Everything first-time buyers, refinancers, and homeowners need to know — from rates and FHA to VA and jumbo loans.
The most-read articles in this category.
Most lenders require a minimum credit score of 620 for conventional mortgages. FHA loans accept scores as low as 580…
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Getting a mortgage is the largest financial decision most Americans will ever make. The FinReply Mortgage section explains every step — from understanding rate structures to closing on your home — in language that assumes you’re smart but busy.
We cover the full landscape of U.S. home loans: conventional mortgages backed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, FHA loans for buyers with lower credit scores or down payments, VA loans for eligible veterans and active-duty service members, USDA loans for rural properties, and jumbo loans for homes above conforming loan limits. Each product has different requirements, costs, and trade-offs that matter to your monthly payment and long-term cost.
Our articles answer the questions real buyers actually ask. How much house can I afford? What credit score do I need? What’s the difference between pre-qualification and pre-approval? Should I buy points? When does refinancing make sense? Every answer is grounded in current guidelines from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), the Federal Housing Administration (FHA), the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), and the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA).
Mortgage rules change. Conforming loan limits, FHA ceilings, and qualifying ratios are updated each year. Our content is reviewed quarterly by licensed loan officers to reflect current rate benchmarks, program limits, and lender requirements. You’ll always see the last-reviewed date on every article, so you know whether the guidance reflects today’s market or last year’s.
We don’t sell mortgages. We don’t originate loans. FinReply is an educational resource that helps you understand your options before you talk to a lender — so you can ask better questions, compare offers more confidently, and avoid the most common first-time buyer mistakes.
Whether you’re still saving for a down payment, comparing your first round of quotes, or thinking about refinancing a loan you took out three years ago, start with the popular questions above or browse the full archive below.
Browse all mortgage articles or search our full archive.
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