Colorado Springs
Buying your first home in Colorado Springs can feel like a maze of programs and acronyms. The good news is that most first-time buyers here lean on a small set of well-worn paths: FHA for flexible credit and a low down payment, VA for those who have served, USDA for eligible areas around the Front Range, and CHFA down payment assistance to help with the upfront cost. The right one depends on your situation, and you do not have to figure it out alone.
How it works
Insured by the Federal Housing Administration, FHA loans make room for lower credit and a smaller down payment, which is why so many first-time buyers begin here. See our FHA page or the FHA vs conventional comparison.
Colorado’s housing finance authority offers assistance that can help cover the upfront cost, paired with one of the loans above and a homebuyer education course. Our down payment assistance page covers how it works.
Each path has its own guidelines, and they change over time. We match your situation to the current options rather than pushing a single program. Program details for CHFA live at chfainfo.com.
Who it is for
Where we come in
Common questions
There is no single best one. FHA, VA, USDA, and conventional each fit different situations. We match the program to your credit, savings, and goals rather than pushing one path.
Often, yes. CHFA offers down payment assistance for eligible Colorado buyers, which can pair with an FHA, VA, USDA, or conventional loan. We help you see whether you qualify.
It depends on the loan and whether you use assistance, and some paths require very little upfront. We show you the real number for your situation rather than a generic figure.
For CHFA assistance, yes, an approved homebuyer education course is required. Many first-time buyers find it genuinely useful, and we point you to an approved option.
Yes. FHA in particular was built with more flexible credit guidelines, and we can map a path now and a refinance later as your credit grows.
Keep exploring
How CHFA and other programs help cover the upfront cost in Colorado.
Learn moreGovernment-insured flexibility for lower credit and a smaller down payment.
Learn moreAn earned benefit for those who served, often with no down payment.
Learn moreThis page is general education, not a commitment to lend, financial advice, or a guarantee of program eligibility, assistance amount, rate, or term. CHFA program rules, income limits, and assistance are set by the Colorado Housing and Finance Authority and change over time; confirm current details at chfainfo.com. All loans subject to credit approval; not all applicants will qualify.
Get started
Tell us where you are and we will help you figure out which doors are open, with no pressure and no application required to ask.