VA Loan Entitlement Explained — What Veterans Need to Know Before They Build

Most veterans have heard the term VA loan entitlement but few understand exactly what it means or how it affects their ability to get a VA construction loan. Getting this wrong can cost you your loan approval.

Here is a clear explanation.

What Is VA Loan Entitlement

VA loan entitlement is the dollar amount the Department of Veterans Affairs guarantees to your lender if you default on your loan. It is not the maximum amount you can borrow. It is the amount the VA promises to cover if things go wrong.

This guarantee is what allows lenders to offer VA loans with no down payment and no private mortgage insurance. The lender has the VA’s backing, which reduces their risk significantly.

Basic Entitlement vs Bonus Entitlement

There are two tiers of entitlement.

Basic entitlement is $36,000. This is the original entitlement amount established decades ago and it is still in the system. For most veterans today it is not the relevant number.

Bonus entitlement — sometimes called second-tier entitlement or additional entitlement — brings your total available guarantee up to 25 percent of the conforming loan limit in your county. In most counties in 2026 this means your total entitlement is well above $100,000.

For practical purposes, if you have full entitlement available, there is no VA-set loan limit. You can borrow as much as your lender will approve based on your income and credit.

Full Entitlement vs Remaining Entitlement

Full entitlement means you have never used your VA loan benefit, or you have paid off a previous VA loan and had your entitlement restored, or you sold the home and the VA loan was paid in full.

With full entitlement you have no loan limit beyond what your lender will approve.

Remaining entitlement means you have an active VA loan or a previous VA loan that was not fully resolved. Your entitlement is reduced by the amount tied up in that existing loan.

You can still use remaining entitlement for a VA construction loan but your available guarantee may be lower which could affect your loan ceiling or require a down payment.

How to Check Your Entitlement

Your available entitlement is shown on your Certificate of Eligibility. The COE will display your entitlement code and the dollar amount available.

If you have used your VA loan benefit before, review your COE carefully before starting a construction loan application. Understanding your entitlement position upfront prevents surprises during the approval process.

Entitlement Restoration

If you have used your VA loan benefit in the past and paid off that loan, you can apply to have your entitlement restored. This is done by submitting VA Form 26-1880 to your regional VA loan center.

Entitlement restoration is not automatic. You must request it. If you sold a home with a VA loan and paid it off years ago but never requested restoration, your COE may still show reduced entitlement. Check before you assume you have full entitlement available.

How Entitlement Affects Your VA Construction Loan

For most veterans building a home in 2026 with full entitlement, the entitlement question is straightforward — there is effectively no loan limit set by the VA. Your ceiling is set by your lender based on your financial qualifications.

For veterans with reduced entitlement, the available guarantee limits how much the lender is willing to approve without a down payment. In some cases a partial down payment can bridge the gap between remaining entitlement and the loan amount needed.

The Bottom Line

Entitlement is the foundation of every VA loan. Understanding your entitlement position before you apply for a VA construction loan ensures you know exactly what you are working with and prevents delays caused by entitlement issues discovered late in the process.

Check your COE. Know your numbers. Apply with confidence.


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