Sacramento · VA Loans

VA Loans in Sacramento, CA

Educational, lender-neutral guide for Sacramento, California homeowners weighing how to finance a VA loan.

Home Improvement Calculator

Estimate how much you could access for a VA loan under each program. Add your ZIP code for hyperlocal cost adjustment. Educational illustration only — not a quote.

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Compare all four programs at your numbers

ProgramMax accessEst. monthlyYear 1 costTerm

Illustrative only. Real LTV caps, rates, fees, and qualifying criteria vary by lender, property, occupancy, and credit profile. HomeWise does not originate loans. Compare offers from at least three licensed institutions.

The three programs

Three ways to tap your equity for a VA loan

With meaningful equity, you generally have three realistic ways to fund the project — a cash-out refinance, a HELOC, or a home equity loan. Each lands differently on monthly payment, total cost, and flexibility.

The calculator above sizes each option to your home value and balance; the table below shows when each one fits.

ProgramMax accessBest forRate type
Cash-out RefinanceUp to 80% of home value (100% if VA-eligible)Large projects where you also want to reset the mortgage termFixed
HELOCUp to 90% combined LTV (credit-tiered)Phased projects where you draw funds as work progressesVariable (prime-tied)
Home Equity LoanUp to 90% combined LTV (credit-tiered)Firm contractor bid with one lump-sum paymentFixed

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Local snapshot

Sacramento at a glance

County
Sacramento County
Population
528,706
Median home value
$490,000
Effective property tax
1.10%
Wind/code notes
Sacramento's dominant natural hazard is flooding: the city sits near the confluence of the Sacramento and American Rivers and depends on an extensive levee system, with the low-lying Natomas basin historically among the nation's more flood-prone urban areas. Federal, state, and local agencies (the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the Sacramento Area Flood Control Agency) have been rebuilding levees toward a 200-year level of flood protection, and buyers should confirm a property's FEMA flood-zone status and any required flood insurance. Most of the valley-floor city is not mapped in CAL FIRE's High or Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zones, but foothill and wildland-urban-interface areas east of the county carry greater wildfire risk, and regional wildfire smoke can affect air quality. As some insurers have pulled back from higher-risk areas statewide, a growing number of California homeowners rely on the FAIR Plan, the state's fire insurer of last resort, which covers basic fire perils only and generally must be paired with a separate policy; seismic risk exists but is generally lower than in coastal California.

Common remodel areas: Midtown, East Sacramento, Land Park, Natomas, Oak Park.

Sacramento is California's state capital and one of the state's larger cities, with a housing stock that ranges from historic bungalows and Victorians in central neighborhoods to newer tract subdivisions in outlying areas like Natomas and the surrounding suburbs. As of mid-2026, typical home values sit in the high-$400,000s to around $500,000, well below California's coastal metros but still above the national median, which shapes the down payment and monthly-cost math many local buyers face. Property taxes generally start from California's roughly 1% Proposition 13 base plus voter-approved bond measures and, in some newer developments, Mello-Roos special assessments, so a new buyer's effective rate commonly lands somewhat above 1% of the purchase price. Buyers here also weigh river-and-levee flood exposure and, in foothill-adjacent areas, wildfire and insurance considerations.

Typical scope & cost

What Sacramento VA loans actually cost

Sacramento cost guide: Entry-level ~$230,000 · Mid-range ~$460,000 · Premium ~$920,000.

Sacramento projects run at ~115% of the U.S. national average for this category.

Project scopeWhat it typically includes
First-time VA purchaseZero down payment, no PMI, funding fee can be financed. Eligibility verified via Certificate of Eligibility (COE) from VA.gov.
VA cash-out refinanceUp to 100% LTV (highest in industry). Useful for major equity access — also see our Cash-out Refinance topic. Funding fee applies again.
VA IRRRL (Streamline Refinance)Lower-doc rate-and-term refinance from one VA loan to another. No appraisal in most cases, lower funding fee, no income verification typically required.
FAQs

Common questions about VA loans in Sacramento

Does Sacramento require a permit for a VA loan?
In Sacramento (Sacramento County), permits are typically required when the project moves plumbing, alters electrical, changes the footprint, or relocates fixtures. Cosmetic-only work usually doesn't require one. The authoritative source is the Sacramento County building inspection office — see the permit-office link in the stats panel above. Pulling a required permit also protects future insurance claims and resale.
Who qualifies for a VA loan?
Active duty (90+ continuous days during wartime, 181 in peacetime), veterans with honorable or general discharge, National Guard/Reserves with 6+ years of service, and surviving spouses of servicemembers who died in service or from service-related causes. Verify via Certificate of Eligibility at VA.gov.
How much is the VA funding fee?
First-use purchase: 2.15% of loan amount. Subsequent use: 3.30%. Cash-out refi: 2.15% / 3.30%. IRRRL: 0.50%. Borrowers with 10%+ service-connected disability are EXEMPT. Funding fee is typically financed into the loan.
Can I use a VA loan more than once?
Yes. Your VA entitlement is restored after you sell a VA-financed home and pay off the loan. You can also use Second-Tier Entitlement to have two VA loans at once in specific situations (relocation, second home in another state).
Are VA loans always the best option?
Usually but not always. If you have 20%+ down, excellent credit, and don't want to pay the funding fee, conventional can sometimes win on total cost — especially on a primary mortgage that you plan to keep for many years. Always run both scenarios.
Can I use a VA loan for an investment property?
No — VA loans are for primary residences only. You can own up to a 4-unit property and live in one unit (the other units can be rented), but you can't buy a property purely for investment with a VA loan.