First-Time Homebuyer Calculators Georgia

Georgia First-Time Homebuyer Calculator

First-time homebuyer costs in Georgia: $11,200 FHA down payment, $8,960 closing costs, 0.92% property tax. See total upfront costs & monthly payments.

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Georgia Quick Facts
5.4% Income Tax Rate
0.92% Property Tax Rate
$65,030 Median Income
93.4 Cost of Living

How This Calculator Works

Calculation methodology and assumptions

First-time homebuyer cost breakdown for Georgia. Includes down payment, closing costs (2.8%), PMI (required below 20% down), property tax (0.92%), and homeowners insurance ($2,050/yr). Note: Georgia requires an attorney at closing. DTI ratio should stay below 43% for conventional loans and 50% for FHA.

Key State Information

Georgia homebuyer facts: Median price $320,000 | 20% down = $64,000 | FHA 3.5% down = $11,200 | Closing costs ~$8,960 | Property tax 0.92% | Attorney required at closing.

Standard financial formulas Pre-filled with real state data Estimates only — not financial advice
Data Source
Census Bureau, HUD, Zillow
View Original Source | Verified | Updated annually

How to Use This First-Time Homebuyer Calculator

  1. 1

    Enter your income and savings

    Input your gross annual income and total available savings for down payment and closing costs. The calculator applies Homebuyer's first-time buyer programs that you may qualify for.

  2. 2

    Select your preferred loan type

    Compare FHA (3.5% down, lower credit score OK), Conventional (5-20% down, no upfront MIP), VA (0% down for eligible veterans), and USDA (0% down for rural areas). Each has different cost structures.

  3. 3

    Set location and home price

    The calculator pre-fills Homebuyer's median home price. FHA and conforming loan limits vary by county — check HUD's website for your specific county limit.

  4. 4

    Review affordability and programs

    Results include maximum affordable home price (based on 28% front-end DTI), monthly payment breakdown, available state/local down payment assistance programs, and mortgage credit certificates (MCCs).

Example Calculation

Let's analyze a first-time homebuyer scenario in Homebuyer.

A couple with $85,000 combined income and $25,000 in savings. Using FHA financing with 3.5% down: maximum affordable home price (at 28% front-end ratio) is approximately $340,000. Down payment: $11,900. Upfront MIP (1.75%): $5,742 (rolled into loan). Monthly: $2,100 (P&I) + $283 (property tax) + $125 (insurance) + $180 (monthly MIP) = $2,688 total.

Result: Total monthly housing cost: $2,688 (32% of gross income — slightly above the 28% guideline but within FHA's 43% maximum DTI). The couple needs $11,900 + closing costs (~$10,000) = ~$22,000. With $25,000 savings, they have $3,000 remaining — tight but doable. A down payment assistance program could cover $5,000-$10,000, creating a more comfortable cushion.

What Affects Your Results

Down Payment

FHA requires 3.5% (credit score 580+), Conventional requires 3-5%, VA requires 0%. A larger down payment reduces monthly payments, eliminates PMI faster, and may get a better interest rate.

Credit Score

FHA accepts 580+ (3.5% down) or 500-579 (10% down). Conventional loans prefer 680+ for best rates. Every 20-point increase can save 0.125-0.25% on your rate.

Debt-to-Income Ratio

Lenders use two ratios: front-end (housing costs / gross income, max 28-31%) and back-end (all monthly debt / gross income, max 43-50%). Student loans and car payments reduce borrowing power.

Down Payment Assistance

Homebuyer offer grants, forgivable loans, or matched savings programs for first-time buyers. Income limits typically range from 80-150% of Area Median Income.

Loan Limits

FHA and conventional conforming loan limits vary by county. High-cost areas have higher limits ($1.15M+ for conforming). Check HUD.gov for your specific county limit.

Tips for Homebuyer Residents

  • Check Homebuyer's first-time homebuyer programs. Most states offer down payment assistance (grants or low-interest second mortgages of $5,000-$15,000), mortgage credit certificates (annual tax credit of 10-50% of mortgage interest), or below-market interest rates.
  • You're considered a "first-time buyer" if you haven't owned a home in the past 3 years — even if you owned one before. This opens up FHA, state programs, and favorable terms.
  • FHA loans require mortgage insurance for the life of the loan (unless you put 10%+ down). Consider refinancing to conventional once you have 20% equity to eliminate MIP.
  • Don't drain your savings for a down payment. Keep at least 3 months of expenses in reserve after closing. New homeowners almost always encounter unexpected repair costs in the first year.
  • Get pre-approved (not just pre-qualified) before house shopping. Pre-approval gives you a firm budget, makes your offers more competitive, and identifies any credit issues to resolve early.
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StateCalc Team

Editorial Team

The StateCalc team builds free financial calculators using data from official government sources including the IRS, U.S. Census Bureau, BLS, and state revenue departments. All formulas are validated by an automated test suite and cross-referenced against published data.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How much do I need to buy a house in Georgia?

For Georgia's median home ($320,000): FHA minimum down payment is $11,200 (3.5%), plus $8,960 in closing costs. Total minimum: ~$20,160. With 20% down to avoid PMI: ~$72,960.

What are closing costs in Georgia?

Georgia closing costs average 2.8% of the home price, or about $8,960 on the median home. This includes title insurance, appraisal, origination fees, recording fees, and required attorney fees. Transfer taxes are 0.1%.

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