Loan Comparison

FHA vs Conventional Loan in 2026: Which is Better for Houston Buyers?

The honest breakdown with real numbers. Spoiler: the "right" answer depends on your situation, but I'll tell you which one I'd pick.

This is the question I get asked most often: "Should I go FHA or Conventional?"

And honestly? Most of the advice online is outdated or oversimplified. "FHA is for bad credit, Conventional is for good credit", that's not wrong, but it's not the whole picture either.

Let me break down exactly how these loans compare in 2026, with real numbers for Houston's market. By the end, you'll know exactly which one makes sense for you.

Market Update: January 2026

Rates have been trending down toward the 6% range after the Fed's recent cuts. This is actually making Conventional loans more attractive for some buyers who were on the fence, but FHA is still winning for lower credit scores.

Houston's median home price is sitting around $340,000 right now, which keeps us well under conforming loan limits ($766,550 for 2026). Both FHA and Conventional are fully in play.

Last updated: January 2026

The Quick Comparison

Feature FHA Loan Conventional
Min. Down Payment 3.5% 3% +
Min. Credit Score 580 (3.5% down) + 620-640
Mortgage Insurance For life of loan Removable at 20% equity +
Upfront MIP/PMI 1.75% of loan None +
Monthly MI Cost 0.55% annually Varies (often lower)
Property Standards Stricter inspections More flexible +
DTI Limit Up to 57% + Up to 50%
Seller Concessions Up to 6% + 3-6% (varies)

The Real Difference: Mortgage Insurance

Here's where most people get tripped up. The biggest difference between FHA and Conventional isn't the down payment, it's the mortgage insurance.

FHA Mortgage Insurance (MIP)

  • Upfront MIP: 1.75% of loan amount (rolled into loan)
  • Annual MIP: 0.55% per year (paid monthly)
  • Duration: For the LIFE of the loan (if you put less than 10% down)

Conventional PMI

  • Upfront: None
  • Monthly: Varies by credit score (0.3% - 1.5% annually)
  • Duration: Drops off automatically at 22% equity, or you can request removal at 20%
My Take: This is the killer. FHA's mortgage insurance sticks with you forever (unless you refinance). On a $300K loan, that's roughly $137/month that never goes away. Conventional PMI? Once you hit 20% equity, whether through payments or appreciation, it's gone. In Houston's market, that could be 3-5 years.

Let's Run Real Numbers

Enough theory. Let's look at what you'd actually pay on a $320,000 home in Houston:

Scenario: $320,000 Home Purchase

Buyer Profile: 680 credit score, first-time buyer

Cost FHA (3.5% down) Conventional (3% down)
Down Payment $11,200 $9,600
Loan Amount $308,800 + $5,404 MIP = $314,204 $310,400
Interest Rate* 6.25% 6.50%
Principal and Interest $1,935 $1,962
Monthly MI/PMI $142 (forever) $155 (drops off ~year 7)
Total Monthly** $2,077 $2,117

*Rates as of January 2026, for illustration. Your rate will vary.
**Excludes taxes and insurance, which are the same for both.

FHA saves $40/month initially, but Conventional wins long-term once PMI drops off.

When FHA Wins

Pick FHA if:

  • Your credit score is below 680 (especially below 640)
  • You have a higher debt-to-income ratio (FHA allows up to 57%)
  • You've had credit issues in the past 2 years (FHA is more forgiving)
  • You need maximum seller concessions (6% vs 3%)
  • You plan to refinance within 2-3 years anyway
Success Story: Had a client last month, 605 credit score, recovering from some medical debt. Conventional lenders wanted 10% down and a brutal rate. Got him into FHA at 3.5% down, 6.5% rate. He's in his house now, building equity, and we'll refinance to Conventional once his score hits 680. That's the play.

When Conventional Wins

Pick Conventional if:

  • Your credit score is 700+ (you'll get better PMI rates)
  • You can put 5-10% down (PMI drops faster)
  • You plan to stay long-term (PMI removal = huge savings)
  • The property might not pass FHA inspection (older homes, fixer-uppers)
  • You're buying a condo (many don't meet FHA requirements)
Watch Out: A lot of Houston condos aren't FHA-approved. If you're looking at condos in the Galleria area, Midtown, or downtown, check the FHA condo approval list first. I've seen buyers fall in love with a unit only to find out FHA won't touch it. Conventional doesn't have this problem.

The Credit Score Breakpoints

Here's how I think about it based on credit score alone:

Credit Score My Recommendation Why
580-619 FHA Conventional barely available, rates brutal
620-659 FHA (usually) Compare both, FHA often wins on rate
660-699 Toss-up Run both scenarios, pick lower total cost
700-739 Conventional (usually) PMI rates get competitive, removability wins
740+ Conventional Best rates, lowest PMI, no contest

The "Secret" Third Option: Conventional 97

Not enough people know about this. Conventional 97 is Fannie Mae's 3% down program, same down payment as FHA, but with removable PMI.

Requirements:

  • 3% down (same as FHA's 3.5%)
  • 680+ credit score typically
  • First-time buyer (haven't owned in 3 years)
  • PMI required but removable

If you qualify for Conventional 97, it's often the best of both worlds, low down payment without the lifetime mortgage insurance trap.

What About Down Payment Assistance?

Here's where it gets interesting. Houston's DPA programs work with both FHA and Conventional loans. So that variable is neutral.

However, some DPA programs pair better with one or the other. For example:

  • City of Houston HAP: Works with both, but FHA is more common
  • TSAHC: Works with both, Conventional often has better net rate

I always run both scenarios with DPA layered in. Sometimes the winner flips.

Related: Houston Down Payment Assistance Programs 2026: Complete Guide

The Bottom Line

Here's my honest take after closing hundreds of these loans:

Brandon's Rule of Thumb: If your credit score is under 680, start with FHA. If it's over 700, start with Conventional. If you're in between, let me run both scenarios, the answer isn't obvious, and getting it wrong can cost you thousands.

The "best" loan isn't about what's trendy or what your friend did. It's about your credit, your down payment, your timeline, and your property. All four matter.

And honestly? The smartest move is to let someone run both options with your actual numbers. It takes me 10 minutes and could save you $10,000+ over the life of the loan.

Not Sure Which Loan is Right for You?

Send me your credit score and target price. I'll run both FHA and Conventional scenarios and tell you exactly which one saves you more money.

Get Your Free Loan Comparison
BH

Brandon Huynh

Mortgage Loan Officer | NMLS #2522494

I help Houston homebuyers figure out the best loan for their situation, not the loan that's easiest to sell. FHA, Conventional, VA, Bank Statement, I do them all and I'll tell you straight which one makes sense.

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About the Author

Brandon Huynh is a mortgage loan officer (NMLS #2522494) at Lock It Mortgage in Houston, TX. He specializes in bank statement loans, DSCR loans, foreign national mortgages, and non-QM lending for borrowers who do not fit conventional guidelines. Licensed in all 50 states and bilingual in English and Vietnamese. Call (832) 997-1527 or visit brandonhuynh.net.