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USDA · Rural Housing

The USDA rural loan eligibility map for Kansas.

Roughly 97% of Kansas is geographically eligible for USDA-guaranteed rural development loans. That includes towns most buyers don’t think of as “rural” — Derby, Haysville, Hesston, Park City, and parts of Salina. Here’s how to check, who qualifies, and why it’s often the best loan in the state.

Quick answer

A USDA Section 502 Guaranteed loan finances 100% of the purchase price with no down payment and a guarantee fee cheaper than FHA MIP. Income limits apply by county (2026: roughly $121,500 for a 1–4 person household in most Kansas counties). The property must be in a USDA-designated eligible area. You check eligibility by address at eligibility.sc.egov.usda.gov. Most of non-metro Kansas qualifies, including many suburban towns that feel urban.

Which Kansas markets are USDA-eligible (you’d be surprised)

People assume “USDA” means deep farm country. In Kansas, the eligibility map is far more generous than that. As of 2026, these markets are fully or largely USDA-eligible:

What isn’t eligible: downtown Wichita, most of Topeka, most of Lawrence, and most of Kansas City Metro (Johnson, Wyandotte, and the eastern half of Leavenworth County).

Household income limits by Kansas county

USDA income limits are based on household income — every adult in the home who earns money is counted, even non-borrowers. The 2026 moderate-income limits for most Kansas counties:

Johnson County has a slightly higher cap because of metro adjustment. Rural/frontier counties all use the same base limit. Limits update each June — we always verify current numbers at application.

Important adjustments: deduct $480 per minor child, $400 per elderly household member, and all documented medical expenses over 3% of gross income. These adjustments can bring a household that looks over-income down into qualifying range.

The 100% financing + minimal costs advantage

On a $225,000 home purchase in Derby, here’s the side-by-side:

For a buyer who has 620+ credit and is income-eligible, USDA is almost always the lowest-cost path on an eligible property.

Credit requirements

USDA technically has no minimum credit score (the automated underwriting system GUS decides), but in practice our lender minimum is 580 (GUS automated approval typically 640+). Under 640, files go to manual underwriting, which requires compensating factors like strong reserves, low DTI, or a significant track record of rent payment history. Radley has closed USDA files with scores as low as 580 through manual underwrite when the rest of the file was strong.

Property eligibility rules (what the house itself must be)

How to check if a specific address is eligible

  1. Go to eligibility.sc.egov.usda.gov.
  2. Select “Single Family Housing Guaranteed.”
  3. Accept the disclaimer.
  4. Enter the exact street address.
  5. You’ll see “Eligible” or “Ineligible” on a map.

If I’m screening a property for a buyer, I do this check before we even pull credit. It takes 30 seconds.

Common USDA misconceptions

“USDA is for farmers.” It’s not. It’s a general mortgage product for eligible geographic areas. You can be a software engineer buying a ranch-style home in Hesston and qualify.

“USDA takes forever.” Used to. Since 2016, GUS (Guaranteed Underwriting System) has sped USDA up to within 3–5 days of conventional timelines. Most of our USDA files close in 28–35 days.

“I make too much.” Most buyers haven’t checked the actual adjusted income calculation. Minor children and medical expenses reduce countable income significantly.

“I already own a home.” USDA allows current homeowners to buy a new USDA-eligible home as long as the current home is being sold or rented out and is not within “reasonable commuting distance” (typically 50 miles) of the new home.

Check your USDA eligibility.

Give me the address and your household income — I’ll confirm property and income eligibility in under 10 minutes. No credit pull required to start.

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