Cities
Down Payment Assistance in College Station, TX
A 2026 guide to down payment assistance in College Station, Texas: how the statewide TSAHC and TDHCA programs work, the Brazos County income and price limits, and how to qualify.
College Station is a city where a lot of people plan to leave and then stay. Graduate students become staff, postdocs become faculty, young Aggies take a first job in town and put down roots, and somewhere in there renting quietly turns into “we should probably buy.” The thing that holds many of them back is the down payment, not the monthly cost, and that is exactly the gap the statewide assistance programs are built to close.
Home of Texas A&M University and the larger half of the Bryan-College Station metro, this is a steady university-and-research economy with a deep base of staff, healthcare, and young professionals, and home prices that still sit within reach. Because homes here cost below the area limit, the real question is fitting your income and credit to the right program and lining up the cash to close. Here is the full 2026 picture.
College Station assumptions worth a second look
Plenty of College Station renters could own sooner than they think. These are the beliefs that hold them back:
- “I’m only here for school or a first job.” Many people stay longer than planned, and even a few years of ownership can beat renting once the upfront cost is lowered. A participating lender can run the rent-versus-own math for your timeline.
- “I need 20% down.” You do not. Assistance pairs with FHA at 3.5% down and conventional at 3% down, and may cover much of even that smaller amount.
- “My university or professional income is too high to qualify.” Often it is not. The Brazos County TSAHC income limit may reach approximately $123,542 at any household size, and TDHCA’s My Choice Texas Home may reach approximately $150,450.
- “Assistance is only for first-time buyers.” For most programs, it is not. TSAHC’s Home Sweet Texas and TDHCA’s My Choice Texas Home both welcome repeat buyers.
You will not know which of these fits you until you check your income against the Brazos County limits and look at homes in your range. In an affordable university market like College Station, the answer surprises a lot of people.
What down payment assistance in College Station actually is
Down payment assistance in College Station is help that covers your down payment and usually part of your closing costs, so you bring less cash to the table. The money comes mostly from two statewide agencies rather than the city: the Texas State Affordable Housing Corporation (TSAHC) and the Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs (TDHCA).
Each may provide up to about 5% of your loan amount, offered as a grant or a forgivable second lien, depending on the option you pick. The assistance rides on a normal first mortgage, FHA, conventional, VA, or USDA, so the underlying loan is ordinary. Our Texas down payment assistance hub covers how the statewide help works in depth.
Down payment assistance in Brazos County, and how we fit
The City of College Station, the City of Bryan, and Brazos County have at times offered smaller, income-restricted homebuyer programs funded through federal HOME dollars. Those local options have limited budgets and their own rules, and they are worth asking about if your income is on the lower end.
To be straight with you: ShopDPA does not administer any College Station or Brazos County program. The help that is open year-round, available in larger amounts, and usable by repeat buyers comes from the statewide TSAHC and TDHCA programs, which is where the licensed lenders in our network connect qualified Brazos County buyers. Any city or county program is education here, not the engine.
College Station down payment assistance income limits (2026)
Income limits are measured against the area median, and the statewide programs use the Balance of State figures for Brazos County. The numbers below show approximately how high the limits may reach for non-targeted areas. Read them as “up to” guides; a participating lender confirms your exact number.
| Program (Brazos County / College Station area) | Household of 1–2 | Household of 3+ |
|---|---|---|
| TSAHC Home Sweet Texas / Homes for Texas Heroes | Up to ~$123,542 | Up to ~$123,542 |
| TDHCA My First Texas Home | Up to ~$98,800 | Up to ~$113,620 |
| TDHCA My Choice Texas Home | Up to ~$150,450 | Up to ~$150,450 |
TSAHC applies one income limit at any household size, while TDHCA brackets by household. The My Choice ceiling near $150,450 reaches well past a typical College Station household, so income is rarely the wall here. The work is fitting the program to your loan and lining up the cash to close.
TSAHC programs for College Station buyers
TSAHC is the program most College Station buyers end up using. TSAHC’s down payment assistance may provide up to about 5% of the loan amount, structured three ways: a no-assistance option (first mortgage plus an optional MCC, often at the lowest rate), a grant you never repay, or a three-year forgivable second lien.
- Home Sweet Texas is the general track. If your Brazos County income fits the limit, you may qualify no matter your profession or whether you have owned before.
- Homes for Texas Heroes serves teachers, police officers, firefighters, EMS, corrections officers, nursing faculty, and veterans, with the same assistance. College Station ISD staff, the city’s first responders, and university nursing faculty fit here. See our Homes for Texas Heroes guide for the full occupation list.
Not every lender is approved to offer TSAHC programs, which is one reason working with a participating lender in our network matters. TSAHC publishes its full program terms and current eligibility on its homebuyer pages.
TDHCA programs for College Station buyers
TDHCA runs the other statewide track, and it pairs well with College Station’s price range:
- My First Texas Home is for first-time buyers (no ownership in the last three years) and qualified veterans, pairing a competitive first mortgage with assistance at the lower income limits above.
- My Choice Texas Home removes the first-time requirement and lifts the income ceiling to around $150,450, which fits repeat buyers and dual-income households better than the first-time track.
Both live on TDHCA’s homebuyer site. For most College Station households there is usually a comfortable fit between the two agencies; the work is picking the right one, which the eligibility step handles. If you want the agency comparison first, our guide to TSAHC and how it differs from TDHCA lays it out.
The MCC tax credit for College Station buyers
A Mortgage Credit Certificate is an easy benefit for first-time College Station buyers to overlook. An MCC is a federal tax credit under IRS Form 8396 that may return up to 15% of the mortgage interest you pay each year, with no annual cap, taken straight off your federal tax bill. A credit lowers what you owe dollar for dollar, which is stronger than a deduction.
The real benefit depends on your loan amount, your rate, and your federal tax liability, so it is an “up to” figure rather than a flat promise. On a College Station-sized loan, the annual credit may add up to real money, and it continues as long as you keep the loan and live in the home. TSAHC issues the MCC for qualifying first-time buyers, and our Texas MCC guide walks through the math.
How College Station DPA works with FHA, VA, USDA, and conventional loans
Assistance is not its own loan type. It rides on top of a standard first mortgage, and the right base loan depends on your credit, your cash, and what you are buying. In College Station’s price range, FHA and conventional financing are both common, and each pairs with assistance a little differently.
How Texas DPA pairs with each loan type
| Loan type | Min down | Min credit | DPA pairing benefit |
|---|---|---|---|
| FHA | 3.5% | 580 (TSAHC overlay: 620) | DPA may cover much of down + closing → out-of-pocket often drops below $1,000 |
| VA | 0% | 620 (TSAHC overlay) | DPA may cover closing costs; funding fee waived for 10%+ disabled vets |
| USDA | 0% | 620 (TSAHC overlay) | Rural areas only; DPA may cover closing costs; income caps lower |
| Conventional | 3% | 640-680 typical | HFA Advantage / HFA Preferred reduces MI; better long-term economics with 680+ credit |
| TSAHC and TDHCA both require 620+ FICO regardless of underlying loan-type minimums. | |||
Source: tsahc.org, FHA Handbook 4000.1, VA Lenders Handbook M26-7
Parts of Brazos County outside the College Station and Bryan city cores can qualify for USDA rural financing, which allows 100% financing in eligible areas. Veterans have their own path: beyond a VA home loan, the Texas Veterans Land Board offers below-market loan options for Texas veterans. Our Texas VA loan guide covers the veteran path in detail.
TSAHC vs TDHCA: which College Station program fits?
The two agencies overlap, so here is how they compare at a glance for a Brazos County household.
TSAHC vs TDHCA — Texas state DPA programs at a glance
| Program detail | TSAHC | TDHCA |
|---|---|---|
| First-time-buyer required? | No (Heroes); Yes/No (HSTH) | Yes (MFTH); No (MCTH) |
| Income limit | By county, any household size (up to ~$167,250) | By county and household size; My Choice is higher |
| DPA structure | Grant OR 3-year deferred forgivable second lien (36 months) | 30-year deferred (repayable) OR 3-year deferred forgivable second lien |
| Typical DPA % | 3% / 4% / 5% of loan amount | Up to 5% of mortgage amount |
| Min credit score | 620 (lender overlays may apply) | 620 (lender overlays may apply) |
| Loan types accepted | FHA, VA, USDA, Conventional | FHA, VA, USDA, Conventional |
| MCC pairing allowed? | Yes (TSAHC MCC) | Yes with MFTH; NOT with MCTH |
| Recapture tax (§143)? | May apply; reimbursement program available | May apply; reimbursement program available |
| MCC = Mortgage Credit Certificate. One MCC per loan, ever. TDHCA MCTH does not allow MCC pairing. | ||
Source: tsahc.org + welcomehome.tdhca.texas.gov
For most College Station buyers the decision comes down to two questions: are you a first-time buyer, and which option leaves you with the most help on your numbers? Because income is rarely the limit here, the choice usually turns on the assistance structure and the loan type rather than the ceiling. A participating lender can compare both.
Where you buy in College Station changes the picture
College Station’s price range sits under the roughly $544,232 limit across nearly the whole city, so the price cap rarely bites. That gives buyers room to choose on schools and commute rather than scrambling for a home under a ceiling.
- Established neighborhoods near campus and central College Station offer homes, including townhomes and condos, that easily fit the limit.
- South College Station and the newer subdivisions add a mix of homes, still well within range.
- Neighboring Bryan and the outer edges of Brazos County bring more affordable options, with some USDA-eligible areas farther out.
Because almost every College Station home qualifies on price, the focus shifts to getting pre-qualified and choosing the right program. Buyers comparing nearby options can ask a participating lender about Bryan and the wider Brazos Valley, which share the same county limits.
College Station schools and the Homes for Texas Heroes program
Most of the city is served by College Station ISD, alongside Texas A&M University and Blinn College. Between the districts, the university, the region’s hospitals, and the city’s police and fire departments, College Station is full of people whose jobs qualify them for the Homes for Texas Heroes program.
Teachers, aides, counselors, librarians, and school nurses qualify, as do College Station’s police officers, firefighters, and EMS, along with nursing faculty at the universities. The Heroes program offers the same assistance as Home Sweet Texas, framed for your profession, with no first-time-buyer requirement. Our Texas teacher home loan guide explains how district employment verification works.
Credit score requirements for College Station DPA
Most TSAHC and TDHCA programs start around a 620 credit score. That is well short of “perfect,” and it surprises buyers who assumed assistance demanded a flawless file. Your score shapes your interest rate and which assistance option fits, but 620 is the number to aim for, and some loan types flex around it depending on the rest of your application.
If you are under 620 right now, treat it as a timeline rather than a closed door. A participating lender or a HUD-approved housing counselor can usually point to the few specific moves that may lift your score into range, and in College Station’s affordable market a modest improvement can open the door quickly.
Homebuyer education for College Station buyers
Most assistance programs require a short homebuyer education course before you close. It covers budgeting, the loan process, and what to expect at closing, and buyers who take it tend to do better over the long run. You can find a HUD-approved counselor through the CFPB’s housing counselor tool, and your lender confirms which specific course your program accepts.
Recapture tax for College Station DPA buyers (IRS §143)
Some TSAHC and TDHCA bond-backed programs carry a federal recapture provision under IRS §143. A recapture tax may apply only if all three of these happen together: you sell within nine years, your income at sale is significantly above the program limits, and you realize a capital gain. If any one of those is not true, there is generally nothing to recapture.
Very few buyers ever owe it, and both agencies offer reimbursement programs that may cover a recapture tax if it is ever triggered. The mechanics live on IRS Form 8828. We mention it for honesty, not alarm; a participating lender explains how it applies to the program you choose.
Step by step: from form to closing day in College Station
- Check where you stand. Spend a couple of minutes on the eligibility step so we understand your income, location, and goals.
- Connect with a participating lender. We introduce you to a licensed mortgage professional in our network who is approved to offer TSAHC and TDHCA programs in the College Station area.
- Get pre-qualified and pick your program. Your lender checks your income against the Brazos County limits, reviews your credit, and helps you choose the assistance option that fits.
- Finish homebuyer education. Complete the short HUD-approved course your program requires, online or in person.
- Shop, offer, and close. House-hunt across College Station with your assistance lined up and bring far less cash to closing than you expected.
Documents to have ready for pre-qualification
You do not need these to begin, but they speed things up once you connect with a lender:
- Recent pay stubs (about 30 days) and the last two years of W-2s or tax returns
- Two months of bank statements
- A government-issued ID
- Your DD-214 if you are using a VA loan or the Heroes/veteran track
- A rough idea of your target College Station neighborhoods and price range
College Station down payment assistance: frequently asked questions
College Station down payment assistance: frequently asked questions
How does down payment assistance work in College Station, Texas?
Who qualifies for down payment assistance in College Station?
Can Texas A&M staff and young professionals qualify for down payment assistance in College Station?
How much down payment assistance can I get in College Station?
Do I have to be a first-time buyer to get help in College Station?
What is the income limit for down payment assistance in College Station in 2026?
Is there a price limit for down payment assistance in College Station?
Can USDA loans be used with down payment assistance near College Station?
Do you have to pay back down payment assistance in College Station?
† ShopDPA is The Texas Down Payment Assistance Marketplace, a home loan and down payment assistance referral service. We are not a mortgage lender, mortgage broker, or loan officer, and we do not originate, fund, or service loans. We connect Texas homebuyers with licensed mortgage professionals and with down payment assistance programs. We are not affiliated with the City of College Station, Brazos County, Texas A&M University, TSAHC, TDHCA, HUD, the IRS, the VA, or any government agency. Program terms, income limits, purchase-price limits, and tax-credit amounts are set by the applicable agency, lender, or insurer and may change; confirm current details with a participating licensed lender. Equal Housing Opportunity.
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