Buying your first home in Northern Virginia can feel like showing up to a race that started without you. Prices in Fairfax, Loudoun, and Arlington counties are among the highest in Virginia, and saving a 20% down payment on a median-priced home can take a decade. Here’s the good news: you almost certainly don’t need 20% down, and there are real programs — state, county, and lender-based — designed to get first-time buyers over the finish line sooner.
First, the Myth: You Don’t Need 20% Down
The single biggest misconception I hear from first-time buyers in NoVA is that 20% down is the price of admission. In reality, conventional loans are available with as little as 3% down for qualifying first-time buyers, FHA loans require 3.5%, and eligible veterans and active-duty service members — a big share of our market given the Pentagon, Fort Belvoir, and Quantico — can buy with 0% down using a VA loan. Putting less down means paying mortgage insurance in some cases, but it also means becoming an owner years earlier and building equity instead of paying rent. If you’re weighing what you can realistically afford, start with a conversation, not a calculator — my buyer services page explains how I walk first-time buyers through this step by step.
Virginia Housing: The State’s First-Time Buyer Toolbox
Virginia Housing (formerly VHDA) is the state agency most first-time buyers should look at first. Its programs work through approved local lenders and can be layered together:
- First-time buyer mortgages — conventional and FHA-backed loans with competitive rates for buyers who haven’t owned a home in the last three years.
- Down Payment Assistance Grant — a grant (not a loan) that covers a percentage of the purchase price toward your down payment and never has to be repaid.
- Plus Second Mortgage — a companion second loan that can cover most or all of your down payment when paired with an eligible Virginia Housing first mortgage.
- Homebuyer education — a free required course that genuinely helps you understand the process.
Income and purchase-price limits apply, but here’s what surprises people: the limits are set regionally, and the Washington-area limits are significantly higher than in the rest of Virginia — so plenty of dual-income NoVA households still qualify. Always confirm current limits with a Virginia Housing-approved lender, as they’re updated regularly.
County-Level Help in Fairfax, Loudoun, and Arlington
Each of our major counties runs its own affordable homeownership programs, and they’re often overlooked:
- Fairfax County operates a First-Time Homebuyers Program that sells designated affordable townhomes and condos at below-market prices to income-qualified buyers through a lottery-style process.
- Loudoun County offers down payment and closing cost assistance for qualifying moderate-income buyers, plus Affordable Dwelling Unit (ADU) purchase opportunities in communities like Ashburn and Brambleton. If you’re targeting that area, my Ashburn guide covers neighborhoods and price points.
- Arlington County runs the Moderate Income Purchase Assistance Program (MIPAP), which provides a deferred-payment second loan toward down payment and closing costs for first-time buyers purchasing in Arlington.
These programs have waitlists, income caps, and residency or employment preferences, so the earlier you apply, the better positioned you’ll be.
How to Put It All Together
The buyers who succeed with these programs do three things early. First, they get program-specific pre-approval — not every lender participates in Virginia Housing or county programs, so choosing the right lender matters. Second, they set a realistic search area: assistance programs stretch further in Herndon, Sterling, or western Loudoun than in McLean or Clarendon. Third, they move quickly but carefully when the right home appears — assistance programs can add a week or two to closing timelines, and your offer needs to account for that. If you’re moving to the area from out of state, my relocation guide pairs well with this planning.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I count as a first-time buyer if I owned a home years ago?
Usually, yes. Most programs, including Virginia Housing’s, define a first-time buyer as someone who hasn’t owned a primary residence in the past three years — so previous owners who have been renting can often qualify again.
How much down payment do I really need in Northern Virginia?
Many first-time buyers in Fairfax, Loudoun, and Arlington close with 3% to 5% down, and VA-eligible buyers can put down nothing. Layering a Virginia Housing grant or county assistance can reduce your out-of-pocket cash even further.
Are there income limits for these programs in Fairfax and Loudoun counties?
Yes, but they’re higher than most people expect because limits are set for the Washington region’s cost of living. Many households earning well into six figures still qualify — confirm current figures with a Virginia Housing-approved lender before ruling yourself out.
Do down payment assistance programs work with FHA and VA loans?
Often, yes. Virginia Housing grants can pair with its FHA-backed first mortgages, and several county programs work alongside FHA financing. Your lender will confirm which combinations are allowed for your specific loan.
Will using assistance make my offer weaker in a competitive market?
Not if it’s handled well. A clean pre-approval letter, realistic timelines, and an agent who communicates with the listing side can make an assisted offer just as compelling — I’ve closed many of them in multiple-offer situations.
Ready to Stop Renting?
The gap between renting and owning in Northern Virginia is rarely about income — it’s about knowing which doors to knock on. If you’d like a clear, no-pressure plan for using these programs, book a free consultation or call me at (571) 429-7477. And if you already own and are curious what your equity could do for your next move, check your home’s current value.