The Short Answer for 2026 Florida Buyers
- Hometown Heroes is a 0% interest deferred second mortgage — no monthly payment, but repayment is due when you sell, refinance, or move out.
- Funding is limited each year and typically runs out well before the fiscal year ends, so early pre-approval matters.
- Most first-time buyers pair Hometown Heroes with an FHA, VA, USDA, or Conventional first mortgage.
- County and city layers often add $10,000 to $100,000 in additional assistance on top of the state program.
Why 2026 Is a Decisive Year for Florida First-Time Buyers
If you've been watching Florida home prices and quietly assuming homeownership is out of reach, this year deserves a second look. State and county assistance programs are paying out more meaningful amounts than ever — and they're pairing well with a market that's slowly giving buyers more room to negotiate.
The catch is timing. The 2025–26 Hometown Heroes allocation committed its entire $50 million within six months, helping over 3,000 Florida families buy homes before funds ran out. That same urgency is shaping 2026: buyers who move early, get pre-approved, and understand which programs stack are the ones actually closing.
This guide walks you through what's available, who qualifies, how the programs fit together, and the Florida-specific details other guides skip. For a broader look at navigating the current Florida market, our insider strategy guide covers the broader picture.
Quick Start: Which Program Path Fits You?
Before reading further, use this short checklist to spot your likely starting point. You can find out which programs fit your situation in a single conversation with a loan originator.
You work full-time for a Florida employer and earn within county limits. Start with Hometown Heroes — up to $35,000 in 0% deferred assistance.
You don't meet Hometown Heroes criteria but still need help at closing. Look at Florida Assist ($10,000) or the Florida Homeownership Loan Program ($12,500) as your statewide options.
You're buying in a specific city or county with local DPA. Layer county SHIP funds or a city grant on top of your state program — Palm Beach, Broward, and Orange County routinely add $40,000 or more.
You're a veteran or active military member. Salute Our Soldiers pairs a reduced-rate first mortgage with down payment assistance; VA borrowers are exempt from several Hometown Heroes requirements.
The Four Statewide Programs Every Florida Buyer Should Know
Florida Housing Finance Corporation — the state agency known as FHFC or simply Florida Housing — runs four statewide programs worth understanding before you look at county options. Each pairs with a primary mortgage (FHA, VA, USDA, or Conventional), so choosing the right first mortgage type shapes which assistance you can access.
A quick definition: a down payment assistance (DPA) program gives you money toward your down payment, closing costs, or both — usually as a second mortgage behind your main loan. Some are forgivable (you don't pay them back if you stay long enough). Most in Florida are deferred — no monthly payment, but the balance is due when you sell or refinance.
| Program | Max Assistance | Structure | Repayment Trigger | Key Requirement |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hometown Heroes | Up to $35,000 | 0% deferred 2nd mortgage | Sale / refinance / move-out | Full-time FL employer, eligible occupation |
| Florida Assist | Up to $10,000 | 0% deferred 2nd mortgage | Sale / refinance / move-out | Must use FL Housing first mortgage |
| FL HLP | Up to $12,500 | 3% amortizing 2nd | Standard + accel. on sale/refi | Must use FL Housing first mortgage |
| HFA Preferred Grant | 3–5% of loan amount | Forgivable (5-year term) | Due if move out early | Conventional HFA first mortgage |
Most buyers use either Hometown Heroes or Florida Assist as their state layer — you generally cannot combine both. HFA Preferred Grant is the option many conventional-loan buyers overlook, since it's forgivable after five years.
A Closer Look at Hometown Heroes: Income Limits, Occupations, Funding
The income limits are higher than most people assume. Verify current limits for your county before applying, but here's the April 2026 snapshot:
Miami-Dade caps eligibility around $185,850 for most household sizes. Palm Beach runs near $175,650, Broward around $172,950, Orlando (Orange, Osceola, Seminole) about $158,100, Tampa Bay (Hillsborough, Pinellas, Pasco) near $156,450, and Jacksonville (Duval, St. Johns, Clay, Nassau) at $153,750. Lower-cost counties sit at roughly $142,950.
You'll also need a 640 minimum credit score, a signed purchase contract, and full-time work (35+ hours per week) for a Florida-based employer — with a veteran exemption on the work requirement. The home must be your primary residence. Single-family homes, approved condos, townhomes, and owner-occupied two-to-four-unit properties are all eligible.
On funding: the 2025–26 Hometown Heroes allocation opened August 18, 2025 with $50 million and committed every dollar by late February 2026. The Florida Legislature is considering $50 million to $75 million for the 2026–27 fiscal year. If you're shopping now, confirm current funding status before making an offer — how your income maps to home price is the first conversation to have regardless of program timing.
How to Stack State, County, and City Programs
This is where most Florida guides fall short. The right order matters, and combining programs has rules.
Pick your state layer first. You generally choose one — Hometown Heroes or Florida Assist, not both. Then layer a county SHIP (State Housing Initiatives Partnership) grant if your county participates. SHIP is the federal-state funding mechanism most Florida counties use to deliver their own DPA. Finally, check whether your specific city adds a grant on top.
A realistic Miami-Dade example: a qualifying nurse uses $35,000 from Hometown Heroes for down payment and closing costs, then adds a Miami-Dade Advocacy Trust grant of $28,500 toward the purchase price. That's about $63,500 in combined assistance — real money that changes what neighborhoods are within reach. Understanding how stacking reduces your real cash-to-close is often the deciding factor in whether a buyer closes this year or next.
Your Step-by-Step Roadmap From Pre-Approval to Closing
The typical DPA-layered purchase takes 30 to 45 days from pre-approval to closing, plus an extra 5 to 10 business days for the assistance program review. Here's the sequence most Florida buyers follow. If you want the full process detail, our standard mortgage loan process page walks through each stage.
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1
Check your county income limits.Get the current cap for your household size and confirm you're under it.
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2
Get pre-approved with a Florida Housing-approved lender.Not every lender is set up to originate Hometown Heroes or Florida Assist loans. Confirm participation before applying.
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3
Complete a HUD-approved homebuyer education course.Most programs require this. Online courses are typically under $100 and take a few hours. The certificate is usually valid for 12 months.
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4
Find a home within price limits.Each county sets a maximum purchase price for assistance-eligible homes. Your lender can pull the current figures before you make offers.
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5
Lender submits the DPA enrollment with your loan file.Once you're under contract, your lender reserves the assistance funds and packages them with underwriting.
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6
Close.At closing, the assistance is applied as a second mortgage or grant, and you receive the keys.
Pre-approval itself usually takes 1 to 3 business days once you submit your documents. The bigger variable is how quickly you find a home inside the price cap.
The Florida Factors Most Guides Skip
Grant money matters more in Florida than in most states — because Florida homeownership comes with specific costs national guides ignore.
The homestead exemption can reduce the taxable value of your primary residence by up to $50,000, lowering annual property taxes once you file. Homestead exemption rules are set by Florida statute and administered at the county level; verify current details with your county property appraiser after closing.
Flood insurance is the bigger surprise for many buyers. If your home is in a FEMA Special Flood Hazard Area and you're using a federally-backed mortgage (FHA, VA, USDA, or conforming conventional), federal law requires flood coverage. You can choose between the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) and private carriers — premiums vary considerably, and what Florida buyers need to know about flood insurance is worth reading before you write an offer.
Hurricane and windstorm coverage is a separate conversation. Florida's property insurance market has shifted significantly in recent years; Citizens Property Insurance is the state-run insurer of last resort, and many homeowners end up there. Premiums change monthly and vary by ZIP code, so factor insurance shopping into your pre-approval timeline — not after you're under contract.
Six Mistakes That Cost Florida First-Time Buyers Money
- ✗Waiting too long to get pre-approved. Hometown Heroes funding routinely runs out mid-year. If you're shopping now, start pre-approval this week.
- ✗Assuming you earn too much to qualify. The 2026 Miami-Dade income cap exceeds $185,000. Most buyers who write themselves off haven't actually checked their county's limit.
- ✗Forgetting the homebuyer education course. Nearly every Florida program requires it, and you can't close without the certificate.
- ✗Confusing "deferred" with "forgiven." Most Florida DPA is repaid when you sell or refinance — it's not a gift. Understand the payoff trigger before you sign.
- ✗Skipping flood insurance research before contract. A flood zone you didn't check can add hundreds per month and blow up your affordability calculation.
- ✗Not checking whether a condo is FHA-approved before making an offer. For FHA-backed loans, the building itself has to be on the approved list. Many South Florida condos aren't.
For complex situations — self-employed income, foreign national buyers, or credit-challenged files — the Pegasus USA lending team works directly with first-time buyers across Florida. You can also see our full guide to first-time buyer mistakes.
Florida First-Time Homebuyer FAQs
What is the Florida Hometown Heroes program and how much down payment help can I get?
Who qualifies as a first-time home buyer in Florida in 2026?
What credit score do I need for Florida first time home buyer programs?
Can I stack Hometown Heroes with Florida Assist or county down payment assistance?
Do Florida first time home buyer down payment assistance programs have to be repaid?
How do I apply for Florida first time home buyer grants in 2026?
What are the Hometown Heroes income limits in Miami-Dade and other Florida counties?
Is Hometown Heroes funding still available in Florida right now?
Ready to See Which Programs Fit Your Situation?
Florida's assistance landscape is generous but genuinely complex. Let us walk through your specific eligibility and map out a path that fits.
Apply OnlineAbout the author
Pegasus Lending Team
Mortgage Professionals · Pegasus Mortgage Lending (USA) · Miami, Florida
The Pegasus Mortgage Lending USA team is based in Miami, Florida, and specializes in helping homebuyers, investors, and foreign nationals navigate the Florida real estate market. With expertise spanning FHA loans, conventional mortgages, jumbo financing, VA loans, and Foreign National programs, the team guides clients through every step of the mortgage process with clarity and transparency.
Meet the Pegasus USA Team →Sources & References
- Florida Housing Finance Corporation — Hometown Heroes Program Overview: floridahousing.org
- Florida Housing Finance Corporation — Hometown Heroes Income and Loan Limits (PDF): income-and-loan-limits.pdf
- Florida Realtors — Hometown Heroes 2025–26 Funding Exhausted (Feb 2026): floridarealtors.org
- U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development — Homeownership Assistance in Florida: hud.gov
- Consumer Financial Protection Bureau — Your Home Loan Toolkit: consumerfinance.gov
- Federal Emergency Management Agency — National Flood Insurance Program: fema.gov
- Florida Office of Financial Regulation: flofr.gov