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(FHFA) 2026 Conforming Loan Limit Update

$832,750 Conforming Limit - $1,249,125 High Balance Limit

INDUSTRY
Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) 2026 Conforming Loan Limit Update

🔍 What’s New

The FHFA has announced the baseline conforming loan limit for one-unit properties in most of the U.S. will rise to $832,750 for 2026. FHFA.gov

In high-cost counties, the ceiling limit is now set at $1,249,125 (which is 150 % of the $832,750 baseline). FHFA.gov

📊 Why This Matters for Buyers & Sellers

For real estate agents working with buyers and sellers, this change means more potential purchasing power for clients using conventional loans, thanks to the higher conforming limit.

Example:

Scenario

Down Payment

Max Purchase Price (old limit $806,500)

Max Purchase Price (new limit $832,750)

Increase in Price

Buyer puts 3% down

3%

~$831,000

~$861,000

~$30,000

Buyer puts 5% down

5%

~$850,000

~$883,000

~$33,000

Calculations: Purchase Price = Loan Limit ÷ (1 – Down Payment %).

Thus, a buyer who previously maxed out at about ~$831k with 3% down now can look at ~$861k. That’s meaningful in many markets.

📌 Realtor Insight

🎯 Takeaway: Leverage this higher limit in conversations with clients. Buyers who thought they were boxed in at the previous cap may now qualify for a slightly higher price. For sellers, this opens a slightly broader pool of conforming-loan buyers (vs jumbo).

🏠 Heads-Up for California Markets

Note: The announced baseline of $832,750 applies broadly. The updated specific limits for high-cost counties (such as Sonoma County, San Diego County, and much of the Bay Area / Southern CA region) will be released soon and covered by us.

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