VA Home Loans: Everything You Need to Know
Expert guidance from a veteran who has lived it — Spencer Wartman, NMLS #2109932
What Is a VA Loan?
A VA loan is a mortgage benefit earned through military service. Backed by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, VA loans allow eligible veterans, active-duty service members, and surviving spouses to purchase or refinance a home with significant advantages unavailable in any other loan program.
Key Benefits:
- No down payment required (in most cases)
- No private mortgage insurance (PMI) — ever
- Competitive interest rates — typically lower than conventional loans
- Flexible credit requirements
- Assumable loan — can be transferred to another buyer
- No prepayment penalties
- Lifetime benefit — can be used more than once
Who Qualifies for a VA Loan?
You may be eligible if you meet one of the following service requirements:
- Active Duty: 90 consecutive days of active service
- Veterans (Wartime): 90 days active service during wartime
- Veterans (Peacetime): 181 days of continuous active service
- National Guard / Reserves: 6 years of service OR 90 days under Title 32 orders
- Surviving Spouses: of veterans who died in service or from a service-connected disability
Not sure if you qualify? Contact me directly — eligibility questions are always free.
VA Loan Entitlement: What It Is and Why It Matters
Entitlement is the amount the VA guarantees on your behalf. Understanding entitlement is the most important — and most misunderstood — part of the VA loan program.
Basic vs. Bonus Entitlement
Basic Entitlement: $36,000. This is the foundational amount the VA guarantees.
Bonus (Tier 2) Entitlement: In 2026, the conforming loan limit is $806,500 (standard) and $832,750 (high-cost areas). The VA’s maximum guaranty is 25% of the conforming limit — meaning the full entitlement is up to $208,187.50.
For loan amounts above the conforming limit, lenders can still offer VA loans, but the calculation becomes more specific.
If You Already Have a VA Loan (Second-Tier / Remaining Entitlement)
This is where most veterans get confused — and where bad advice costs people money.
If you have an existing VA loan and want to buy a second property without selling the first, you are working with what’s called “remaining entitlement.” You can absolutely do this — but the math matters. Here is how it works:
- Your full entitlement at the 2026 conforming loan limit is $208,187.50 (25% of $832,750)
- If your existing loan used $XXX,XXX in entitlement, that amount is “charged”
- Your remaining entitlement = $208,187.50 minus what’s charged
- Your remaining entitlement × 4 = your VA loan limit with no down payment
- Any amount above that limit requires a 25% down payment on the difference only
Example: If your remaining entitlement is $58,187.50, your no-down-payment ceiling is $232,750. If you’re buying at $500,000, you owe 25% of the $267,250 gap = ~$66,812 down.
This calculation is something I run with every veteran client before we ever look at a property. Know your numbers first.
Restoring Your Entitlement
Full entitlement is restored when:
- You sell your current VA-financed property AND pay off the VA loan, OR
- Another qualified veteran assumes your loan, OR
- You pay off the VA loan (even without selling the property, you can apply for a one-time restoration)
The VA Funding Fee
The VA funding fee is a one-time charge that helps fund the VA loan program. It is typically rolled into the loan amount. The amount varies:
| Loan Type | Down Payment | First Use | Subsequent Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| Purchase | 0% | 2.15% | 3.30% |
| Purchase | 5–9.99% | 1.50% | 1.50% |
| Purchase | 10%+ | 1.25% | 1.25% |
| IRRRL (Refinance) | N/A | 0.50% | 0.50% |
| Cash-Out Refinance | N/A | 2.15% | 3.30% |
Funding Fee Exemption
You pay NO funding fee if you:
- Receive VA disability compensation (any rating)
- Are a surviving spouse of a veteran who died in service or from a service-connected disability
- Are active duty and have a pre-discharge disability claim pending
Note: Even a 0% disability rating from the VA — if it generates compensation — qualifies for exemption. If you have not filed a disability claim, doing so before closing can save you thousands.
VA Loan vs. Conventional: Which Is Better for Veterans?
| Factor | VA Loan | Conventional |
|---|---|---|
| Down Payment | 0% (usually) | 3–20% |
| PMI | Never | Required under 20% down |
| Interest Rate | Typically lower | Market rate |
| Funding Fee | Yes (0.5–3.3%) | No |
| Loan Limit | None (with full entitlement) | Conforming limit for best rates |
| Multiple Uses | Yes | Yes |
Bottom line: For most veterans, the VA loan wins on pure math — even with the funding fee — because eliminating PMI and down payment creates enormous financial flexibility. I run both scenarios for every client so you can make an informed decision, not a guess.
The VA Loan Process: What to Expect With Spencer
- Discovery Call (15 min): We talk through your situation, entitlement status, and goals.
- Pre-Approval: I collect your documents (DD-214, COE, pay stubs, W-2s/tax returns) and generate your pre-approval letter — often same or next business day.
- House Search: You shop with confidence knowing exactly what you qualify for.
- Under Contract: We move quickly. Many of my closings are under 30 days.
- Clear to Close: You get my personal commitment: you will always know where your loan stands.
- Close: Keys in hand.
Why Choose Spencer for Your VA Loan?
I am not a VA loan expert because I read the guidelines. I am a VA loan expert because I am the veteran the VA loan was designed for. I have personally used this benefit. I have navigated its complexities. And since 2021, I have helped hundreds of veterans do the same — from first-time homebuyers to seasoned investors leveraging their second-tier entitlement.
Trident Home Loans closes 3,000+ VA loans per year. 80% of our volume is VA loans. Four of our originators rank in the national top VA loan officers out of 555,000+.
We are not generalists dabbling in VA loans. This is what we do.
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