and tell you exactly whether this program fits your scenario — no credit pull required for the initial review.

Find Out If You Qualify for 15% Down, Zero PMI

No credit pull. No commitment. Just a straight answer from Joe Pistone within 60 seconds of applying — or $500 off your closing costs.

Joe Pistone, NMLS# 2087918 · CrossCountry Mortgage · Licensed in Florida


Frequently Asked Questions: Avoiding PMI in Florida

What is PMI and how much does it cost on a Florida conventional loan?
Private Mortgage Insurance (PMI) is a monthly premium required on conventional loans when your down payment is less than 20%. It protects the lender if you default — you pay it and receive nothing in return. On a $400,000 Florida home, PMI typically costs between $100 and $300 per month depending on your credit score and loan-to-value ratio. On a $600,000 home, monthly PMI can reach $400 or more. PMI remains until your loan balance drops to 80% of the original purchase price — often 10 years or longer with standard payments.
How does Joe Pistone's 15% down no-PMI program work?
Joe offers a specialized lender-paid PMI structure through CrossCountry Mortgage where the lender absorbs the PMI cost — so you have zero PMI on your monthly statement. You put down only 15% instead of the 20% industry standard, saving $22,500 on a $450,000 home at closing. There is no monthly PMI from day one and no PMI for the life of the loan. Most banks and brokers in Florida cannot offer this program.
What is lender-paid PMI (LPMI) and how does it differ from borrower-paid PMI?
With borrower-paid PMI (BPMI), you pay a monthly premium until you reach 80% LTV and can request cancellation. With lender-paid PMI (LPMI), the lender covers the PMI cost in exchange for a slightly higher interest rate — no separate PMI line item appears on your payment. Joe's 15% down no-PMI program uses a specialized LPMI structure that eliminates monthly PMI entirely. The key advantage is you still put down only 15% instead of 20%, saving significant cash at closing.
What is an 80-10-10 piggyback loan and is it a good way to avoid PMI in Florida?
An 80-10-10 loan combines a first mortgage at 80% LTV, a second mortgage (home equity line or loan) at 10% LTV, and a 10% down payment from the buyer. Because the first mortgage is at exactly 80%, no PMI is required. However, this approach requires two separate loans, two sets of closing costs, a HELOC at a variable rate, and a 10% down payment. Joe's 15% no-PMI program is simpler — one loan, no second mortgage, 15% down — and avoids all of those complications.
When does PMI automatically cancel on a Florida conventional loan?
Under the federal Homeowners Protection Act, your lender must automatically cancel PMI when your loan balance reaches 78% of the original purchase price — based on scheduled amortization, not market value. You can request cancellation at 80% LTV if you have a good payment history. Appreciation alone does not qualify you for automatic cancellation without a formal appraisal and lender approval. On a $400,000 home with 5% down, reaching 80% LTV through normal payments takes approximately 10–12 years.
Is there a difference between PMI on a conventional loan and MIP on an FHA loan?
Yes — they differ significantly. PMI on a conventional loan cancels once you reach 80% LTV (or never applies with 20%+ down). FHA MIP lasts for the life of the loan if your down payment is less than 10% — it never cancels. MIP also includes an upfront cost of 1.75% of the loan amount added at closing. On a $400,000 FHA loan, that's $7,000 paid upfront just for insurance. Conventional PMI avoidance strategies — especially Joe's 15% no-PMI program — are far more cost-effective for eligible borrowers with credit scores above 680.

Ready to Buy with 15% Down and Zero PMI?

Apply in minutes and Joe personally calls you within 60 seconds — or $500 off your closing costs. Valid Mon–Sat, 8am–8pm ET.

Joe Pistone · NMLS# 2087918 · CrossCountry Mortgage · (941) 260-3051

Disclaimer: This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute a commitment to lend. All loans are subject to credit approval, underwriting guidelines, and property eligibility. Rates, programs, and terms are subject to change without notice. The 15% down no-PMI program is available to qualified borrowers; eligibility is determined based on individual credit profile, income, and property type. Joseph Pistone NMLS# 2087918 is licensed in Florida. CrossCountry Mortgage, LLC NMLS# 3029 is licensed in all 50 states. Equal Housing Opportunity Lender. NMLS Consumer Access: nmlsconsumeraccess.org