VA construction loan vs USDA construction loan — two zero down payment programs that eligible veterans can use to build a home, but with very different terms and advantages.
The Basic Difference
The VA construction loan is available exclusively to eligible veterans, active-duty service members, and qualifying surviving spouses. There are no geographic restrictions — you can build anywhere in the country.
The USDA construction loan is available to any income-qualified borrower but is restricted to properties in USDA-designated rural and suburban areas. Veterans can use USDA loans but give up the VA-specific advantages when they do.
Down Payment
Both programs offer zero down payment for qualified borrowers.
VA: Zero down for veterans with full entitlement, no loan limits. USDA: Zero down but subject to income limits and geographic restrictions.
Who Qualifies
VA: Requires military service — veterans, active duty, and qualifying surviving spouses. No income limits. No geographic restrictions.
USDA: Open to any borrower but requires the property to be in a USDA-eligible area and the borrower’s income to be within program limits — typically 115% of the area median income.
Mortgage Insurance vs Funding Fee
This is where the programs diverge significantly in long-term cost.
VA loans charge a one-time funding fee of 2.15% for first-time use with no down payment. After that, no ongoing mortgage insurance ever.
USDA loans charge an upfront guarantee fee of 1% of the loan amount plus an annual fee of 0.35% of the outstanding balance — paid monthly for the life of the loan. On a $300,000 loan, that’s $1,050 per year in ongoing fees.
Over a 30-year mortgage, the USDA annual fee adds up to more than $31,000 compared to the VA’s one-time funding fee of $6,450 on the same loan amount.
Interest Rates
Both programs typically offer below-market interest rates due to government backing. VA loans historically carry slightly lower rates — typically 0.25% to 0.50% below conventional loans. USDA rates are competitive but generally slightly higher than VA rates.
Geographic Restrictions
VA: None. Veterans can build in cities, suburbs, or rural areas anywhere in the country.
USDA: Restricted to USDA-eligible areas, which generally excludes most urban and many suburban locations. The USDA eligibility map changes periodically as areas develop.
Property Requirements
Both programs have minimum property requirements. VA requirements focus on safety, structural soundness, and habitability. USDA requirements are similar but also include restrictions on the size and type of property — luxury features and income-producing agricultural land can create eligibility issues.
When a Veteran Might Choose USDA
Despite the VA loan’s advantages, there are specific situations where a veteran might consider a USDA construction loan. If a veteran has used their full VA entitlement on another property and doesn’t have entitlement remaining, USDA provides an alternative zero down payment path. Additionally, some rural lenders may be more experienced with USDA construction lending than VA construction lending in specific markets.
Veterans who have served in rural communities or plan to retire in rural areas sometimes assume the USDA loan is their only zero-down option. It is not. The VA construction loan works in rural areas just as well as in cities — and without the geographic restrictions, income limits, or ongoing annual fees that come with the USDA program. If you have earned VA eligibility, use it.
The Bottom Line
For eligible veterans, the VA construction loan is almost always the better choice. No geographic restrictions, no ongoing mortgage insurance, lower interest rates, and stronger consumer protections create a clear advantage over the USDA program in most scenarios.
Veterans considering USDA should consult with a VA-knowledgeable lender first to fully understand their VA entitlement status before pursuing an alternative program.
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