California will give firs-time home buyer 20% down- California Dream for all

Hello!

California passed SB-197, which gave birth to the housing program California Dream for All. This program isn't available to apply for until 3/27/2023; however, the guidelines and details about the program have been released. You can verify all the info in my post here. This program is similar to the 10% down program CalFHA had last year. Like that previous program, this program only has a set amount of funds available.

What is the program?

Through shared appreciation, The California Housing financial Agency (CalHFA) will provide 20% down payment assistance, in the form of a silent second loan. There is not a monthly payment associated with this loan; however, should you sell, refi, or transfer ownership, you will have to repay the loan they provided to you, as well as a portion of the appreciation. This loan does not turn into a grant.

– For Example –

$500,000 purchase price.

CalHFA will give you $100,000

This amount doesn't include what you would owe through shared appreciation.

What does shared appreciation mean?

CalHFA is entitled to 15% or 20% of the appreciation gained the purchase date. Whether you pay 15% or 20% will depend on your earnings. Per the guidelines, buyers whose earnings is between 80% – 150% of your county's Area Median earnings (AMI) pay 20% of the appreciation. Most buyers are going to be within this range. If your earnings is less than 80% then CalHFA will only take 15%.

Benefits

  • No down payment
  • No private property loan assurance
  • Lower monthly payment
  • increased purchase power

Qualifications:

  • First-time Homebuyer (haven't owned a property in the last 3 years)
  • Minimum loan score: 660
  • Maximum debt-to-earnings ratio: 45%
  • Single Family home or Condo; no multifamily
  • earnings can't exceed county earnings limit
  • CalHFA homebuyer education course required
  • One year home warranty required

Thank you 🙂

41 thoughts on “California will give firs-time home buyer 20% down- California Dream for all”

  1. This seems like a great program. I wonder what happens if you never sell the house and it gets inherited? It seems like they’re mostly anticipating first time buyers to be younger, but with the outrageous home prices I could see some older folks also being first time buyers.

    Reply
  2. At first blush, this is a great program to give a first time homebuyer an honest chance to purchase – it is still up to the seller if they want to accept the deal, especially if there are cleaner (ie, faster closing, cash, etc) offers. I see this as a huge win overall.

    Reply
  3. Two questions pop up in my head…

    What happens to the homeowner if there is no appreciation at time of sale? Would they owe initial 20% only back or would there be other costs too?

    Secondly, is there a borrowing limit? If so is it a flat amount of formula based on DTI

    Reply
  4. I will warn people to start getting ahead of this opportunity before home prices jump up due to the influx of new buyers taking advantage of this opportunity

    ALSO mortgage interest rates are high right now, if you refinance down the road when interest rates are lower then you will have to pay back the 20% and either the 15%/20% appreciation

    Reply
  5. This literally doesn’t help at all. The cheapest houses in SoCal right now are around 650k. Even with a “free” 20% down the monthly payment ends up being $3,953/month (double most people’s monthly income.). The only way anyone could afford this is if they are already INCREDIBLY well off. Millennials getting fucked again by “help” that is only usable for Boomers……

    Edit: even if you cut 4k in HALF to 2k that is more than or equal too what 80% of people make in a month. So still unaffordable for anyone not very rich already.

    Reply
  6. This is great news! Unfortunately, I probably won’t be ready to buy a house for another few years. I’m happy for anyone that takes advantage of this though. We need more family homes and fewer for profit rental homes

    Reply
  7. No one making $235k can afford the mortgage on a $1million house at current rates unless you go crazy.

    Also what happens if property values go down and you need to sell? Suddenly you are underwater and either can’t sell or need to make up potentially a lot of money.

    Reply
  8. Is there any kind of repayment scheme for those that DO NOT sell or refinance their homes? If I live in the home for the rest of my life does this mean that I never have to pay anything towards this program?

    Reply
  9. I was excited about this program at first, but after talking with multiple LO, it’s actually not that great

    1. The actually details of this program are actually not finalized until 27th this month.

    2. Interest rate for this program will actually be higher than your usual 30 year conventional

    3. There’s only couple hundreds of million dollars / year, not that many people will get it

    4. You actually have to get a deal accepted before you can apply to this program, government won’t approve you first for you to find one. So it might make you make rash decisions.

    5. In prior years, such programs usually are very limited in criteria so people can usually get their money within 30 days. But some are telling me the closing date can take a lot longer since the demand is likely gonna be high. And as you can guess, government workers probably won’t work faster.

    Reply
  10. Haven’t read the details in the entirely but I can see two ways of screwing the state or the homebuyer (especially in this current market). Please correct me if I am wrong.

    1st. Interest rates are going up to curb inflation (if you take a loan then this is bad). Market was expecting a 1/2 of a % rate increase this week leading to the mid 5%’s interest rates. Due to banks going through turmoil, they raised it by 1/4 of a % so half of what was expected. Some people were expecting no increase to settle the markets but the Fed’s main goal is to curb inflation. I would personally wouldn’t take out any loan at this point in time and would rather buy in cash.

    2nd. Fellow homeowners like myself are seeing how much more we can sell our properties once this goes into effect. Government is subsidizing home purchases so we can charge more an make more as there is more liquidity and every seller will try to get as much as they can get.

    Hope people get their dream home but many moving parts to consider. Will have to coordinate with legal and others with more knowledge. Good luck everyone.

    Reply
  11. Awesome. More people can now afford to buy the few homes that are available. This solves nothing long term. Build more goddamn affordable homes with assinine HOA and Melo Roos

    Reply

Leave a Comment