FHA & FHFA Loan Limits Increase for 2019
December 18, 2018 Government & Community Affairs
Conforming loan limits are on the rise for Barnstable, Dukes, and Nantucket counties in 2019. This means home buyers in all three counties will have higher limits for both Federal Housing Finance Agency (Fannie Mae & Freddie Mac) loans and Federal Housing Administration (FHA) loans. This gives prospective home buyers more purchasing power in these loan products.
For FHA, the single-family loan limits in counties in Barnstable, Dukes, and Nantucket counties rose. In Barnstable, the FHA loan limit will be $458,850, while in Dukes and Nantucket counties, the new limit is $726,525. This means that with 3.5% down, a new purchasing amount will be nearly $474,900 on Cape Cod.
For Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac (FHFA) loans, the single-family lending limit will rise to by 6.9 percent from $453,100 to $484,350 for Barnstable County. On Martha’s Vineyard and Nantucket, the new limit will be $726,525 – up from $679,650. This means that depending with down payment, the purchasing power of a conventional loan hovers around at least $500,000 when you add a three to five percent down payment on top of the maximum loan limit for Cape Cod and more than $750,000 on the each island.
These increased loan limits help to increase the buying power and options for eligible buyers and properties in a given area. This means that buyers will be able to afford a wider range of properties without taking out a jumbo loan. The new rates for each county in CCIAOR’s jurisdiction are:
2019 FHA Loan Limits
Barnstable County:
2019: $458,850
Dukes County:
2019: $726,525
Nantucket County:
2019: $726,525
2019 FHFA Loan Limits
Barnstable County:
2019: $484,350
Dukes County:
2019: $726,525
Nantucket County:
2019: $726,525
What does a “high-cost area” like Dukes and Nantucket counties mean?
In areas where 115 percent of the local median home value exceeds the baseline loan limit, the maximum area loan limit will be higher. HERA sets the maximum loan limit as a function of the area median home value, while setting a “ceiling” on that limit of 150 percent of the baseline loan limit.
This year, median home values generally rose in high-cost areas. Because the baseline loan limit will be higher in 2019, the new ceiling limit will also be higher. The new ceiling loan limit, which applies in areas with the most expensive homes, will be $726,525 (160 percent of $484,350) for one-unit properties in the Dukes and Nantucket counties and other “high-cost areas.”