![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEis_N-wj2vbPwjehI6kvXCMLsuPu5UcuW-unAPWEXxSTc0LHtgH6kUtMb74wjMNSa2_84A9frwrZQqY7TTGYKCZ6E8jEKLs-dlCUxTotoFGckEleCAbspu6bsuqC3MsFP_aLMH3RJ3ekjJi/s320/fha-loan-limits-2010.png)
By all accounts, FHA home loans are surging in popularity.
- 2006, FHA insured 3.3% of all mortgages made
- Q2 2009, FHA insured 19.2% of all mortgages made
As compared to its conforming mortgage cousins Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, FHA home loans have lower downpayment requirements and looser credit standards. The FHA allows downpayments of 3.5 percent and Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac do not, as an example.
Another reason is that FHA home loans aren't subject to credit score fees the way that conforming mortgages are. Through Fannie or Freddie, a home buyer with a 650 FICO and 20% down is subject to 3% in risk fees. Via the FHA, the fee is zero, making FHA the better "deal".
The FHA published its 2010 loan limits. There's no change from 2009.
The base 2010 FHA loan limits are:
- 1-unit : $271,050
- 2-unit : $347,000
- 3-unit : $419,400
- 4-unit : $521,250
The official FHA announcement included a complete, county-by-county FHA loan limit list. The first spreadsheet shows each county at or above the $729,750 maximum; the second list is everyone else.
If your home's county is on neither list, use the "base" numbers above.