*6 min read · Last updated June 22, 2026*
In this article
– The four program types, and how each one repays – The purchase-price limit nobody warns you about – Which type to use when you qualify for more than one – Whether multiple programs can stack – The application sequence that keeps your options open – FAQ
The typical first-time buyer is now 40 years old, and the share of first-time buyers in the market has hit a record low. So when a buyer finally qualifies for assistance, the stakes are high. Picture this: you are approved for three programs at once. A forgivable grant worth $15,000. A silent second covering 5% of the purchase price. A matched savings program worth $10,000. The instinct is to grab all three. The real question is which one fits your purchase, and whether you are even allowed to combine them.
The four program types
Down payment assistance comes in four common structures, and the difference is entirely about how, or whether, you pay it back.
A forgivable grant is money you do not repay, as long as you stay in the home for a set period, often five years. Move out early and you repay part or all of it. These are the most common and the most valuable, because the obligation disappears if you simply live there.
A silent second is a second mortgage with no monthly payment. It sits behind your main loan and comes due only when you sell, refinance, or pay off the first mortgage. It is “silent” because you feel nothing month to month, but the balance is real and gets settled at the end.
A low-interest second loan does carry a monthly payment, usually small, at a rate below your main mortgage. You repay it like a regular loan, just on cheaper terms.
A matched savings program, sometimes called an IDA, matches money you deposit into a dedicated account over time. Save $5,000 and the program might add $5,000 or more. The catch is timing: these require you to start saving months before you buy.
Our companion piece on down payment assistance programs every renter should check covers how to confirm you are eligible in the first place.
The purchase-price limit
Most buyers focus on the income ceiling. Income is the wrong number to lead with.
The filter that quietly disqualifies more buyers is the purchase-price limit. Many state and local programs cap the eligible home price somewhere between $350,000 and $450,000. In much of the Northeast and the West Coast, that rules out a large share of available homes before income even enters the picture.
So check the price cap first. If the homes you are actually shopping sit above the program’s ceiling, your income qualifying does not matter. You can be perfectly eligible on paper and still have no home that fits the rules. The 18-month financial checklist before buying your first home is the right place to confirm your target price range before you start matching programs to it.
Which type to use
When you qualify for more than one program, rank them by how soon you plan to move, not by dollar amount.
If you expect to stay in the home a long time, a forgivable grant is usually the best choice. You meet the residency period, the obligation vanishes, and you keep the full amount. The dollar figure being smaller than a silent second often does not matter, because the silent second still has to be repaid eventually.
If you might move within a few years, weigh the forgiveness window carefully. A $15,000 forgivable grant with a five-year clause becomes a $15,000 repayment if you sell in year four. A smaller grant with a shorter clause, or a low-interest loan you have been paying down, can leave you better off.
A matched savings program is the one to claim earliest, because it only works if you set it up before you need the cash. If you are buying in 60 days, that option is already off the table.

Whether programs stack
Stacking is allowed more often than buyers assume, but not universally. The general pattern: a forgivable grant and a silent second can frequently be combined, because they come from different funding sources and serve different parts of the cost.
What rarely stacks cleanly is two programs from the same funding agency, or two that both claim to cover the same down payment dollars. Programs also have a layering order. A grant applied to the down payment and a separate credit applied to closing costs can both apply, since they target different expenses. The prepaid and closing items that assistance can cover are detailed in where the closing-cost surprise comes from.
The only reliable way to confirm stacking is to ask each program administrator directly whether their assistance can be combined with the specific other programs you named. Get the answer in writing.
| Program type | Repaid? | Set up before buying? | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Forgivable grant | No, if you stay the full term | No | Buyers staying past the forgiveness window |
| Silent second | Yes, at sale or refinance | No | Buyers who need the largest upfront amount |
| Low-interest second | Yes, monthly | No | Buyers comfortable with a small extra payment |
| Matched savings | No, it is matched cash | Yes, months ahead | Buyers planning 6-12 months out |
The application sequence
Run the steps in this order. First, confirm the purchase-price cap on each program against the homes you are shopping. Second, set up any matched savings account early, since it is the only option with a long lead time. Third, ask each administrator in writing whether the programs stack. Fourth, choose your first-mortgage lender from the program’s approved-lender list, not the other way around.
That last step is where buyers most often lose assistance. Many programs only release funds through lenders they have approved. If you lock in a mortgage first and your lender is not on the list, you can be forced to start over or walk away from the help entirely. When you reach the financing step, you can compare approved mortgage lenders and rates to find one that works with your program.
FAQ
Can I really combine more than one down payment assistance program? Often yes. A forgivable grant and a silent second from different funding sources frequently stack, especially when one covers the down payment and the other covers closing costs. Two programs from the same agency, or two targeting the same dollars, usually do not. Confirm in writing with each administrator.
What counts as a first-time home buyer? Most programs define it as someone who has not owned a primary residence in the past three years. So a former owner who has rented for three years can often qualify again. Each program sets its own rule, so check the exact definition.
Why does the purchase-price limit matter more than income? Income limits disqualify some buyers, but many programs also cap the eligible home price between $350,000 and $450,000. In higher-cost regions, that price cap rules out most homes regardless of your income. Check the price cap against your target homes first.
Do I have to repay a forgivable grant if I sell early? Usually yes. Forgivable grants typically require you to stay in the home for a set period, often five years. Sell or move out before that window closes and you repay part or all of the grant, often on a prorated schedule.
Should I pick my mortgage lender before or after choosing a program? After. Most assistance programs only work with lenders on their approved list. If you commit to a lender first and they are not approved, you can lose access to the help. Confirm the program, then choose an approved lender.




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