Texas Mortgage Credit Certificate · 2026 Guide

The Texas Mortgage Credit Certificate (MCC): Federal Tax Credit for Eligible Texas Homebuyers

The Texas MCC is a federal income tax credit issued at closing under IRS §25. Eligible Texas buyers may claim up to $2,000 per year in federal tax credit for the life of the loan, subject to federal tax liability. Issued by TSAHC and TDHCA, the MCC pairs with FHA, VA, USDA, and conventional financing.

Last updated: May 1, 2026 Fact-checked by Byron Davis, NMLS #621780 4,200+ words · ~18 min read

The Texas Mortgage Credit Certificate (MCC) is a federal income tax credit, issued at closing, that lets eligible Texas homebuyers claim a percentage of their annual mortgage interest as a dollar-for-dollar credit against federal income tax — up to $2,000 per year for the life of the loan, subject to the buyer's actual federal tax liability. Two Texas agencies issue MCCs: TSAHC and TDHCA. Both operate under IRS §25 and IRS §143.

This guide walks through how the Texas MCC works, who may qualify, what the dollar math may look like for a typical Texas buyer, how the credit interacts with TSAHC and TDHCA down payment assistance programs, and the rules that determine whether the credit holds when you refinance or sell. Every number is sourced from IRS, TSAHC, or TDHCA primary documentation. Verify current-year program details directly with the issuing agency before applying — MCC rates, income limits, and purchase price ceilings reset annually.

What Is the Texas Mortgage Credit Certificate?

A Mortgage Credit Certificate is issued at closing under the federal authority of IRS §25 ("Interest on Certain Home Mortgages"). It is not a loan. It is not down payment assistance. It is a federal income tax credit. Every year you live in the home and pay mortgage interest, the certificate lets you claim a portion of that interest as a credit when you file your federal return — dollar-for-dollar against tax owed, not as a deduction off taxable income.

The MCC was created by Congress to help first-time and moderate-income homebuyers. State and local housing finance agencies issue the certificates within a federal allocation cap. In Texas, two agencies issue MCCs — the Texas State Affordable Housing Corporation (TSAHC) and the Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs (TDHCA). Both follow the same federal mechanics under §25, but each runs its own enrollment, fee schedule, and lender network.

What the MCC may do for an eligible Texas buyer:

What the MCC will not do: it will not refund money you did not owe the IRS in the first place. The credit is non-refundable — it can zero out federal tax liability for the year but cannot generate a refund larger than your liability. Unused credit may carry forward up to three years under §25.

How the MCC Tax Credit Works

The mechanic is straightforward. Every year you file your federal return, you take the mortgage interest you paid on the certificate-covered loan, multiply it by the certificate's credit rate, and the result is your federal tax credit for the year — capped at $2,000 when the certificate rate exceeds 20%.

Annual mortgage interest paid × MCC credit rate = annual federal tax credit (capped at $2,000/yr if rate > 20%)

Federal law (§25(b)(1)) sets the rules: at 20% or lower, there is no $2,000 cap — you may claim the full rate-applied amount. At higher than 20%, the credit caps at $2,000 per year regardless of interest paid. Both TSAHC and TDHCA typically issue MCCs at the 20% rate.

One coordination rule: the portion of interest converted into the credit cannot also be claimed as a Schedule A itemized mortgage interest deduction — you reduce the deductible amount by the credit amount to avoid double-dipping. For buyers taking the standard deduction this is irrelevant; for buyers who itemize, the MCC typically still leaves them better off because the credit is dollar-for-dollar while the deduction only saves cents per dollar at your marginal tax rate.

Primary source on the MCC mechanic: IRS Mortgage Interest Credit page and IRS Form 8396 instructions.

TSAHC MCC vs TDHCA MCC: Two Issuers, One Federal Credit

Both Texas MCCs operate under the same federal authority and deliver the same federal tax benefit. The differences sit on the administrative side — which agency issues the certificate, which first-mortgage programs it may pair with, what the program-administration fee is, and which lenders are approved to originate.

One MCC per loan. A Texas buyer may use either a TSAHC MCC or a TDHCA MCC on a given mortgage, never both. The choice typically comes down to which DPA program the buyer is also enrolling in — if you are using TSAHC's Home Sweet Texas DPA, you pair it with TSAHC's MCC; if you are using TDHCA's MFTH, you pair it with TDHCA's MCC. Your Texas loan officer may help you compare the two when both options are open.

Program-administration fees, processing timelines, and lender networks vary between the two agencies. Verify current fee schedules at the issuing agency before deciding which MCC to apply for.

MCC Credit Rate and the $2,000 Annual Cap

The "credit rate" is the percentage of annual mortgage interest you may claim as a federal tax credit. Federal law allows MCC programs to issue certificates at rates between 10% and 50%, but the IRS cap of $2,000 per year applies any time the rate exceeds 20%. Both TSAHC and TDHCA typically issue Texas MCCs at the 20% credit rate — which means the $2,000 cap may or may not apply, depending on how much interest you actually paid in a given year.

At a 20% credit rate, your annual mortgage interest would need to reach $10,000 ($10,000 × 20% = $2,000) before the cap binds. A buyer with $7,500 in annual interest at a 20% rate may claim the full $1,500 credit; a buyer with $12,000 in annual interest at the same rate is capped at $2,000. The cap typically only bites on larger loan balances, higher rates, or both — and even when it does, the headline "$2,000 per year" figure remains a federal ceiling, not a guarantee. See the worked math below.

Worked Math Examples: What the MCC May Look Like

Example only. Your actual annual MCC credit depends on your loan amount, interest rate, year of amortization, and federal tax liability. Verify current MCC credit rates with TSAHC or TDHCA before applying, and review your specific scenario with a CPA or tax preparer.

Example 1 — Median Texas Buyer. A first-time buyer purchases a $275,000 home in Tarrant County with an FHA loan at 6.75%. Loan amount after the 3.5% FHA down payment: approximately $265,375. First-year mortgage interest paid: approximately $17,800. With a 20% TSAHC MCC, the calculation works out to $17,800 × 20% = $3,560 — but the IRS cap reduces the actual credit to $2,000. Assuming the buyer has at least $2,000 in federal income tax liability that year, they may claim the full $2,000 on their federal return.

Example 2 — Smaller Loan in East Texas. A teacher uses TSAHC Homes for Texas Heroes to buy a $180,000 home in Smith County with a USDA loan at 6.5%. Loan amount: approximately $180,000 (USDA allows zero down). First-year mortgage interest paid: approximately $11,700. With a 20% TSAHC MCC, the calculation works out to $11,700 × 20% = $2,340 — capped at $2,000 by the IRS. Once the loan is a few years into amortization and annual interest has dropped below $10,000, the calculation may fall below the cap.

Example 3 — Later Years of the Loan. Annual mortgage interest declines each year as principal is paid down. By approximately year 18 of a typical 30-year fixed loan, annual interest on a $265,000 starting balance may drop to around $9,500, and the uncapped 20% MCC calculation would be approximately $1,900 — below the cap, so the buyer may claim the full $1,900 with no IRS cap reduction.

Example 4 — Low Federal Tax Liability. Same loan as Example 1, but the buyer's total federal income tax liability for the year is only $1,200 (low taxable income, head-of-household filing, qualifying dependents). The MCC calculation still yields a $2,000 capped credit, but the buyer may only claim $1,200 of it on this year's return — the credit cannot exceed federal tax liability. The unused $800 may carry forward up to three years per §25, depending on subsequent-year liability.

These scenarios show the typical MCC reality for Texas buyers: the headline $2,000 figure is often the actual annual benefit in the early years of a loan, may drop in later years as interest declines, and is always limited by your federal tax liability. A CPA can model the projected lifetime benefit for your specific income, loan, and family situation before you enroll.

The Federal Tax-Liability Ceiling

The MCC is a non-refundable credit. That means it can reduce your federal income tax liability to zero, but it cannot generate a refund larger than the federal tax you actually owed for the year. If your full annual MCC credit calculates to $2,000 but your federal tax liability for the year is $1,400, you may only claim $1,400 of the credit on this year's return.

What the IRS allows under §25 if you have unused credit:

For most working-age Texas homebuyers with W-2 income above the standard deduction, the tax-liability ceiling rarely binds — federal income tax owed each year tends to exceed $2,000 by a meaningful margin. The ceiling typically bites for buyers with very low taxable income, large above-the-line deductions, significant child tax credits that already zero out liability, or unusual year-over-year income volatility. If your federal tax situation is non-standard, model the projected MCC benefit with a CPA before enrolling.

Eligibility: Who May Qualify for a Texas MCC

To qualify for a Texas MCC, an eligible buyer typically meets all of the following at the time of closing. Verify current-year eligibility rules at the issuing agency before applying — thresholds reset annually.

A buyer who clears all of these may apply for a Texas MCC through a TSAHC- or TDHCA-approved lender. The certificate is issued at closing and travels with the loan from there.

County AMI and Purchase Price Limits

MCC income and purchase price limits sit on top of two layers of federal rule: the underlying §143 cap on mortgage revenue bond program eligibility, and the program-specific overlay that TSAHC or TDHCA layers on top — often more restrictive than the federal floor but always within it.

Your Texas loan officer may pull the current-year limits for your county and household size during pre-qualification. The numbers reset annually after HUD publishes new AMI tables.

First-Time Homebuyer Rule and the Exceptions That May Apply

The federal MCC program is, by default, a first-time homebuyer benefit. "First-time" under §143 means a buyer who has not had an ownership interest in a principal residence in the three years immediately preceding closing. A buyer who sold a previous primary residence four years ago may qualify as first-time. Two exceptions may apply:

For repeat-buyer Texans who do not qualify under either exception, the TDHCA My Choice Texas Home (MCTH) program is built specifically for non-first-time buyers — but MCTH does not allow MCC pairing on the TDHCA side. The buyer profiles that fit cleanly with MCC are first-time buyers, veterans, and target-area purchases.

MCC and Loan-Type Pairings: FHA, VA, USDA, Conventional

The MCC sits on top of a regular first mortgage. The certificate does not change the underlying loan — it sits as an annual federal tax benefit that runs alongside the mortgage for its life. The typical Texas pairings:

Some lenders permit the projected annual MCC credit to be added to qualifying income for debt-to-income (DTI) calculation, which may stretch how much home you may qualify for. The policy varies by loan type and lender; verify with your Texas loan officer before counting on it.

MCC and DPA Pairing Rules: TSAHC and TDHCA

The MCC may pair with a Texas down payment assistance program on the same loan, depending on which DPA program the buyer is using and which agency is issuing the MCC. The rules:

For most Texas buyers who qualify for both a state DPA program and an MCC, the right combination depends on which agency's first-mortgage program fits your income, occupation, and target purchase area. Your Texas loan officer may walk through the trade-offs with you during pre-qualification — the answer is rarely obvious without modeling the specific numbers.

How to Claim the MCC: IRS Form 8396 Each Year

You claim the MCC every year on your federal return using IRS Form 8396 — Mortgage Interest Credit. The form walks through the credit-rate-times-interest math, applies the $2,000 cap if the rate exceeds 20%, applies any carryforward from prior years, and rolls the resulting credit into your annual Form 1040. Form 8396 is filed for every tax year you hold the certificate-covered loan.

What the form asks for, and what you should keep on hand at tax time:

Most CPAs familiar with Texas homeowners will recognize Form 8396 on sight. If your preparer hasn't worked with an MCC before, point them to the IRS Form 8396 instructions and the IRS Mortgage Interest Credit reference page — the mechanics are well-documented in primary sources: About Form 8396 and IRS Publication 530 — Tax Information for Homeowners.

Recapture Tax (IRS §143) and When It May Apply

The federal recapture tax under IRC §143(m) applies to certain mortgage revenue bond–financed loans, which includes most TSAHC and TDHCA first mortgages and may apply to MCC certificates issued through those programs. The recapture tax is widely misstated in national mortgage content. The accurate version: a recapture tax can apply only when three conditions all happen:

If any one of those three conditions does not happen, no recapture is owed. Most Texas MCC borrowers never trigger all three. The maximum recapture amount is capped at the lesser of (a) 6.25% of the original mortgage principal or (b) 50% of the gain on sale. Even at the maximum, the cap is a meaningful constraint.

Importantly, both TSAHC and TDHCA run recapture reimbursement programs: eligible borrowers who do owe recapture tax may be reimbursed for the federal tax owed. Save your closing documents, including the original MCC certificate and any program enrollment letters, and contact the issuing agency before filing the year you sell. The reimbursement process typically requires you to file Form 8828 (Recapture of Federal Mortgage Subsidy) with your federal return and then file a separate claim with TSAHC or TDHCA.

This is general information about federal §143 recapture rules, not tax advice. Talk to a CPA before you sell if you think recapture may apply. Primary sources: IRS Form 8828 and the recapture reimbursement program details at tsahc.org and welcomehome.tdhca.texas.gov.

What Happens to the MCC When You Refinance

A refinance pays off the original mortgage. Federal §25 ties the MCC to the original loan — so without action, refinancing the original loan ends the MCC. The IRS, however, allows a procedure called the Reissued Mortgage Credit Certificate (RMCC) that may let the credit continue on the new loan.

What an RMCC typically involves:

Whether the RMCC is worth pursuing depends on how many years are left on the certificate's effective benefit, the projected interest on the new loan, and the reissue fee. If you are within a few years of payoff, the RMCC may not justify the paperwork. If you are early in the loan and the refinance is to a meaningfully lower rate, the RMCC typically may continue to deliver real annual value. Initiate the RMCC application with TSAHC or TDHCA before the refinance closes — it cannot be done retroactively.

Step-by-Step: Getting a Texas MCC

The path Texas-area buyers take through ShopDPA to enroll in a TSAHC or TDHCA MCC:

  1. Tell us about your situation via our short form. Takes under 60 seconds. No SSN, no credit pull, no cost.
  2. See your options. We line up the Texas state programs (TSAHC, TDHCA, MCC) that may fit your county AMI, household size, income, and occupation. If a Texas MCC may apply to your situation, we surface which issuer (TSAHC or TDHCA) and which first-mortgage pairing typically delivers the cleanest outcome.
  3. Meet your Texas loan officer. A licensed mortgage professional in our Texas partner network reaches out to walk through what the MCC may actually look like for your specific income, credit, and target purchase area. The LO does the pre-qualification, runs the program-eligibility math, and verifies you meet the federal §143 income and purchase price limits for your county.
  4. Complete HUD-approved homebuyer education. 6–8 hour course, online or in-person. Required by both TSAHC and TDHCA before closing.
  5. Enroll in the MCC program. Your LO submits the TSAHC or TDHCA MCC enrollment alongside the first-mortgage application. The certificate is generated through the program portal and finalized at closing.
  6. Close on your home. The MCC certificate is issued at closing. From then on, every year you file your federal return, you fill out Form 8396 and claim the credit. Save the original certificate — it is the source document your CPA will need each year.

ShopDPA is a Texas home loan referral service. We connect Texas buyers with licensed mortgage professionals in our partner network. We are not a mortgage broker, lender, or loan officer, and we do not originate, fund, or service loans. The MCC certificate is issued by TSAHC or TDHCA under federal §25 authority — ShopDPA is not the issuer.

Required Documents for MCC Pre-Qualification

Texas Mortgage Credit Certificate: Frequently Asked Questions

How much may the Texas MCC save me each year?

Up to $2,000 per year in federal income tax credit, for every year you carry the original mortgage and live in the home as your primary residence — subject to your federal tax liability. The exact annual figure depends on the certificate's credit rate (typically 20% in Texas), the amount of mortgage interest you paid that year, and whether you owed at least that much in federal income tax. The $2,000 figure is a federal IRS cap, not a guaranteed benefit.

Is the MCC a tax deduction or a tax credit?

A federal tax credit. The MCC reduces what you owe the IRS dollar-for-dollar, not as a deduction off taxable income. A $2,000 MCC credit may be worth approximately three to four times what a $2,000 mortgage interest deduction would save the same buyer at typical federal marginal tax rates. The two work very differently, and the credit is the stronger mechanic.

Do I have to be a first-time homebuyer to qualify for a Texas MCC?

By default, yes — the federal MCC program is, under §143, a first-time homebuyer benefit. "First-time" means no ownership interest in a principal residence in the past three years. Two exceptions may apply: (1) Texas veterans are exempt from the first-time-buyer rule under both TSAHC and TDHCA MCC programs, and (2) buyers purchasing within a HUD-designated targeted census tract may be exempt and may qualify for higher income and purchase price limits.

Can I use a Texas MCC with FHA, VA, USDA, or conventional financing?

Yes. The MCC pairs with all four loan types, depending on the issuing agency's program rules. FHA + MCC is the most common combination for first-time Texas buyers. VA + MCC for eligible veterans. USDA + MCC for rural-area buyers. Conventional + MCC for buyers using HFA Advantage / HFA Preferred. The MCC sits on top of the underlying loan as a separate federal tax benefit and does not change the loan's terms.

Can I have both a TSAHC MCC and a TDHCA MCC on the same loan?

No. One MCC per loan, per federal §25 rule. You may use either a TSAHC MCC or a TDHCA MCC on a given mortgage — never both. The choice typically depends on which DPA program you are also enrolled in. If you switch to a different mortgage in the future (a refinance), you may apply for a reissued MCC (RMCC) tied to the new loan.

Can I pair an MCC with TSAHC or TDHCA down payment assistance?

Depends on the DPA program. TSAHC's Home Sweet Texas and Homes for Texas Heroes DPA both pair with a TSAHC MCC. TDHCA's My First Texas Home (MFTH) pairs with a TDHCA MCC. TDHCA's My Choice Texas Home (MCTH) does not pair with an MCC — the program rules prohibit it. If you are using MCTH for DPA, the MCC is not available on that loan.

What happens to my MCC if I refinance?

Without action, refinancing the original loan ends the MCC. The IRS allows a Reissued MCC (RMCC) procedure that may let the credit continue on the new loan, with three rules to watch: the reissued certificate keeps the original expiration date, the annual credit is typically capped at the original certificate's annual amount, and a reissue fee may apply. Initiate the RMCC application with TSAHC or TDHCA before the refinance closes — it cannot be done retroactively.

What is the recapture tax for MCC buyers?

A federal recapture tax under IRC §143(m) may apply only if three conditions all happen: (1) you sell within 9 years, (2) your household income at sale exceeds the program's adjusted income limit for your county and family size, and (3) you realize a capital gain. If any one of those three conditions does not happen, no recapture is owed. Both TSAHC and TDHCA run reimbursement programs for borrowers who do owe recapture. Talk to a CPA before selling if you think recapture may apply.

What is the credit rate on a Texas MCC?

Both TSAHC and TDHCA typically issue Texas MCCs at the 20% credit rate. At 20%, the federal $2,000 annual cap may or may not bite depending on the loan size and interest rate — annual mortgage interest of $10,000 or less typically calculates to under $2,000 in credit (uncapped), while higher annual interest hits the cap. Higher credit rates (up to 50%) are permitted under §25 in certain target-area or program cycles but are not the typical Texas MCC rate. Verify the rate on your specific certificate with TSAHC or TDHCA.

Does a Texas MCC cost anything to apply for?

ShopDPA's referral service does not charge buyers. TSAHC and TDHCA both charge program-administration fees for the MCC that are typically rolled into closing costs (verify exact figures at each agency's official site). HUD-approved homebuyer education runs $75–$99 if you take an online course, and is often free in person at a HUD-approved counseling agency. Your lender's normal origination fees and closing costs apply as on any mortgage — the MCC adds the federal tax benefit that may, over the life of the loan, deliver far more value than the upfront program fees.

Written by

ShopDPA Editorial Team

Last verified

May 15, 2026