CalHFA in Orange County · Updated July 2026
Orange County's CalHFA income limit is $274,000. Read that again.
It's the highest limit in Southern California — higher than San Diego, higher than LA. Two professionals earning six figures each can still qualify for state down payment assistance in OC. Most of them have no idea.
The number nobody believes
When people hear "down payment assistance," they picture strict, low income cutoffs. Then they see Orange County's 2026 CalHFA limit: $274,000 in household income, effective June 30, 2026. That's not a typo, and it's not a niche carve-out — it's the standard limit for every CalHFA program in the county, and it's the highest in Southern California. San Diego sits at $259,000, Los Angeles at $214,000, Riverside and San Bernardino at $210,000.
What that means in practice: a nurse married to an engineer, two teachers with side income, a project manager and a dental hygienist — dual-professional households earning $130,000 each — can still fit under the OC limit. If you've been assuming you "make too much" for assistance, Orange County is the county where that assumption is most likely wrong.
Honest talk: where the math actually works in OC
Let's not pretend. Detached single-family medians in Orange County run well over $1 million, and CalHFA doesn't change that. The realistic CalHFA entry point in OC is the condo and townhome market between roughly $600,000 and $850,000 — and north and central OC has real inventory there:
- Santa Ana — condos and townhomes with some of the county's most accessible pricing
- Anaheim — townhome communities across the city, from the Platinum Triangle to West Anaheim
- Garden Grove — established condo stock at approachable prices
- Fullerton — townhomes near downtown and the university corridor
- Buena Park — entry-level condos with easy freeway access to LA jobs
- Orange — condo communities that keep you close to the county's core
Buyers set on a detached house at these price points usually end up weighing OC condos against detached homes in the Inland Empire. Both are legitimate paths — the question is whether you'd rather own walls in Orange County or a yard in Riverside County. We help you run both scenarios with real numbers rather than vibes.
What the assistance looks like at OC prices
The MyHome Assistance Program provides up to 3.5% of the purchase price with a CalHFA FHA first mortgage (3% with conventional) as a deferred junior loan — no monthly payment, repaid when you sell, refinance, or pay off the home:
| Orange County purchase | MyHome @ 3.5% (FHA) | What it covers |
|---|---|---|
| $700,000 townhome (Anaheim, Garden Grove) | $24,500 | The full 3.5% FHA minimum down payment |
| $850,000 townhome (Fullerton, Orange) | $29,750 | The full 3.5% FHA minimum down payment |
Because FHA's minimum down payment is exactly 3.5%, MyHome frequently covers all of it — your remaining cash need is mostly closing costs, which CalHFA's ZIP program (a 0% deferred closing-cost loan of roughly 2–3% of the first loan) and seller credits can shrink further. We structure the right stack for your file.
Why buyers come to us
Most lenders don't offer these programs. We do — it's what we specialize in. CalHFA loans only come through approved lenders, and in a market as fast as Orange County you need a team that can structure the assistance stack and still close on schedule.
Work for an OC school district? You get more.
Employees of California K-12 public school districts — Santa Ana Unified, the Anaheim districts, and every other public district and charter in the county — can qualify for the CalHFA School Program: a deferred junior loan of up to 4% of the purchase price instead of MyHome's 3.5%. And it's not just teachers — classified staff, instructional aides, office employees, custodians, and cafeteria workers count too. On a $700,000 Anaheim townhome, that's up to $28,000 in assistance instead of $24,500.
The commuter question: OC condo or Inland Empire house?
Plenty of buyers who work in Irvine or Anaheim ultimately buy in Corona or Eastvale, trading a daily 91-freeway commute for a detached home in the mid-$500,000s. Others decide their time is worth more than a yard and buy the Garden Grove condo ten minutes from work. There's no universally right answer — but there is a right answer for your household, and it falls out of the numbers: payment difference, assistance amounts at each price point, commute cost, and how long you'll stay. That's exactly the comparison we build for you, using Inland Empire, Los Angeles, and San Diego numbers side by side with OC.
Orange County CalHFA FAQ
What is the CalHFA income limit for Orange County in 2026?
$274,000 in household income, effective June 30, 2026 — the highest CalHFA limit in Southern California. Two professionals each earning $120,000 to $135,000 can still fit under it, which surprises many Orange County couples who assumed assistance programs were only for lower incomes.
Can I really buy in Orange County with CalHFA assistance?
Yes, if you target the right inventory. Detached-home medians in Orange County run well over $1 million, but condos and townhomes in cities like Santa Ana, Anaheim, Garden Grove, Fullerton, Buena Park, and Orange trade roughly between $600,000 and $850,000 — squarely in range for CalHFA FHA and conventional first mortgages paired with MyHome assistance.
How much down payment assistance would I get on a $700,000 Orange County condo?
With a CalHFA FHA first mortgage, MyHome provides up to 3.5% of the purchase price — about $24,500 on a $700,000 purchase, or about $29,750 at $850,000 — as a deferred junior loan with no monthly payment. Qualifying public school employees may receive up to 4% through the School Program instead.
I work for an Orange County school district — do I get extra help?
Likely yes. Employees of California K-12 public school districts — including Santa Ana Unified and the Anaheim districts, and not just teachers but classified staff, aides, custodians, and office employees — can qualify for the CalHFA School Program, a deferred junior loan of up to 4% of the purchase price instead of MyHome's 3.5%.
Program details summarized from calhfa.ca.gov as of July 2026. CalHFA sets and may change all program terms, including income limits and assistance percentages. Home prices cited are approximate market figures for illustration. This page is educational and not a loan commitment; not all applicants will qualify.
Think you make too much to qualify? Check anyway.
Orange County's $274,000 limit fits more households than any other in SoCal. Two minutes of questions tells you where you stand — no credit pull, no obligation.