- About
- My Account/On-Line Registration
- News & Special Events
- Member Services
- Education
- Class Calendar & Registration
- DAAR on the Road - LIVE CLASSES IN YOUR OFFICE!
- CE/PL Requirements for Agents
- CE Requirements for Brokers
- Check My Education Credits
- Principles and Practices of Real Estate
- On-Line Post License (PL) and Continuing Education (CE)
- DAAR Education Gold Card: The Best Deal in Real Estate Education
- REALTOR® Designations
- MRIS Training at DAAR!
- Inclement Weather Policy
- Course/Class Refund Policy
- Advocacy
- Affiliates
- Market Stats
- Consumers
FHA Loan Limits Reinstated; Flood Insurance Extended
The U.S. Congress voted to reinstate the loan limit formula and maximum cap for Federal Housing Administration-insured loans for two years. The provision, within a spending bill passed by the House and Senate on Thursday, November 17th and signed by the President, reinstates the FHA loan limits through 2013 at 125 percent of local area median home prices, up to a maximum of $729,750 in the highest cost markets. The floor will remain at $271,050. The loan limits for Fannie Mae- and Freddie Mac-backed mortgages will remain at 115 percent of local area median home prices, up to $625,500.
NAR believes the reinstated loan limit formula and cap change will help make mortgages more affordable and accessible for hard-working, middle-class families throughout the country, not just wealthy individuals or those in costly markets. Nearly two-thirds of buyers who will be helped by the loan limits provision have incomes below $100,000.
“It’s a misconception that only wealthy borrowers benefit from the maximum cost loan limits; middle-class home buyers living in all areas of the country deserve the same access to affordable mortgage financing and the same opportunity to achieve homeownership that home buyers enjoy in the most affordable regions of the country,” said Veissi. The legislative action will have an impact even in communities with loan limits well below the maximum cap; the reset last month impacted 669 counties in 42 states and territories, with an average loan limit reduction of more than $68,000.
The bill also provides for a short-term extension of the National Flood Insurance Program through December 16, 2011. NAR strongly urges Congress to use the additional time to complete work on a five-year reauthorization of the program, which ensures access to affordable flood insurance for millions of home and business owners across the country.
Courtesty National Association of REALTORS

