🏡 Mortgages Hub

Buy the asset.
Not just a house.

A mortgage is the biggest financial move you'll make. Most people get it wrong — overpaying, under-researching, letting the bank lead. We'll show you how Multipliers approach home buying: as a strategic wealth move, not just a life milestone.

📊 Today’s Mortgage Rates
30-Year Fixed 6.52%
15-Year Fixed 5.94%
5/1 ARM 6.28%
FHA 30-Year 6.57%
VA 30-Year 6.17%
Rates shown are approximate. Always compare lenders directly.

How Smart Buyers Do It

Eight steps most first-time buyers either skip or do in the wrong order. Don't be most buyers.

01
Know Your Credit Before Anyone Else Does
Your score determines your rate, which determines your payment for 30 years. Pull it now, fix issues first.
Read guide →
02
Get Pre-Approved (Not Pre-Qualified)
Pre-qualification is just a guess. Pre-approval is a verified offer — it wins bidding wars. There's a big difference.
Read guide →
03
Shop At Least Three Lenders
Getting one quote is like accepting the first job offer. Rate shopping with 3+ lenders can save thousands over the loan life.
Read guide →
04
Choose the Right Loan Type
Conventional, FHA, VA, USDA — each has tradeoffs. Your credit score and down payment determine which is actually cheaper.
Compare loans →
05
Understand Closing Costs
2–5% of the purchase price, due at closing. Most buyers are blindsided. You won't be.
Read guide →
06
Lock Your Rate at the Right Time
Rate locks are time-sensitive. Learn when to lock, when to float, and how to avoid getting caught when rates spike.
Read guide →
07
Survive Underwriting
Don't open new credit, change jobs, or move money around. Underwriting is the danger zone most buyers stumble in.
Read guide →
08
Close — and Build Equity on Purpose
Closing is a beginning, not the end. Learn how to build equity faster and turn your home into a real wealth asset.
Read guide →

Mortgage Loan Types Explained

The wrong loan type costs you thousands. Here's what each one is actually for.

Conventional
Most Common
The standard home loan — not backed by the government. Best rates for buyers with 620+ credit and 20% down. Can avoid PMI.
Min. Down
3%
Min. Credit
620
Full guide on Conventional Loans →
FHA Loan
Low Down
Government-backed loans for buyers with lower credit or smaller down payments. Required MIP (mortgage insurance) for the loan's life unless you refinance.
Min. Down
3.5%
Min. Credit
580
Full guide on FHA Loans →
VA Loan
Veterans Only
The best mortgage deal in America for those who qualify. No down payment, no PMI, competitive rates. For active-duty, veterans, and surviving spouses.
Min. Down
0%
Min. Credit
Varies
Full guide on VA Loans →
USDA Loan
Rural Only
Zero down payment loans for homes in eligible rural and suburban areas. Income limits apply. Underused and underrated.
Min. Down
0%
Min. Credit
640
Full guide on USDA Loans →
Jumbo Loan
High Value
For homes above conforming loan limits ($766,550 in most markets in 2026). Stricter requirements — higher income, larger down payment, strong credit.
Min. Down
10–20%
Min. Credit
700+
Full guide on Jumbo Loans →
ARM Loans
Rate Adjusts
Adjustable-Rate Mortgages start fixed for 3, 5, or 7 years, then adjust annually. Lower initial rates — but risk if you stay past the fixed period.
Initial Rate
Lower
Risk Level
Medium
Full guide on ARM Loans →

"Laborers buy a house to live in.
Multipliers buy a house to build wealth in."

The mortgage itself isn't the goal — the equity, the leverage, the long-term asset is. Every decision in this process should be made with that lens.

Read the Beelinger Philosophy →

Mortgage FAQs

The questions everyone Googles at 11pm before their first home purchase.

It depends on the loan type and your goals. FHA loans allow 3.5% down with a 580+ credit score. Conventional loans go as low as 3% down. But putting down less than 20% on a conventional loan triggers PMI (Private Mortgage Insurance), which adds $50–$200/month to your payment. VA and USDA loans require zero down if you qualify. The "right" down payment depends on your cash reserves, your timeline, and whether PMI's cost is worth maintaining liquidity.
Minimum scores vary by loan type: FHA allows as low as 500 (with 10% down) or 580 (with 3.5% down). Conventional loans generally require 620+. VA loans don't have a set minimum, though most lenders want 620+. The real answer is: the higher your score, the lower your rate. Going from 680 to 740+ can save you 0.25–0.75% in rate — that's thousands of dollars over the life of the loan. If your score is below 700, consider spending a few months improving it before applying.
Speed vs. flexibility. A 15-year mortgage has a lower interest rate and you pay far less total interest — but monthly payments are typically 30–40% higher. A 30-year mortgage gives you a lower monthly payment and more cash flow flexibility, which matters a lot if you're investing the difference. The "right" choice depends on your income stability, other investment opportunities, and risk tolerance. Neither is universally better — this decision deserves its own spreadsheet.
Budget 2–5% of the home's purchase price. On a $400,000 home, that's $8,000–$20,000 — in addition to your down payment. Closing costs include lender fees, title insurance, appraisal, attorney fees (in some states), prepaid property taxes, and homeowner's insurance. You'll receive a Loan Estimate within 3 days of applying, and a Closing Disclosure 3 days before close — review both carefully. You can sometimes negotiate with sellers to cover some closing costs, or roll them into the loan.
When the math works — not just because rates dropped. The classic rule was to refinance when you can drop your rate by 1%+, but that's too simple. Use our refinance calculator to find your break-even point: how many months until your monthly savings recoup the closing costs. If you plan to sell before you break even, a refi doesn't make sense. Other reasons to refinance: removing PMI, shortening your term, or tapping equity (cash-out refi) for a high-ROI use like a rental property.
It depends on your timeline, market, and what you'd do with the difference. Buying wins if you stay in the home 5+ years, the market appreciates, and you couldn't invest the down payment more productively elsewhere. Renting wins if you're in a high price-to-rent ratio market, plan to move within 3 years, or have a compelling investment vehicle for your capital. Don't let cultural pressure make this decision for you — run the numbers in our Rent vs. Buy Calculator.

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