University of Kansas drives seasonality and rental-to-owner flow. Established east-side historic homes and newer west-side construction — we handle both.
Quick answer
Kansas Mortgage Lending is the Lawrence mortgage practice of Radley Brooks (NMLS #263374), Division President at Primary Residential Mortgage, Inc. We originate conventional, FHA, VA, USDA, and jumbo home loans for buyers across Lawrence and every Douglas County community. Most full pre-approvals are issued within one business day.
Lawrence is a small market with a large personality. The University of Kansas drives seasonal rhythms — listings that move fast in spring, families timing closings to the school calendar, rental-to-owner transitions in late summer. Price points run meaningfully higher than the Kansas statewide median, which means more jumbo files than you’d expect from a town of 95,000. A national lender will see none of these patterns and will underwrite the file like it’s any other Midwest purchase.
A Lawrence loan officer knows that Old West Lawrence appraisals have to be comp-shopped carefully because truly similar homes are rare. A Lawrence loan officer knows the Oread Neighborhood rental-to-primary-residence transition and the occupancy declarations that follow. We close Douglas County loans regularly and know where the friction is. For statewide context see our Kansas mortgage page.
Below is a loan officer’s view of Lawrence’s core submarkets. (None of this is real estate advice; it’s context for how mortgage files typically fit in each area.)
Old West Lawrence is the city’s architecturally anchored historic neighborhood — Victorian, Queen Anne, and Craftsman homes on mature lots, with prices that routinely sit at the top of the Lawrence market. Conventional financing with 20%+ down is the standard structure. Jumbo loans appear regularly. Appraisals on truly unique historic homes can run long because comparable sales are limited; we brief the appraiser on the property narrative when it helps. FHA and VA minimum property standards (MPS) can create friction on pre-1940 homes — peeling paint, knob-and-tube wiring, older roofs — and we review the target property early.
The Oread Neighborhood sits immediately south of the University of Kansas and runs a unique mix of owner-occupied, rental, and transitioning properties. Conventional and FHA both perform here. A common file type is a buyer purchasing a home that has recently operated as a rental — the occupancy declaration, pro forma rent discussion (if any), and condition review all need careful handling. We’ve done it often.
East Lawrence and the central neighborhoods (Pinckney, Hillcrest, Oread-adjacent blocks) run mid-to-upper-mid price points with a mix of owner-occupants, KU-adjacent buyers, and move-up families. Conventional 5–20% down and FHA are the most common file types. Many of these homes are pre-1960; MPS awareness matters on FHA and VA files.
West Lawrence is where newer construction sits. Prairie Park, Alvamar, Sunflower, and Fall Creek Farms carry mid-to-upper-mid price points with strong conventional financing volume. New-construction files on the west edge have their own rhythm — extended locks, builder-coordinated timelines, and certificate-of-occupancy coordination. Jumbo loans show up occasionally on higher-priced Alvamar-area properties.
The small towns and rural stretches of Douglas County — Lecompton to the west, Baldwin City to the south, Eudora to the east — are where USDA eligibility starts to appear. USDA offers 0% down for income-qualified buyers and is often the single best program in these areas. We run the eligibility check the same day you call. Private well and septic inspections are common on rural Douglas County properties.
Appraisal in unique historic housing stock. Old West Lawrence and pockets of the Oread Neighborhood contain truly distinctive homes; comparable sales are sometimes scarce. We build the appraiser’s packet carefully and plan for slightly longer turn times on historic targets.
MPS on pre-1940 homes. Lead-based paint disclosures, peeling paint, older roofs, knob-and-tube wiring, and deteriorated exterior surfaces are the usual flags for FHA and VA files. We flag the risks at pre-approval.
Jumbo thresholds. Because Lawrence’s median is above the Kansas statewide median, the conforming-to-jumbo line gets crossed more often here than in most Kansas cities. Jumbo underwriting has its own reserve, credit, and documentation guidelines.
KU seasonality. Spring and summer listing activity is meaningfully heavier than fall/winter; most buyer families try to close before the KU academic calendar begins. Appraisal and title queues can run longer in peak season. We lock ahead.
Commuter dynamics. Many Lawrence buyers commute to Kansas City (35 miles east) or Topeka (25 miles west). Commute does not affect mortgage qualification — income is underwritten on documentation, not location.
Property tax timing. Kansas property taxes are paid in arrears — half in December, half in May. A November closing and a March closing proratе very differently. We walk through closing cost projection at pre-approval.
Flood zones. Parts of North Lawrence and areas adjacent to the Kansas River and Kansas/Wakarusa confluence fall within FEMA-designated flood zones. We pull flood certification at pre-approval.
Our branch is located at 302 E. 30th Avenue in Hutchinson. Most Lawrence clients never visit — pre-approval completes online and closings run through Lawrence or Douglas County title offices. For clients who prefer a face-to-face meeting, the branch is open Monday–Friday 9am–6pm and Saturday 10am–2pm. Call (620) 860-4480 or email rbrooks@primeres.com to schedule.
You get a mortgage originated by someone who understands historic-home underwriting and jumbo structure, processed by someone who works in the same building, and underwritten by someone who knows Kansas — all backed by one of the largest privately held lenders in the U.S.
Radley Brooks (NMLS #263374), Division President at Primary Residential Mortgage, Inc., has originated Kansas mortgages for more than two decades and regularly closes loans in Lawrence and Douglas County. The branch handles origination, processing, and underwriting in-house.
Lawrence home prices generally run above the Kansas statewide median, driven by University of Kansas demand and constrained supply in established east-side neighborhoods. Old West Lawrence and parts of the Oread Neighborhood carry higher price points; west-side newer subdivisions run mid-to-upper-mid. Current figures are reviewed at pre-approval.
The Lawrence city footprint is not USDA-eligible. Rural Douglas County edges and small-town addresses near Lecompton, Baldwin City, and Eudora may be USDA-eligible for income-qualified buyers. See Kansas USDA loans.
Yes. Higher-priced properties in Old West Lawrence, parts of the Oread Neighborhood, and certain west-side subdivisions sometimes exceed the conforming loan limit. We originate jumbo loans through multiple investor channels.
No. Commute location does not affect mortgage qualification — income is underwritten based on documentation, not employer distance. Many Lawrence buyers commute to KC or Topeka and qualify cleanly.
All of them — Old West Lawrence, Oread Neighborhood, East Lawrence, Prairie Park, Alvamar, Sunflower, Fall Creek Farms, and every subdivision in Lawrence, plus Lecompton, Baldwin City, Eudora, and every other Douglas County community.
Start online or call the office at (620) 860-4480.
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