HELOC in Jacksonville, FL — A 2026 Educational Guide

Click here for the FREE HELOC & HELOAN Guide

Florida-specific • Free PDF • Educational updates only — never sold, never lender pitches

Jacksonville, Florida sits in Duval County with a median home value around $268,000. This educational guide explains how FHA loans work in the Duval County market and what Jacksonville homebuyers should compare before signing with any lender.

FHA loan limits and local context for Jacksonville

  • County: Duval County
  • Jacksonville median home value: $268,000 source (verify against current local MLS)
  • County effective property tax rate: 0.97% source
  • 2026 FHA loan limit (Duval County, 1-unit): $524,225 source (verify against HUD county lookup before publish)
  • 2026 FHA loan limit (Duval County, 4-unit): $1,006,850 source
  • Jacksonville permit / inspection office: https://www.coj.net/departments/planning-and-development/building-inspection
  • HUD-approved housing counselors near Duval County: https://www.hud.gov/states/florida/homeownership/hsgcounselors

Jacksonville neighborhoods this guide addresses: Riverside, San Marco, Avondale, Mandarin, Jacksonville Beach.

Jacksonville's housing stock is a mix of older Riverside and San Marco bungalows (1920s-1940s plumbing) and newer Mandarin, Southside, and Beaches construction (1980s onward). The age gap matters: any project in a pre-WWII home almost always uncovers cast-iron drain stacks, knob-and-tube wiring fragments, or non-code venting that adds $2,000-$5,000 to the scope once walls open up. Budget a contingency.

Important: estimates only

All values shown on this page are estimates intended for educational use only. Property values, tax rates, FHA loan limits, insurance premiums, program eligibility, and lender pricing change frequently. Always verify current values with your Jacksonville or Duval County official sources before relying on any number for a financial decision. The Duval County Property Appraiser, the HUD county loan-limit lookup, the Florida Department of Revenue, and your chosen Florida-licensed lender each publish authoritative current values. Use the figures on this page as a starting point for planning, not as the basis for any binding financial commitment.

Estimate your FHA payment in Jacksonville

$50K – $2M
$70,000 down · 3% – 50%
Illustrative — adjust to your quote
Sets the property-tax estimate for your state

Estimated Monthly Payment

Principal & Interest$0
Mortgage Insurance$0
Property Tax (est.)$0
Home Insurance (est.)$0
Estimated Total$0

Loan Summary

VA Funding Fee (financed)$0
Loan Amount$0
Loan-to-Value (LTV)
Total Interest$0
Total of Payments$0

Illustrative national averages (≈ early 2026) for education only — not an offer or quote. Verify current rates with sources like the Freddie Mac PMMS.

These figures are estimates provided for educational purposes only and are not a loan offer, quote, rate lock, or commitment to lend. Your actual payment will differ. Property taxes and homeowners insurance shown here are estimates and may be understated or excluded, and other costs — such as mortgage insurance, HOA dues, flood insurance, and closing costs — may not be reflected. For a detailed, personalized quote, consult a licensed lender or loan officer.

For a buyer purchasing at Jacksonville's median home value of $268,000 with an FHA loan at 3.5% down, a rough monthly cost breakdown looks like this — illustrative only, not a quote from any lender. FHA mortgage-insurance figures used below come from the HUD program rules source:

  • Property tax escrow at the Duval County rate of 0.97%: about $2,599/year, or roughly $216/month
  • Homeowners insurance escrow (typical Florida non-HVHZ range): $245–$424/month
  • FHA monthly MIP on a 96.5% LTV loan: roughly $118/month for the first 11+ years
  • Upfront MIP on this loan size: about $4,525 (usually financed into the loan balance)
  • Principal + interest depends on the specific rate quoted by the chosen lender

These numbers are anchored to Jacksonville's Duval County property tax rate and Florida insurance market context. Adjust the calculator above for the actual home price, down payment, credit score, and interest rate offered. The Loan Estimate provided by a lender supplies the binding figures, not these illustrations.

A home equity line of credit (HELOC) is a revolving line of credit secured by the borrower's primary residence (and, less commonly, a second home or investment property). The lender approves a maximum credit limit based on the home's current appraised value, the existing mortgage balance, the borrower's credit profile, and the lender's combined loan-to-value (CLTV) cap. The borrower can draw against the line as needed during the draw period, repay, and re-draw — similar in mechanics to a credit card, but secured by the home and at significantly lower interest rates.

HELOCs are a separate product from home equity loans (sometimes called "HELOANs"), and the differences matter for educational planning.

HELOC versus HELOAN

Both products tap home equity, but the cash-flow structure is different:

  • A HELOC is a credit line. The borrower is approved for a maximum (the "limit"), can draw any amount up to that limit during the draw period, and pays interest only on the amount actually outstanding. Rates are typically variable, tied to the prime rate plus a margin.
  • A HELOAN is a closed-end second mortgage. The borrower receives the full approved amount as a lump sum at closing and repays on a fixed schedule, usually at a fixed interest rate.

Which is the better fit depends on the planned use. A multi-year home renovation project completed in phases often fits HELOC mechanics naturally. A one-time consolidation of higher-interest debt with a known dollar amount fits HELOAN mechanics. Comparing both quotes from three or more lenders is the only reliable way to see the all-in cost for a specific scenario.

How equity is calculated

A lender's HELOC underwriting starts by measuring available equity:

``` Home appraised value $X Existing first mortgage – $Y Other liens on the home – $Z ───────────────────────────────── Available equity = $X − $Y − $Z ```

The HELOC is sized as a percentage of the home's appraised value, minus the existing mortgage balance — never as a percentage of the equity itself. This is the CLTV cap.

Combined Loan-to-Value (CLTV) caps

Most lenders cap CLTV (the sum of the first mortgage plus the new HELOC limit, divided by the home's appraised value) at somewhere between 80% and 90% for primary residences. Some specialty lenders go to 95% or even 100% for borrowers with excellent credit, but rates and fees increase as CLTV rises.

The CLTV cap means even an owner with substantial equity may not be able to draw all of it. For example, on a $400,000 home with a $200,000 first mortgage, the available equity is $200,000 but at an 80% CLTV cap the maximum HELOC limit is $400,000 × 80% − $200,000 = $120,000.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau publishes neutral guides on home equity products that walk through CLTV math and risks in detail source.

Typical credit and DTI requirements

HELOC underwriting generally looks for:

  • Credit score of 680+ for standard pricing; some lenders go down to 620 with higher rates and tighter CLTV
  • Debt-to-income ratio typically capped at 43%–45% including the projected HELOC payment
  • Verifiable income through pay stubs, W-2s, tax returns, or — for self-employed borrowers — two years of personal and business returns
  • Sufficient remaining equity after the HELOC closes (i.e., CLTV under the lender's cap)

Lenders vary in overlay strictness. A borrower who doesn't qualify at one lender may qualify at another with looser overlays, which is one reason to compare offers from three or more lenders before signing.

Draw period and repayment period

A standard HELOC has two distinct phases:

Draw period (typically 5–10 years): the borrower can draw against the line as needed and is required to make at least an interest-only minimum payment on the outstanding balance. Many borrowers pay principal as well during this period to keep the balance manageable.

Repayment period (typically 10–20 years): no more draws are allowed. The outstanding balance amortizes through principal-and-interest payments on a fixed schedule. The transition from interest-only draw period to full amortization can produce a meaningful payment increase — a fact that surprises borrowers who only ever made the minimum during the draw period.

Some HELOC products offer the option to convert all or part of the outstanding balance to a fixed-rate term loan during the draw period. This can stabilize payments when interest rates rise.

Variable rate mechanics

Most HELOCs are tied to the prime rate (the rate banks charge their most creditworthy customers, currently published by major commercial banks and aggregated by the Wall Street Journal). The HELOC's actual rate is the prime rate plus a margin set by the lender at origination.

If prime rises, the HELOC rate rises. If prime falls, the HELOC rate falls. There is typically a "floor" (rate cannot drop below) and sometimes a "ceiling" (rate cannot rise above) — but the ceiling, if any, is often very high relative to current rates.

A borrower considering a HELOC should model what payments would look like at prime + margin in a range of rate scenarios, not just at today's rate. A HELOC drawn fully at today's rate becomes a meaningfully more expensive obligation if prime rises 200–300 basis points over the draw period.

Tax considerations (post-2017 changes)

The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 changed the deductibility of home equity interest. Under current rules, interest on a HELOC is generally deductible only if the proceeds were used to "buy, build, or substantially improve" the home that secures the loan. HELOC proceeds used for debt consolidation, education, vehicles, or general expenses are not deductible regardless of the loan's structure.

The IRS publishes detailed guidance on home mortgage interest deduction rules; the specific rules around HELOC interest are addressed in IRS Publication 936 source. Tax treatment is fact-specific and individual; an educational explainer like this cannot substitute for consulting a CPA on a specific scenario.

Common uses (educational framing — not recommendations)

HELOCs are used for many purposes; how they fit any specific household budget depends on individual circumstances. Common use cases include:

  • Multi-phase home renovation where the total cost is uncertain at the start
  • Bridging cash flow during a major life event (medical, education, career transition)
  • Consolidating higher-interest unsecured debt (with the trade-off of converting unsecured debt to debt secured by the home)
  • Covering large one-time expenses while preserving liquidity in non-real-estate assets

None of these is "the right reason" universally. The right question is whether the lower interest rate of a secured product justifies adding the home itself to the collateral pool.

Risks worth weighing

Three structural risks distinguish HELOCs from unsecured borrowing:

  1. The home is collateral. Default on a HELOC can result in foreclosure, just as default on the first mortgage can.
  2. Variable rate exposure. Payments can rise meaningfully if prime rises during the draw or repayment period.
  3. Draw period to repayment period transition. Minimum payments increase — sometimes substantially — when the draw period ends and full amortization begins.

A reader weighing whether a HELOC fits their situation should model the worst-case scenario (max draw, peak rate, full amortization) and confirm the household budget can absorb it even if circumstances change.

Comparing HELOC offers

Practical points when comparing offers from three or more lenders:

  • Margin over prime is the single biggest long-term cost driver. A 1.0% margin vs a 2.5% margin compounds significantly over a 10-year draw period.
  • Origination fees and annual fees vary widely. Some lenders charge $0 to open and no annual fee; others charge $500 in origination plus $75/year.
  • Draw fees (per-draw charges) may apply and add up if the line is used actively.
  • Conversion-to-fixed-rate options vary in availability and cost. Worth confirming if rate-rise protection is a priority.
  • Early-closure penalties sometimes apply if the line is closed within 2–3 years.

Federal disclosure rules require lenders to provide a HELOC disclosure brochure (sometimes called the "When Your Home Is on the Line" brochure) early in the application process. Reading that disclosure carefully — across each lender being compared — is the most reliable way to see the all-in differences.

Where to learn more

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's home-equity-products portal is the authoritative neutral source for HELOC mechanics, risks, and consumer-protection rules. The IRS publishes the relevant tax-treatment guidance separately.


This section is provided for educational purposes only. HomeWise does not originate, broker, or service loans, and HomeWise is not affiliated with any HELOC lender or financial-services company. HELOC terms, rates, CLTV caps, and eligibility depend on individual circumstances and on the policies of the lender chosen. Tax treatment is fact-specific; consult a CPA before relying on any tax-deductibility framing. Always read the Loan Estimate and disclosure brochure provided by the lender, and consider speaking with a HUD-approved housing counselor for a neutral pre-decision review.

FHA appraisal considerations for Jacksonville properties

FHA appraisers in Jacksonville apply the same federal Minimum Property Standards used nationwide, but local building stock and climate create predictable patterns of findings. Knowing what an FHA appraiser is likely to flag in Jacksonville can save weeks of back-and-forth.

Wind and flood considerations. Outside HVHZ but coastal-exposure wind-load code applies (FBC Chapter 16); coastal flood-zone considerations near the St. Johns River and Atlantic beaches. FHA appraisers do not determine flood-zone status themselves, but properties in mapped Special Flood Hazard Areas require flood insurance as a closing condition. For coastal-exposure Jacksonville properties, the appraisal may also flag missing wind-rated openings, deteriorated roof tie-downs, or storm-shutter requirements depending on the specific zone.

Older housing stock issues. Jacksonville's housing stock is a mix of older Riverside and San Marco bungalows (1920s-1940s plumbing) and newer Mandarin, Southside, and Beaches construction (1980s onward). The age gap matters: any project in a pre-WWII home almost always uncovers cast-iron drain stacks, knob-and-tube wiring fragments, or non-code venting that adds $2,000-$5,000 to the scope once walls open up. Budget a contingency.

For FHA specifically, the appraiser will look for: peeling lead-based paint in homes built before 1978; visible plumbing or electrical defects (cast-iron drain stacks past useful life, missing GFCI in wet locations, exposed knob-and-tube fragments); roof condition with at least two years of remaining useful life; functioning HVAC and water heater; absence of active wood-destroying organism activity; and any structural concerns.

Practical sequencing. Buyers in Jacksonville using FHA often do better commissioning a pre-purchase home inspection through a licensed Florida home inspector (https://www.myfloridalicense.com/wl11.asp) BEFORE the FHA appraisal occurs. Surprise items discovered first at FHA appraisal can delay closing or require seller-paid repairs, which sellers in competitive Jacksonville sub-markets sometimes decline.

Homeowners insurance considerations for Jacksonville

Florida homeowners insurance is significantly more expensive than the national average and has been notably volatile over the past several years. Jacksonville buyers should treat the insurance line on a Loan Estimate as a real budget item, not a footnote.

Key Florida insurance factors that affect FHA borrowers:

  • Wind and flood coverage are usually separate from standard policies. Outside HVHZ but coastal-exposure wind-load code applies (FBC Chapter 16); coastal flood-zone considerations near the St. Johns River and Atlantic beaches.
  • Citizens Property Insurance Corporation (Florida's state-backed insurer of last resort) writes a meaningful share of policies in coastal Florida counties, including parts of Duval County. Citizens premiums can be assessed for solvency surcharges in active hurricane years source.
  • Lender-required policies on FHA loans must include dwelling coverage equal to the replacement cost or the unpaid loan balance. Some insurers in Duval County write only on a 'named perils' basis rather than 'all risks,' which can affect what counts as a covered loss.
  • Flood insurance through the NFIP is required by FHA (and by federal law) for any home in a Special Flood Hazard Area. Jacksonville has several SFHA-mapped zones; verifying the home's flood-zone designation before going under contract is more practical than discovering it during underwriting source.

Plan to get insurance quotes from three or more Florida-licensed carriers in parallel with lender shopping. Insurance premium swings of $1,000+/year between carriers on the same property are common in Florida, and the monthly escrow figure on a Loan Estimate is built directly from the policy quote supplied to the lender.

How Jacksonville's cost base affects FHA borrowers

Based on tracked construction, materials, and labor costs, the Jacksonville market runs about 5% above the U.S. national average (cost multiplier 1.05). For an FHA borrower this matters in two specific ways:

  1. Appraised value vs. purchase price. Jacksonville's cost base typically supports the appraised values shown in stable Duval County neighborhoods. But in fast-moving micro-markets like Riverside or San Marco, an offer price that runs ahead of recent comparable sales can produce an appraisal gap. FHA borrowers cannot finance above appraised value — any gap has to be covered out of pocket or renegotiated with the seller.
  1. Repair-escrow and 203(k) project budgets. If the FHA appraiser identifies repairs that the buyer wants to roll into the loan via FHA's 203(k) program, the budget should reflect Jacksonville contractor pricing, not generic national estimates. Duval County permit fees, prevailing labor rates, and material delivery costs are real line items, and underestimating them stalls projects mid-renovation.

When comparing Loan Estimates from Florida-licensed lenders, ask each lender how they handle appraisal gaps on FHA contracts in Duval County specifically — practices vary, and the answer affects what happens if the appraisal comes in low.

HELOC considerations across Jacksonville's major neighborhoods

Riverside. Riverside owners who held through the 2018+ run-up often have substantial equity. Lenders typically cap CLTV at 80–85% in this submarket and pull a full appraisal on larger HELOC limits given Riverside's price-tier variability between renovated and unrenovated homes on the same block.

San Marco. San Marco's strong appreciation supports HELOC eligibility for long-term owners. AVM-based HELOC processes work well here given the dense comparable sales data; larger draws typically trigger a full appraisal.

Avondale. Avondale HELOCs work similarly to Riverside given the parallel housing stock. CLTV caps of 80–85% are typical; historic-district considerations don't usually affect HELOC underwriting (the loan is against equity, not tied to a specific renovation plan).

Mandarin. Mandarin's newer construction and predictable appraisals make it the simplest HELOC territory in Duval. Most prime borrowers can access 85% CLTV without unusual lender friction here.

Jacksonville Beach. Jax Beach waterfront equity is real but lenders apply tighter CLTV caps and full appraisals more often due to the thin sub-market for true beachfront comparables. Flood-zone status affects both insurance and some lenders' appetite to underwrite at higher CLTV.

Florida Homestead Exemption and FHA escrow in Jacksonville

Florida's Homestead Exemption is one of the most consequential property-tax features for Jacksonville homeowners — and for FHA borrowers specifically, it changes how the lender calculates the escrow line on the Loan Estimate. Understanding the timing matters.

The exemption itself. Florida grants a $25,000 exemption on the first $50,000 of assessed value for any property used as a primary residence on January 1 of the tax year, plus an additional $25,000 exemption on assessed value between $50,000 and $75,000 for non-school taxes. The exemption is filed with the Duval County Property Appraiser; the application deadline is March 1 of the year following the year of purchase. Once granted, the exemption persists as long as the home remains the owner's primary residence source.

Save Our Homes cap. After the first year of homesteaded ownership, Florida caps annual increases in the assessed value at 3% per year (or the change in CPI, whichever is lower). This is why long-term Jacksonville homeowners often pay dramatically lower property taxes than recent buyers of similar properties — the assessed values diverge over time even though market values track together. For a home held over many years in Duval County, this cap can become the single largest factor in the total cost of ownership.

Escrow timing for FHA buyers. FHA loans require the lender to escrow for property taxes and insurance as part of the monthly payment. In year 1 of ownership, the escrow is calculated against the full assessed value (effectively the purchase price for a recent sale), before the Homestead Exemption applies. Once the exemption is filed and processed, year-2 escrow drops to reflect the lower taxable value. Lenders are required to perform an annual escrow analysis and refund any over-collection — buyers in Jacksonville should expect this adjustment and not be surprised by the year-1 vs year-2 payment difference.

Confirm current exemption rules and filing requirements through the Duval County Property Appraiser before relying on any specific tax estimate.

HUD-approved housing counselors serving Jacksonville

A HUD-approved housing counselor is a different kind of professional than a real estate agent, a mortgage loan officer, or a financial advisor — and the difference matters for Jacksonville buyers who want a neutral perspective.

What HUD-approved counselors are. They are nonprofit organizations whose counseling activities are reviewed and approved by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, with funding from HUD grants and other public sources. That funding model is the key feature: most counseling services are free or offered on a sliding scale, and the counselor's role is education — not loan placement, not commission. The counselor has no economic stake in whether a household ultimately borrows, or whom they borrow from.

What services typically cover. Pre-purchase counseling (often delivered as group education plus one-on-one sessions): how mortgages work, what a Loan Estimate contains, how down-payment-assistance programs interact with FHA, how to budget for the true monthly cost of ownership including escrowed taxes and insurance. Post-purchase counseling: rights and obligations of a homeowner, escrow management, refinancing decisions. Foreclosure-prevention counseling and rental counseling are also commonly offered.

Why this matters for FHA buyers in Jacksonville. Some down-payment-assistance programs available in Duval County require completion of an approved pre-purchase counseling course before funds can be released. Even when counseling is not required, attending a session can surface budget realities (FL insurance costs, year-1 vs year-2 escrow swings under the Homestead Exemption, FHA appraisal repair contingencies) before the household is locked into a contract.

The HUD locator for approved counselors serving the Duval County area is published by HUD source. Counseling is one of the few resources in the housing process that is genuinely free of transaction-tied incentives.

Florida Housing Finance Corporation programs in Duval County

The Florida Housing Finance Corporation (commonly called Florida Housing) administers state-level homebuyer assistance programs that frequently pair with FHA loans. These are educational notes on what exists in Florida; eligibility and current program terms are set by Florida Housing and change periodically source.

Bond-backed first-mortgage programs. Florida Housing's first-mortgage programs use tax-exempt bonds to offer below-market interest rates to eligible first-time homebuyers. The programs layer onto FHA, VA, USDA, and conventional loans — meaning the underlying loan is still originated by a participating private lender, but the rate reflects Florida Housing's bond pricing rather than the lender's standard pricing. Whether the program is available in any given month depends on bond-issuance timing.

Down-payment and closing-cost assistance. Florida Assist and the Florida Homeownership Loan Program provide deferred-payment second mortgages that can cover the FHA 3.5% down payment and a portion of closing costs. These second mortgages typically carry no monthly payment and are due upon sale, refinance, or end of the first mortgage. Eligibility is income-limited and home-price-limited.

Targeted program populations. Florida Housing administers several special-purpose programs: Hometown Heroes (essential workers including teachers, law enforcement, firefighters, nurses, and others) and Salute Our Soldiers (active duty, reserve, and veteran military households). These programs have their own eligibility rules and may stack with FHA financing.

Mortgage Credit Certificate (MCC). Separate from down-payment assistance, the MCC is a federal income-tax credit (not a deduction) on a percentage of mortgage interest paid each year. For eligible first-time buyers, the MCC can reduce annual federal income tax liability for as long as the home is owned and used as a primary residence.

Duval County coordination. Several Florida counties, including Duval County, administer their own complementary down-payment-assistance programs alongside Florida Housing's statewide offerings. Program availability and lender participation change year to year; current rules are published by Florida Housing and by the Duval County housing office.

Frequently asked questions — FHA loans in Jacksonville

FHA program rules referenced in these answers come from the HUD FHA program page source.

What is the 2026 FHA loan limit in Duval County? For a single-family home, the limit is approximately $524,225 (verify against the current HUD county-lookup tool). If the home being purchased is priced above the limit, FHA is not an option — conventional, jumbo, or a larger down payment to bring the financed amount under the cap would be required.

Can FHA financing be used for a Jacksonville condo? Only if the condo project itself is FHA-approved. Many Jacksonville downtown high-rises and waterfront condos have not pursued FHA approval, which is a project-level decision made by the HOA, not by individual buyers. The HUD condo-project lookup confirms approval status before an offer is made.

Are FHA appraisers stricter on flood-zone properties in Jacksonville? The appraiser does not determine flood-zone status, but if the home is in a Special Flood Hazard Area, FHA (and federal law) require flood insurance as a closing condition. NFIP premiums depend on the exact zone designation, so verifying flood status before going under contract avoids surprises at underwriting.

Can a down-payment assistance program be used with an FHA loan in Jacksonville? Yes. Florida Housing Finance Corporation programs and county-administered programs in Duval County can layer with FHA financing. Lenders vary in which DPA programs they are approved to deliver, so confirm program compatibility with each of the three or more lenders being compared.

What if the Jacksonville home being purchased needs repairs the FHA appraiser flags? Two paths exist: (a) the seller completes the repairs before closing (negotiable), or (b) the buyer uses an FHA 203(k) renovation loan that finances the repair budget into the mortgage. The 203(k) path adds complexity and longer closing timelines but can be the right tool for cosmetically dated or partially-renovated Jacksonville properties.

Are FHA rates different in Jacksonville than in other parts of Florida? Mortgage rates are set per loan based on the borrower's credit profile, down payment, loan amount, and the lender's pricing — not by city. Florida lenders generally apply consistent state-wide pricing for FHA loans, so the differences between lenders matter much more than the differences between Florida cities. What does change city to city is the FHA loan limit (set per county), the property tax rate (set per county), the prevailing insurance market, and the housing-stock issues an FHA appraiser is likely to flag in Jacksonville specifically — all of which this guide addresses in the sections above.

HELOC & HELOAN Guide

If this overview was useful, the full HELOC & HELOAN Guide goes deeper — a printable PDF to share with your household or bring to a counselor session.

A printable PDF covering HELOC vs HELOAN mechanics, CLTV math, draw-period vs repayment-period payment scenarios, post-2017 tax treatment, and a checklist for comparing lender offers.

HomeWise sends educational updates only — never lender pitches, never resold to third parties.

Click here for the FREE HELOC & HELOAN Guide

Next steps for Jacksonville homebuyers

  1. Verify the current Duval County FHA loan limit using the official HUD county-lookup tool. Limits are updated annually and supersede any value shown above.
  2. Check the Jacksonville permit and inspection office if evaluating a home that may need repairs. FHA appraisals are stricter than conventional appraisals, and Jacksonville's housing stock includes older neighborhoods where pre-purchase findings are common.
  3. Request written Loan Estimates from three or more lenders licensed to operate in Florida. Federal rules require a Loan Estimate within three business days of a complete application.
  4. Consult a HUD-approved housing counselor in the Duval County area for a neutral pre-purchase review. The counselor's role is education, not loan placement.

More HomeWise guides

HELOC educational guides in other Florida cities:

Related Jacksonville educational guides:


About HomeWise. HomeWise is an educational publisher and reference website. HomeWise is NOT a financial institution, mortgage lender, mortgage broker, loan servicer, real estate agent, or financial advisor. HomeWise does NOT originate, broker, arrange, refer, or service any loan, mortgage, or other financial product, and HomeWise is not affiliated with any lender, broker, originator, servicer, or financial-services company. The information on this page is published for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, tax, or investment advice.

About the information you share. Any information you choose to share with HomeWise (such as name, email address, or phone number) is collected solely to deliver the specific educational materials you request and, if you opt in, to send periodic educational updates over time. HomeWise does NOT sell, share, transfer, or otherwise make your information available to any lender, broker, real estate agent, marketer, data broker, or other third party for any commercial purpose. Every email HomeWise sends includes a one-click unsubscribe link; opting out of educational updates is immediate and permanent.

The Jacksonville and Duval County data referenced above is published as a starting point — always confirm current values via the official county source linked above. Consider speaking with a HUD-approved housing counselor for a neutral review before signing any loan documents. Loan terms, FHA approval, and eligibility depend on individual circumstances and on the policies of the lender you choose; HomeWise has no role in any such decision.