FHA Loans (Investor Angle) in North Carolina
Government-insured residential loans designed for primary residence buyers — but the assumable feature creates a real opportunity for investors taking over locked-in low-rate FHA mortgages.
What FHA loans are
A residential mortgage insured by the Federal Housing Administration. Low down-payment + flexible credit. Critically for investors: FHA loans are assumable — a new buyer can take over the original loan with the same rate and terms (subject to lender approval).
Underwriting and qualifying
Original FHA: 580+ FICO, 3.5% down, owner-occupancy required at origination. Assumption: new buyer needs ~$500-1,500 fee + creditworthiness check + occupancy intent.
North Carolina-specific considerations
North Carolina is landlord-friendly on landlord-tenant law. Landlord-friendly states give lenders more confidence that distressed properties can be repossessed and resold quickly, supporting more favorable loan terms.
What financing looks like at North Carolina price points
Greensboro's $265k typical home value fits comfortably within FHA loan limits (typically $498,257 for SFR in most counties, higher in high-cost areas). Owner-occupied small-multi house-hacks at 3.5% down work especially well at North Carolina's price points and the 6.40% rent yield.
North Carolina lender ecosystem
North Carolina has active national-lender presence for fha financing — all major specialty lenders originate here. Local credit unions and smaller regional banks sometimes offer competitive non-traditional investment-property loans that compete on terms vs the national-DSCR product.
Best fit
House-hackers buying small multi-family as primary residence with 3.5% down. Investors targeting assumption of seller's existing low-rate FHA loan (subject-to alternative).
When to use something else
Pure investment buyers without occupancy intent — FHA requires owner-occupancy at origination. Standard rental acquisition.
Top North Carolina metros for FHA-financed investing.
Common questions.
What's a typical FHA rate in North Carolina?
6.5-7% (current originations); 3-4% on pre-2022 loans available via assumption is the broad national range. North Carolina-specific pricing reflects the local lender ecosystem and non-judicial, ~120 days — faster non-judicial foreclosure reduces lender loss-given-default and tends to support pricing on the lower end of the national range. Always collect 5+ term sheets before committing.
Which North Carolina metros are best for FHA-financed investing?
Based on our investor score across North Carolina markets we cover: Greensboro, Fayetteville, Charlotte, Raleigh top the list. Top pick Greensboro runs $265k median with 6.40% gross rent yield — strong yield supports DSCR + rental holds.
How does North Carolina's wholesale-assignment law affect FHA deals?
Wholesale assignment is permitted in North Carolina. This indirectly affects fha availability because wholesaler-sourced deals — common acquisition channels for hard-money and DSCR borrowers — flow through the local assignment-law framework. Investors closing wholesale-sourced properties should verify their title company handles assignment closings in compliance with North Carolina's rules.
Financing options in North Carolina.
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