One of the biggest reasons people delay buying a home is this belief:
“I need 20% down before I can buy.”
That sounds responsible… but it’s usually wrong — and in many cases, it costs people tens of thousands of dollars in lost equity and appreciation.
Let’s clear this up.
Where the 20% Myth Came From
Twenty percent down became a benchmark because it avoids mortgage insurance on conventional loans.
That’s it.
It was never a requirement to buy a home — just a way to avoid one line item in the payment.
But over time, it turned into a psychological gatekeeper that keeps people stuck renting.
What You Actually Need to Buy a Home
Here are the real minimum down payment options today:
| Loan Type | Minimum Down |
|---|---|
| Conventional | 3% |
| FHA | 3.5% |
| VA | 0% |
| USDA | 0% |
| Colorado Down Payment Assistance | Often 1% or less out-of-pocket |
For a $450,000 home, that’s:
- 3% = $13,500
- 3.5% = $15,750
- 20% = $90,000
That gap is why so many qualified buyers sit on the sidelines.
“But What About PMI?”
Mortgage insurance is not the enemy.
PMI typically costs 0.3%–1% of the loan amount per year.
On many loans, that’s less than a streaming subscription.
And here’s the part most people don’t realize:
PMI goes away once you reach 20% equity.
It is temporary. Rent is not.
Waiting for 20% Usually Backfires
When home prices rise even modestly, waiting costs more than PMI ever would.
Example:
- $450,000 home grows 4% per year
- That’s $18,000 in value the first year alone
If you waited two years to save more down payment:
- That home could be worth $485,000+
- Your “20%” just moved farther away
You didn’t save — the target moved.
Low Down Payment ≠ High Risk
Today’s loan programs are designed to keep payments affordable and risk controlled.
Low down payment loans:
- Have strict underwriting
- Require reserves
- Use real income verification
- Have fixed interest rates
They are not the reckless loans from the early 2000s.
The Better Question Isn’t “Can I Put 20% Down?”
It’s:
“What payment fits my life and my long-term goals?”
If a smaller down payment lets you:
- Start building equity sooner
- Lock in a home before prices rise
- Stop paying rent
- Keep cash in reserves
…it’s often the smarter financial move.
Bottom Line
You do not need 20% down to buy a home.
You need:
- A stable income
- A reasonable credit profile
- A payment that fits your budget
- The right loan strategy
If you want, I can show you what buying looks like with 3%–5% down on your price range — and what that compares to waiting.
That’s where the real clarity comes from.