Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac conforming financing with 3–20% down. HomeReady. Home Possible. PMI that cancels at 20% equity. The right program for most Kansas buyers with a 680+ score.
Quick answer
A conventional loan is a mortgage that conforms to Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac underwriting guidelines and is not insured or guaranteed by a government agency. In Kansas, conventional loans require a minimum 620 credit score, 3% down for eligible first-time buyers (HomeReady / Home Possible), 5% down for standard programs, and 20%+ down to avoid private mortgage insurance (PMI). The 2026 Kansas conforming loan limit is $806,500 baseline for a one-unit property, set by the Federal Housing Finance Agency. Debt-to-income ratios up to 45% are standard, with 50% allowed when compensating factors exist.
A conventional loan is any mortgage that is not backed by a government agency — it is not FHA-insured, not VA-guaranteed, and not USDA-guaranteed. Instead, conventional loans are underwritten to guidelines published by Fannie Mae (the Federal National Mortgage Association) and Freddie Mac (the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation), the two government-sponsored enterprises that buy most conforming U.S. mortgages on the secondary market.
Because the loan conforms to GSE guidelines, it can be pooled into mortgage-backed securities and sold — which is what lets lenders keep offering 30-year fixed rates at scale. When a Kansas buyer closes a conventional loan with Primary Residential Mortgage, Inc., the loan is typically delivered to Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac within weeks of funding. PRMI is a direct seller/servicer to both agencies, which removes the broker layer and speeds decisions.
Conventional loans break into two buckets: conforming (at or below the annual FHFA loan limit) and non-conforming / jumbo (above the limit). This page focuses on conforming conventional — the workhorse product for Kansas purchases.
The floor for a Kansas conventional loan is a 620 mid-score — the middle number of your Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion FICOs. Both Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will underwrite to 620, but the pricing hits below 700 are meaningful. The tiers that matter in day-to-day pricing:
Kansas buyers in the 620–680 band should always see an FHA-versus-conventional comparison before locking a program. We run both at pre-approval.
Conventional down payment minimums in Kansas:
Gift funds from family members are permitted for the full down payment on primary residences. Seller concessions toward closing costs are capped by LTV: 3% on 90%+ LTV, 6% between 75.01–90%, and 9% at 75% or lower.
Standard conventional DTI ceiling is 45%, with up to 50% allowed when compensating factors are present — typically strong credit, significant reserves, or a history of housing payments equal to or higher than the proposed payment. Fannie Mae’s Desktop Underwriter (DU) and Freddie Mac’s Loan Product Advisor (LPA) are the automated underwriting engines that make the final DTI call. We run both engines at pre-approval when a scenario is borderline.
PMI is required on any conventional loan above 80% LTV. Kansas buyers have three structural choices:
The cancellability of conventional PMI is the single biggest structural advantage over FHA. FHA’s MIP is permanent for the life of the loan on most new FHA loans with less than 10% down — a cost that does not go away even at 50% equity.
Conventional loans finance the widest range of Kansas property types of any program:
Kansas first-time buyers (defined by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac as someone who has not owned a primary residence in the past three years) have two dedicated 3%-down conventional programs:
HomeReady is Fannie Mae’s affordable conventional product. Highlights:
Home Possible is Freddie’s mirror product. Structurally similar, but runs through LPA instead of DU. Highlights:
If your income exceeds 80% AMI but you are still a first-time buyer, these are the fallback 97 LTV products. Same 3% down, no income cap, but standard PMI pricing rather than reduced. Often the best route for dual-income Johnson County or Overland Park first-time buyers who earn above AMI.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) sets conforming loan limits annually based on national home-price changes. For 2026, the baseline limits that apply across Kansas are:
| Property Type | 2026 Kansas Baseline Limit |
|---|---|
| 1-unit (single-family) | $806,500 |
| 2-unit (duplex) | $1,032,650 |
| 3-unit (triplex) | $1,248,150 |
| 4-unit (fourplex) | $1,551,250 |
No Kansas county carries a high-cost designation in 2026 — every county uses the baseline figures above. Loans above these limits cross into jumbo territory with different underwriting (typically 700+ credit, 10–20% down, and full documentation of reserves).
Most Kansas buyers comparing programs are comparing conventional against FHA. The honest answer depends on credit score, down payment, and time horizon. The five points that actually drive the decision:
| Factor | Conventional | FHA |
|---|---|---|
| Mortgage insurance cancellability | PMI cancels at 80% LTV (auto at 78%) | MIP permanent for life of loan if <10% down; 11 years if 10%+ down |
| Credit score pricing | Tiered via LLPAs — 740+ priced materially better than 620 | Flatter — 580 and 720 price closer together |
| Property condition | More lenient appraisal standards | HUD Minimum Property Standards (MPS); peeling paint, handrails, roof life all matter |
| DTI limits | 45% standard, up to 50% with compensating factors | 46.99/56.99% with AUS approval — similar ceiling in practice |
| Upfront costs | No upfront mortgage insurance premium | 1.75% UFMIP financed into the loan |
Rule of thumb for Kansas buyers: if your credit is 700+ and you plan to stay in the home long enough for PMI to cancel (typically 5–8 years with standard amortization plus Kansas appreciation), conventional usually wins on total cost. If your credit is 620–680 or the property has condition issues, FHA often wins despite the lifetime MIP. Run both — we do it on every file.
Conventional is the only mainstream financing option for Kansas investment property and second homes — FHA, VA, and USDA all require owner occupancy. Structure:
Kansas investors routinely use conventional financing to acquire small-multifamily in Wichita, Topeka, and Kansas City metro. The 10-property cap under Fannie Mae’s multiple-financed-properties rule allows most local investors to scale before moving to portfolio or DSCR products.
Johnson County and the jumbo threshold. Overland Park, Leawood, and Olathe have the highest concentration of purchases that push up against the $806,500 conforming limit. Structuring a 2026 Johnson County purchase in the $800K–$900K band often comes down to whether the buyer brings enough cash to stay conforming (which keeps pricing and PMI flexibility intact) or crosses into jumbo. We model both routes.
Wichita appraisal trends. Sedgwick County appraisals have normalized after the 2021–2023 run-up, but comp selection in older east Wichita neighborhoods remains nuanced — mixed vintages within a half-mile can swing a value materially. Conventional appraisals have more latitude than FHA here, which is one reason conventional sometimes clears a deal that FHA cannot on the same property.
Rural conventional limits. Conventional loans have no rural restriction — unlike USDA, which requires the property to be in an eligible rural census area. For Kansas buyers in towns just outside USDA eligibility maps (parts of Derby, parts of Valley Center, growing edges of Manhattan and Lawrence), conventional is often the default.
Property tax escrow. Kansas property taxes pay in arrears — half in December, half in May. Conventional escrow setup handles this cleanly, but closing timing affects the initial escrow deposit. A September Hutchinson closing requires a larger initial escrow than a February closing on the same property.
Wind and hail insurance. Kansas ranks top-five nationally for wind and hail claims. Conventional loans don’t impose special insurance requirements beyond standard hazard coverage, but homeowner premiums can move the all-in monthly payment by $100+. We underwrite to a conservative insurance estimate so pre-approvals hold when the binder comes in.
Loan Level Price Adjustments (LLPAs) are the reason two Kansas buyers with identical incomes and identical down payments can see different conventional rates. LLPAs are risk-based pricing adjustments published by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac that apply at the loan level based on:
On FHA, pricing is much flatter — a 620 and a 760 FHA borrower see similar rate pricing on the same day. On conventional, the same spread can be substantial. This is why conventional is typically the better economic outcome for Kansas buyers with strong credit, and why FHA can win for buyers with credit events or lower scores even though FHA carries lifetime MIP.
We publish the tradeoff in plain English on our FHA vs Conventional in Kansas guide — worth reading before you pick a program.
Want to see the other Kansas programs side-by-side before committing? Start at our Kansas home loans overview, or compare directly to FHA and VA. Looking to refinance an existing mortgage into a conventional structure to drop PMI or shorten term? See our refinance options. Kansas City metro buyer? We work routinely with clients in Overland Park and across Johnson County. South-central Kansas? See Wichita.
The minimum credit score for a Kansas conventional loan is 620 for most Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac programs. Best pricing starts at 740 and improves further at 760 and 780. Conventional pricing is heavily credit-score-driven through Loan Level Price Adjustments (LLPAs), so a 760 score and a 640 score can see materially different rates on the same loan. Buyers in the 620–680 band should always compare conventional against FHA before locking.
For 2026, the baseline conforming loan limit in every Kansas county is $806,500 for a one-unit property. Two-unit properties go up to $1,032,650, three-unit to $1,248,150, and four-unit to $1,551,250. These limits are set annually by the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA). Loans above these amounts are jumbo and follow different underwriting.
Conventional private mortgage insurance (PMI) is cancellable once the loan reaches 80% loan-to-value, and automatically terminates at 78% LTV under the Homeowners Protection Act. FHA mortgage insurance (MIP) is permanent for the life of the loan on most new FHA loans with less than 10% down, and 11 years if the down payment is 10%+. FHA also charges a 1.75% upfront MIP financed into the loan. Conventional has no upfront mortgage insurance premium.
Yes. Kansas first-time homebuyers — defined as someone who has not owned a primary residence in the past three years — can qualify for 3% down conventional financing through Fannie Mae HomeReady or Freddie Mac Home Possible. Both require income at or below 80% of area median income (AMI) for the property’s county and offer reduced PMI pricing. Buyers above 80% AMI can still access 3% down via standard Fannie Mae 97% or Freddie Mac HomeOne.
Conventional is typically better for Kansas buyers with credit scores of 700+ and down payments of 5% or more, because PMI is cancellable and pricing improves with credit. FHA is usually better for buyers with credit scores between 580 and 680 or with recent credit events, because FHA pricing is flatter and underwriting is more forgiving. The break-even varies by scenario — we run both comparisons on every pre-approval. See our FHA vs Conventional Kansas guide for the detailed breakdown.
Yes. Conventional loans are the primary financing tool for Kansas investment property because FHA, VA, and USDA do not permit non-owner-occupied purchases. Investment property conventional loans require 15% down on single-family and 25% down on 2–4 unit, with 2–6 months of PITI reserves depending on the number of financed properties. Pricing includes LLPAs for occupancy type, so the rate will be higher than a primary-residence loan at the same credit score. Rental income from the subject property can count toward qualification at 75% of market rent.
Five-minute conversation, zero pressure, no credit pull to start. Program availability subject to underwriting guidelines. Not all applicants will qualify.
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