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California First-Time Home Buyer Programs and Down Payment Assistance

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California First-Time Home Buyer Programs and Down Payment Assistance

Buying a home in California is a major goal for millions of people, but with the state’s high price tags, the path to homeownership can feel out of reach. 

The good news is that California first-time home buyer programs have never been more varied or more accessible. From statewide assistance through CalHFA to lottery-based programs and city-specific grants, there are real options available to help bridge the gap between renting and owning.

Whether you’re exploring new homes in Southern California or browsing new homes in Northern California, this guide walks you through the most important programs available in 2025-2026, how to qualify, and how to stack them for maximum benefit.

Who Qualifies as a First-Time Homebuyer in California?

Most California programs define a first-time homebuyer as someone who has not owned and occupied a primary residence in the past three years. 

You don’t have to be a literal first-timer; if you owned a home years ago, you may still qualify. Across most programs, you’ll also need to:

 

  • Purchase the home as a primary residence, not as a vacation or investment property.
  • Complete a HUD-approved or CalHFA-approved homebuyer education course, typically 8-10 hours.
  • Fall within household income limits, usually expressed as a percentage of Area Median Income (AMI)
  • Meet minimum credit score thresholds, usually in the 640-680 range, depending on the program.
Key Term: AMI

Area Median Income (AMI) is a benchmark set by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). Most California assistance programs set income eligibility at a percentage of AMI. For example, 80%, 120%, or 200% of AMI, which varies by county and household size.

CalHFA: The Foundation of California’s Statewide Programs

The California Housing Finance Agency (CalHFA) is the primary state agency offering down payment assistance and affordable mortgage products to first-time buyers. 

CalHFA doesn’t lend directly. Instead, it works through a network of approved lenders who offer CalHFA-backed 30-year fixed-rate mortgages (conventional, FHA, VA, and USDA).

All CalHFA programs require:

  • First-time homebuyer status (three-year rule).
  • Owner-occupancy of the purchased home.
  • Completion of homebuyer education from an approved provider.
  • Household income within CalHFA limits (can be as high as ~$300,000 in some high-cost counties).
Pro Tip

CalHFA-approved lenders have real-time access to program bulletins, income limits, and funding availability. Working with a specialist in CalHFA products is far more effective than relying solely on CalHFA’s public-facing website, which may lag behind current program updates.

CalHFA MyHome Assistance Program

MyHome is the cornerstone of down payment assistance in California for most CalHFA borrowers. It’s a deferred-payment junior loan, meaning no monthly payments, that can be used toward your down payment and/or closing costs.

Loan Type Maximum Assistance Payment Terms
CalHFA FHA first mortgage Up to 3.5% of the purchase price or appraised value (lower) Deferred; due at sale, refi, or payoff
CalHFA Conventional first mortgage Up to 3% of the purchase price or appraised value (lower) Deferred; due at sale, refi, or payoff

MyHome accrues simple interest but requires no monthly payments. The balance is repaid when you sell, refinance, or the property is no longer your primary residence. It’s available statewide and is the most common foundational layer of assistance that buyers stack with other programs.

Did You Know?

MyHome can be combined with the new MyAccess program (launched March 2025) to increase total assistance beyond the standard 3-3.5% cap, giving low-to-moderate income buyers even more help at the closing table.

New in 2025: CalHFA MyAccess Program

CalHFA launched the MyAccess program in February 2025, with reservations opening March 17, 2025. It adds another layer of assistance on top of MyHome for qualifying buyers.

  • Benefit: Up to 2.5% of the total loan amount as a deferred-payment junior loan.
  • Interest rate: 1.0% simple interest.
  • Lien position: Third lien (behind the CalHFA first mortgage and MyHome loan).
  • Required pairing: Must be used with MyHome and either CalPLUS Access FHA or CalPLUS Access Conventional first mortgages.
  • Borrower requirement: All borrowers must be first-time homebuyers.
Stacking Potential

When combined, MyHome + MyAccess can deliver significantly more assistance than MyHome alone, particularly valuable in California’s high-price markets where even a few extra percentage points of help can mean the difference between qualifying and not.

California Dream for All Program: 2026 Lottery Update

The California Dream for All program is one of the most generous down payment assistance options in the state, but it’s also one of the most competitive. Here’s the full picture for 2025-2026.

What It Offers

  • Up to 20% of the purchase price or $150,000 (whichever is less) in down payment assistance.
  • California takes a proportional share of your home’s future appreciation. If you received 20% assistance, the program is owed 20% of the appreciation at sale or refinance.
  • No monthly payments on the assistance loan; repaid at sale, certain refinances, or end of 30-year term.

2026 Application Window

Detail Information
Application window February 24 – March 16, 2026
Selection method Lottery (random selection, not first-come-first-served)
Available funding ~$150-200 million
Time to shop for a home 90 days after conditional approval
Minimum funds to Qualified Census Tracts 10% of total funding

2026 Eligibility Focus: First-Generation Buyers

The 2026 round targets first-generation homebuyers specifically. Key requirements:

 

  • All borrowers must be first-time homebuyers (three-year rule).
  • At least one borrower must be a current California resident.
  • First-generation requirement: At least one borrower and their parents must not currently own a home in the United States (additional ownership lookback rules apply).
  • Household income within CalHFA Dream for All limits (approximately 120% of AMI).
  • A CalHFA first mortgage and homebuyer education are required.
Pro Tip

Because the California Dream for All program uses a lottery and not a first-come, first-served funding system. Preparation matters more than speed. Complete your homebuyer education, get pre-approved by a CalHFA lender, and gather all required documents well before the February 24 opening date.

CalHFA Forgivable Equity Builder Loan (FEBL)

FEBL is designed for lower-income first-time buyers who need a bigger head start in building equity. Key features:

  • Amount: Up to 10% of the home’s purchase price.
  • Interest rate: 0%. No interest charged.
  • Forgiveness: Fully forgiven after five years of continuous owner-occupancy (prorated if repaid early).
  • Income requirement: At or below 80% of AMI, which is more restrictive than MyHome.
  • Credit score: Minimum ~660-680, depending on product.
  • Stacking: Generally cannot be combined with MyHome or CalPLUS ZIP per CalHFA program matrices.

Non-CalHFA Options: GSFA Platinum Program

The Golden State Finance Authority (GSFA) Platinum Program provides a statewide alternative to CalHFA, with some distinct advantages:

  • Assistance amount: Up to 5-5.5% of the first mortgage loan amount.
  • Structure: Partially forgivable loan, 15-year amortizing second mortgage, or a combination.
  • No first-time buyer requirement: Standard Platinum is available to repeat buyers, too.
  • Credit score: FICO as low as 640; DTI up to 50% in some cases.
  • Loan types: FHA, VA, USDA, and conventional fixed-rate mortgages.
  • Occupation-based variants: “Platinum Select” offers enhanced benefits for teachers, public safety workers, and certain other occupations.
GSFA vs. CalHFA

GSFA is useful when CalHFA income limits are exceeded or when a buyer doesn’t meet the first-time buyer requirement. However, stacking GSFA with CalHFA programs is subject to layering rules. So, confirm compatibility with your lender.

Major City Programs: Where the Largest Assistance Lives

While CalHFA and GSFA programs are available statewide, the largest individual assistance amounts come from city-specific programs tied to local affordability challenges.

City/County Program Max Assistance Key Feature
San Francisco DALP (Downpayment Assistance Loan Program) Up to $500,000 Silent second; shared appreciation; lottery-based
Los Angeles (City) LIPA (Low Income Purchase Assistance) Up to ~$161,000 Zero-interest deferred loan; shared appreciation
Los Angeles (City) MIPA (Moderate Income Purchase Assistance) Up to ~$75,000-$115,000 Higher income limits than LIPA; similar structure
Riverside County FTHB Programs (HOME/PLHA/ARPA) Up to 20% of the purchase price Unincorporated areas and participating cities

Other active local programs as of 2025 include Brentwood DAP, Emeryville First-Time Homebuyer Loan, LA County Affordable Homeownership Program, Orange County Mortgage Assistance, and programs in San Diego County, Fresno County, Oakland, Fremont, and Monterey County.

How to Stack Programs for Maximum Benefit?

One of the most powerful strategies available to California first-time buyers is stacking multiple assistance layers. Here’s how it typically works:

Layer Program Typical Use
First mortgage CalHFA FHA, Conventional, VA, or USDA 30-year fixed-rate mortgage at a competitive rate
Second lien CalHFA MyHome Down payment and/or closing costs (3-3.5%)
Third lien CalHFA MyAccess (2025+) Additional closing cost help (up to 2.5% of the loan amount)
Alternative second Dream for All or DALP (city-level) Large down payment assistance where eligible

Eligibility Quick-Reference: 2025-2026

Program Income Limit Min. Credit Score First-Time Buyer Required? Repayment
CalHFA MyHome Varies by county (up to ~$300K) 660-680 Yes Deferred; due at sale/refi
CalHFA MyAccess Same as paired program 660-680 Yes Deferred; 1% simple interest
Dream for All (2026) ~120% of AMI Per CalHFA guidelines Yes + first-gen requirement Shared appreciation at sale
FEBL At or below 80% of AMI 660-680 Yes Forgiven after 5 years
GSFA Platinum Program-specific 640+ No 15-year amortizing or partially forgivable
SF DALP Up to ~200% of AMI Per lender guidelines Yes (city-level) Shared appreciation at sale
LA LIPA Low income; varies 660 Yes Deferred; shared appreciation

Closing Thoughts

Homeownership in California may feel like a moving target, but the reality is more nuanced than it first appears. As this guide shows, the barrier is not always a lack of options but a lack of clarity on how to use them. 

From foundational programs like CalHFA to high-impact opportunities such as Dream for All and city-level grants, the state has built a layered support system that rewards preparation, timing, and strategic stacking.

 

The buyers who succeed are not necessarily the ones with the highest incomes, but the ones who understand how these pieces fit together and act early. 

 

If you approach the process informed, pre-approved, and ready to leverage multiple programs, what once felt out of reach becomes a structured, achievable path forward.

FAQ

What are the main California first-time home buyer programs in 2025-2026?

The main statewide programs are:

 

  • CalHFA’s MyHome Assistance Program, 
  • the new MyAccess program (launched March 2025), 
  • The California Dream for All shared appreciation loan (2026 lottery round), and 
  • The Forgivable Equity Builder Loan (FEBL). 

The GSFA Platinum Program is a major non-CalHFA option. City programs like SF’s DALP and LA’s LIPA/MIPA offer the largest individual amounts for eligible buyers.

How do I apply for down payment assistance in California?

Most CalHFA programs are accessed through CalHFA-approved lenders. You don’t apply to CalHFA directly. For city programs like DALP or Dream for All, watch for application window announcements, complete the required homebuyer education, and secure pre-approval from an approved lender before the window opens.

Is the California Dream for All program still available in 2026?

Yes, but in a limited lottery-based format. 

The 2026 application window runs from February 24 to March 16, 2026, with approximately $150-200 million in funding. 

Because it uses random selection rather than first-come, first-served, preparation matters more than being first to click “apply.”

Can I combine multiple down payment assistance programs?

In many cases, yes, but the specific combinations depend on each program’s layering rules. CalHFA first mortgages are designed to pair with MyHome and, where applicable, MyAccess. 

However, not all combinations work. For example, FEBL cannot be combined with MyHome, and GSFA stacking with CalHFA requires careful lender guidance. Always verify your combination with an experienced CalHFA-approved lender.

Do I have to be a first-time buyer for all of these programs?

Not all. 

GSFA Platinum’s standard version has no first-time buyer requirement, making it a useful option for repeat buyers who need down payment help. Most CalHFA programs and all city-level programs (DALP, LIPA, MIPA, Riverside FTHB) do require first-time buyer status under the three-year rule.