VA Loan Approval Guidelines: What Actually Gets You Approved in 2026
The Complete Guide for Veterans, Active-Duty, and Eligible Surviving Spouses
Serving Veterans Nationwide | LoanGoal / Access Capital Group, Inc. | NMLS #33043 | (602) 648-5860 | www.loangoal.com
| This section answers the #1 question veterans ask: “What actually gets me approved for a VA loan?” — not just the theory, but the real underwriting factors lenders use, in plain English. LoanGoal / Access Capital Group has been approving VA loans since 2001, including scores down to 500, with no lender overlays. |
The VA loan program is the most powerful home financing benefit available to U.S. military veterans and active-duty service members. But getting approved involves more than just checking a credit score box. The VA uses a unique, holistic underwriting approach that weighs multiple factors — and knowing exactly how those factors work can mean the difference between an approval and a denial.
This guide is a deep-dive into every VA approval factor: residual income, DTI, credit, employment, manual underwriting, compensating factors, and the lender overlay problem that causes most VA loan denials. Whether you’re buying in Arizona, Texas, California, Florida, or anywhere across the U.S., these guidelines apply.
| VA Loan Approval — At a Glance (2026 Quick Reference) |
| Minimum Credit Score | No VA minimum — 500+ possible via manual underwriting (LoanGoal specialty) |
| Down Payment Required | 0% — No down payment in most cases |
| Mortgage Insurance (PMI) | None — ever |
| Max DTI Guideline | ~41% standard; higher approved with compensating factors |
| Key Approval Factor | Residual income (unique to VA — more important than DTI) |
| Manual Underwriting | Yes — LoanGoal accepts manual underwriting down to 500 score |
| Lender Overlays | LoanGoal has NO overlays — we follow VA guidelines directly |
| Funding Fee | 2.15%–3.3% (waived for service-connected disabled veterans) |
| Seller Concessions Allowed | Yes — up to 4% + standard closing costs |
| Phone / Apply | (602) 648-5860 | www.loangoal.com/apply-now/ |
| Residual Income: The #1 VA Approval Factor Most Lenders Get Wrong |
What is VA Residual Income — and Why Does It Matter More Than Your Credit Score?
If there’s one concept every veteran needs to understand before applying for a VA loan, it’s residual income. Unlike conventional or FHA loans — which are primarily credit-score-driven — the VA places its heaviest emphasis on residual income. This is the single most important approval factor in VA underwriting.
Residual income is the net monthly money remaining after all major obligations are paid. The VA uses it to ensure you have enough left over to actually live on after your mortgage, debts, and taxes are covered. It’s a financial buffer — and the VA takes it seriously.
How VA Residual Income is Calculated
Residual income is computed as:
| Gross Monthly Income MINUS Monthly Mortgage Payment (PITI) MINUS All Monthly Debt Obligations MINUS Federal, State & Local Taxes MINUS Estimated Maintenance & Utilities = RESIDUAL INCOME |
VA Residual Income Requirements by Region & Family Size (2026)
The VA sets minimum residual income thresholds based on your loan amount, family size, and region of the country. Here are the standard benchmarks:
| Family Size | Northeast / West | South / Midwest |
| 1 person | $390/mo | $382/mo |
| 2 people | $654/mo | $641/mo |
| 3 people | $788/mo | $772/mo |
| 4 people | $888/mo | $868/mo |
| 5 people | $921/mo | $902/mo |
| Each additional | +$75/mo | +$75/mo |
| Note: For loan amounts under $80,000, residual income minimums are slightly lower. For loans over $80,000, the figures above apply. The Southwest / Mountain states (including Arizona) fall under the South/Midwest region. |
Why Every Veteran Needs to Understand Residual Income Before Applying
Home prices have risen significantly across the country — from the Sun Belt to the Pacific Coast to the Southeast and beyond. In many markets, this means your monthly PITI (principal, interest, taxes, and insurance) payment is higher than it would have been just a few years ago, which directly reduces your calculated residual income. No matter what state you’re buying in, understanding your residual income position before you apply gives you a major advantage and helps you avoid surprises at underwriting.
| FREE VA RESIDUAL INCOME CALCULATOR Know your numbers before you apply — use the same calculation your VA underwriter will run. www.loangoal.com/va-residual-income-calculator/ |
What Happens if Your Residual Income is Strong?
Strong residual income is one of the most powerful compensating factors in VA underwriting. If your residual income is 20% or more above the minimum threshold, it can offset a high DTI ratio, a lower credit score, or other risk factors. This is often how LoanGoal is able to approve borrowers that other lenders have turned down.
What if My Residual Income is Too Low?
If your residual income falls below the VA minimums, approval becomes more difficult. However, strategies exist:
Add a co-borrower whose income boosts the residual income calculation
Pay down debts before closing to reduce monthly obligations
Negotiate seller concessions to reduce your cash out of pocket
Choose a lower purchase price to reduce the mortgage payment
Request a VA loan review with our team — we can often find a path others miss
| Debt-to-Income Ratio (DTI): The Other Key Metric |
What is DTI — and What’s the VA’s Limit?
Debt-to-income ratio (DTI) is the percentage of your gross monthly income that goes toward debt payments. It’s expressed as a ratio of your total monthly debts (including the proposed mortgage payment) divided by your gross monthly income.
| DTI Formula: Total Monthly Debts ÷ Gross Monthly Income × 100 = DTI % Example: $2,200 in debts ÷ $6,000 gross income = 36.7% DTI |
What Does the VA Say About DTI?
The VA’s published guideline is a 41% DTI cap — but this is not a hard limit. The VA explicitly allows lenders to approve loans above 41% DTI when compensating factors are present. This is a crucial distinction that many lenders get wrong by refusing any loan over 41% DTI without looking at the full picture.
| DTI Under 41% | Standard approval territory — easiest path through automated underwriting |
| DTI 41%–50% | Requires compensating factors (strong residual income, good credit, reserves, stable employment) |
| DTI Over 50% | Manual underwriting required; strong compensating factors needed; possible but more challenging |
| LoanGoal Approach | We evaluate the full picture — DTI is one factor, not the only factor |
Front-End vs. Back-End DTI — Does the VA Care?
The VA primarily focuses on back-end (total) DTI — the ratio that includes all debts, not just housing. While some conventional loan programs scrutinize the front-end (housing-only) ratio separately, the VA’s residual income calculation effectively accomplishes the same quality check in a more nuanced way.
What Debts Count in VA DTI Calculations?
Proposed monthly mortgage payment (P&I + taxes + insurance + HOA if applicable)
Minimum monthly credit card payments
Auto loan payments
Student loan payments (even if deferred — typically 1% of balance or the actual payment)
Personal loan payments
Child support or alimony obligations
Any installment loan with more than 10 months remaining
Note: Monthly expenses like utilities, groceries, phone bills, and subscriptions do NOT count in DTI — those are captured in the residual income calculation instead.
| Credit Score Requirements: What the VA Really Says |
Does the VA Have a Minimum Credit Score?
No. The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs does NOT set a minimum credit score requirement for VA home loans. This is one of the most misunderstood facts in mortgage lending. When you hear a lender say “you need a 620 to get a VA loan,” that’s not the VA speaking — that’s the lender’s own policy (called a lender overlay), which is stricter than what the VA actually requires.
| The VA has NO minimum credit score. Most denials below 620 are caused by lender overlays — not VA guidelines. LoanGoal is a No-Overlay Lender and follows VA underwriting guidelines directly, which is why we can approve scores down to 500. |
Credit Score Ranges and What to Expect in 2026
| 700+ | Excellent — best rates, fastest automated approval, strong negotiating position |
| 660–699 | Very good — strong approval likelihood, competitive rates |
| 620–659 | Good — standard approval with most lenders; may need AUS approval |
| 580–619 | Challenging for many lenders but within LoanGoal’s range — may require manual underwriting |
| 500–579 | Manual underwriting required; residual income and compensating factors become critical — LoanGoal specialty |
| Below 500 | Very limited options; most lenders, including LoanGoal, require a minimum of 500 |
What is a Lender Overlay — and Why Does It Matter?
A lender overlay is a lending policy that is stricter than the actual VA underwriting guidelines. For example, the VA may approve a 550 credit score loan with manual underwriting, but a lender with a 620 overlay will deny that same loan before it ever reaches the VA’s guidelines.
Most major banks and many mortgage companies have overlays. This is the #1 reason veterans get denied for VA loans they should qualify for. At LoanGoal / Access Capital Group, we have operated as a No-Overlay Lender since 2001. We apply the VA’s actual guidelines — not our own more restrictive policies — which means we can often approve what others can’t.
How Does Credit Score Affect VA Loan Interest Rates?
While the VA loan program is inherently more flexible than conventional loans, your credit score still influences the interest rate your lender offers. Higher scores generally mean lower rates. However, because VA loans are government-guaranteed, the rate differential between scores is typically smaller than it would be on a conventional loan — another advantage of the VA program.
| Manual Underwriting: The Key for Borrowers Most Lenders Turn Away |
What is VA Manual Underwriting — and Do I Qualify?
When a VA loan cannot receive an automated approval through the VA’s Automated Underwriting System (AUS) — typically due to a low credit score, higher DTI, recent late payments, or other risk factors — the loan may be manually underwritten. Manual underwriting means a human underwriter reviews the entire loan file and makes a judgment-based decision using the VA’s full underwriting guidelines.
This is where experience matters enormously. Not all lenders offer manual underwriting. Many will simply decline any loan that doesn’t receive an automated approval. LoanGoal has specialized in VA manual underwriting since 2001 and has helped thousands of veterans get approved this way.
What Does a Manual Underwriter Look At?
Your 12–24 month payment history — not just the score, but the actual payment record
Explanation for any derogatory items (late payments, collections, judgments)
Evidence of re-established credit following hardship
Residual income strength (often the decisive factor in manual files)
Employment history and stability
Cash reserves after closing
The nature and cause of any credit issues (medical bills vs. willful nonpayment, etc.)
What Are Compensating Factors in VA Manual Underwriting?
Compensating factors are positive elements of your loan profile that offset risk. The VA explicitly allows underwriters to approve loans that exceed standard guidelines when strong compensating factors exist. Examples include:
| Strong Residual Income | Residual income 20%+ above the VA minimum threshold — the most powerful compensating factor |
| Low DTI | A DTI well below 41% when other risk factors are present |
| Minimal Discretionary Debt | Little or no consumer debt (credit cards, car loans, etc.) |
| Cash Reserves | Significant cash or liquid assets remaining after closing (ideally 3+ months of payments) |
| Down Payment | Any down payment made voluntarily on a VA loan (rare, but powerful when present) |
| Long-Term Employment | 5+ years with the same employer or in the same field |
| Re-established Credit | A documented pattern of on-time payments after a prior hardship |
| Military Benefits / Housing Allowance | Long-term BAH stability adds predictability to income analysis |
| Property Appreciation Potential | Strong local market conditions and equity position |
| LoanGoal’s Approach: We build your file around your strengths, not your weaknesses. If your credit score is low but your residual income is strong and your payment history is clean for the last 12 months, that’s a case we know how to make. We’ve been doing it for 25 years. |
| Employment & Income: What VA Underwriters Verify |
What Kind of Income Qualifies for a VA Loan?
VA underwriters verify that your income is stable, reliable, and likely to continue for at least the next three years. The type of income matters — some are easy to document and fully countable; others require additional documentation.
| W-2 Employment | Easiest to qualify — 2 years of employment history required; recent graduates with strong job offers may qualify sooner |
| Self-Employment / 1099 | 2 years of self-employment required; average of 2-year net income used; strong business stability needed |
| Military Pay / BAH / BAS | Fully countable; BAH and BAS are non-taxable which gives VA borrowers an income gross-up advantage |
| VA Disability Compensation | Fully countable and non-taxable — very strong income type for VA purposes; disability pay also waives the VA funding fee |
| Social Security / Retirement | Countable with award letters; non-taxable income receives a 25% gross-up in many cases |
| Part-Time Income | Countable with 2-year history of receiving it from the same source |
| Rental Income | Countable at 75% of verified rental receipts after PITI on rental property |
| Child Support / Alimony | Countable if documented to continue for 3+ years |
How is Military BAH Treated in VA Loan Qualifying?
This is one of the biggest advantages VA borrowers have. BAH (Basic Allowance for Housing) and BAS (Basic Allowance for Subsistence) are non-taxable income. VA guidelines allow lenders to gross up non-taxable income by up to 25% when calculating qualifying income — meaning a veteran receiving $2,000/month in BAH can treat it as $2,500 for qualifying purposes. This meaningfully increases buying power.
What About Employment Gaps?
Employment gaps don’t automatically disqualify you, but they require explanation. Common acceptable explanations include:
Military service or deployment
Documented medical leave
Return to school or vocational training
Laid off but re-employed in the same field within a reasonable time
The key is documentation. A written explanation letter (LOX) combined with supporting documents (separation papers, school transcripts, medical records, etc.) allows an underwriter to view the gap as a temporary disruption rather than a sign of income instability.
| Collections, Bankruptcy, Foreclosure & Derogatory Credit: The Real Rules |
Can I Get a VA Loan with Collections or Charge-Offs?
Yes — and this is where VA loans truly shine versus other programs. The VA does not require that all collections or charge-offs be paid off as a condition of loan approval. Whether a collection needs to be paid is determined by the underwriter based on the type of debt, the amount, the age, and the overall credit profile.
| Medical Collections | Generally do not need to be paid; VA guidelines are lenient on medical debt |
| Non-Medical Collections | Do not automatically need to be paid, but larger recent collections may require explanation or payoff depending on the underwriter’s judgment |
| Charge-Offs | Do not automatically need to be repaid; underwriter will review the circumstance |
| Judgments | Active judgments are typically required to be resolved or on an established payment plan |
| Tax Liens | Must be on an established repayment agreement with at least 3 months of timely payments documented |
How Long After Bankruptcy Can I Get a VA Loan?
The VA has some of the shortest mandatory waiting periods in the mortgage industry after major credit events:
| Chapter 7 Bankruptcy | 2 years from discharge date — one of the shortest waiting periods of any loan program |
| Chapter 13 Bankruptcy | 12 months of on-time plan payments + trustee/court approval; no waiting period after discharge if payments were current |
| Foreclosure | 2 years from foreclosure completion date |
| Short Sale / Deed in Lieu | 2 years — though timing may vary based on whether the VA had a prior guarantee on the property |
| Important: These are VA guidelines. Lenders with overlays often impose longer waiting periods (3 years, 4 years). LoanGoal follows VA minimums — not lender overlays. If you’ve been told you have to wait longer after a bankruptcy or foreclosure, call us for a second opinion. |
Can I Get a VA Loan with a Prior VA Foreclosure?
Yes, but there is an important nuance. If you had a prior VA loan that ended in foreclosure, the VA may have suffered a loss on that loan. In that case, your VA entitlement may be reduced or you may owe the VA a debt. This situation requires a careful review of your entitlement status, which our team can walk you through. In many cases, veterans can still use remaining entitlement or restore full entitlement over time.
| Automated vs. Manual Underwriting: Which Path Are You On? |
What is the VA Automated Underwriting System (AUS)?
The VA uses an automated underwriting system — most commonly Fannie Mae’s Desktop Underwriter (DU) or Freddie Mac’s Loan Product Advisor (LPA) set to VA parameters — to initially evaluate your loan application. The AUS ingests your credit report, income data, and loan details and returns a recommendation: Approve/Eligible, Refer, or Refer with Caution.
| Approve/Eligible | Clean automated approval — loan can proceed without additional underwriter scrutiny on risk factors |
| Refer | No automated approval — loan must go to manual underwriting; does NOT mean denial |
| Refer with Caution | Heightened risk indicators — manual underwriting required with additional scrutiny |
A “Refer” result is where most lenders stop and issue a denial. At LoanGoal, a Refer result is the beginning of the conversation — we assess whether manual underwriting is a viable path and build the file accordingly.
| State-Specific & Geographic Considerations for VA Loan Approval |
Does Location Affect VA Loan Approval?
VA loan underwriting guidelines are federal and apply the same way across all 50 states. However, several location-specific factors do affect your loan:
| County Loan Limits | Since 2020, veterans with full entitlement have NO VA loan limit regardless of county. Veterans with partial entitlement may still be subject to county limits. |
| Property Taxes | Vary significantly by state and county — affects your PITI payment and therefore your residual income calculation |
| Homeowners Insurance | Rates vary by region (hurricane zones, wildfire areas) — higher premiums affect residual income |
| HOA Fees | Arizona condos and HOA communities are common; HOA dues count in the payment for qualifying |
| Flood Zones | Properties in FEMA flood zones require flood insurance — counts in the residual income calculation |
| VA MPR Compliance | Some older or rural properties may need repairs to meet VA Minimum Property Requirements |
Veterans Nationwide: How Location Affects Your Residual Income
Whether you’re buying in Texas, California, Florida, Georgia, Virginia, North Carolina, Washington, Colorado, Nevada, or any other state, rising home prices across the country mean residual income structuring matters everywhere. Working with a lender who knows how to properly structure your VA loan around residual income requirements is critical regardless of where you’re purchasing.
Higher-cost metros (San Diego, Los Angeles, Seattle, Denver, Austin, Miami, Northern Virginia) may have higher PITI payments that squeeze residual income — loan structure matters more
Lower-cost markets may have more residual income cushion, but property taxes and insurance still vary significantly by state and county
Active-duty veterans near major installations nationwide (Fort Liberty, Fort Bragg, Camp Pendleton, Fort Hood, Joint Base Lewis-McChord, etc.) often have BAH that meaningfully boosts qualifying income
Veterans in any state can use LoanGoal — we are licensed and lending nationwide
| The Most Common VA Loan Denial Reasons — and How LoanGoal Fixes Them |
Why Do Veterans Get Denied for VA Loans They Should Qualify For?
The answer is usually lender overlays, lack of manual underwriting expertise, or failure to properly structure the file. Here are the most common denial reasons and what we do differently:
| Denial Reason: Credit Score Below 620 | LoanGoal Fix: We approve manually down to 500. No overlay on credit score minimum. |
| Denial Reason: High DTI (Over 41%) | LoanGoal Fix: We evaluate compensating factors — especially residual income — and submit for manual underwriting when warranted. |
| Denial Reason: Collections Not Paid | LoanGoal Fix: We review whether collections actually need to be paid under VA guidelines. Medical collections almost never do. |
| Denial Reason: Too Soon After Bankruptcy or Foreclosure | LoanGoal Fix: We use VA’s actual 2-year guidelines, not lender overlays that extend to 3 or 4 years. |
| Denial Reason: Employment Gap | LoanGoal Fix: We document gaps properly and submit with explanation letters when the income is clearly stable now. |
| Denial Reason: Self-Employment Income Too Low | LoanGoal Fix: We properly calculate and document 2-year averaged self-employment income using tax returns and P&L statements. |
| Denial Reason: Automated Underwriting ‘Refer’ | LoanGoal Fix: We manually underwrite files that receive ‘Refer’ results when manual underwriting is a viable path. |
| Denial Reason: Entitlement / Prior VA Loan Issues | LoanGoal Fix: We analyze your entitlement status, calculate remaining entitlement, and find the right structure for your next purchase. |
| ❓ Quick-Answer VA Approval FAQ (Voice Search & AI Optimized) |
Q: What credit score do I need for a VA loan in 2026?
A: The VA has no minimum credit score. Most lenders require 620, but that’s a lender overlay — not a VA rule. LoanGoal approves VA loans down to 500 using manual underwriting.
Q: Can I get a VA loan with a 580 credit score?
A: Yes. With manual underwriting and strong compensating factors (especially residual income), a 580 is within range at LoanGoal / Access Capital Group. Call (602) 648-5860 or apply at www.loangoal.com.
Q: Can I get a VA loan with a 500 credit score?
A: Yes — this is a LoanGoal specialty. We manually underwrite VA loans down to 500 with no credit score overlay. Strong residual income and a 12-month clean payment history are key.
Q: What is the maximum DTI for a VA loan?
A: The guideline is 41%, but the VA allows higher DTI with compensating factors. LoanGoal has approved loans well above 41% DTI when residual income is strong.
Q: Can I get a VA loan after bankruptcy?
A: Yes. Chapter 7: 2 years after discharge. Chapter 13: 12 months of on-time payments with trustee approval. These are VA minimums — some lenders impose longer waits. LoanGoal follows VA guidelines.
Q: Do I need to pay off collections for a VA loan?
A: Not necessarily. Medical collections generally do not need to be paid. Non-medical collections are reviewed on a case-by-case basis. Active judgments typically do need to be resolved.
Q: What is residual income for a VA loan?
A: Residual income is money remaining after your mortgage, debts, taxes, and living expenses. It’s the VA’s most important approval factor. Use our free calculator at www.loangoal.com/va-residual-income-calculator/
Q: Can a veteran with bad credit get a VA loan?
A: Yes — especially through manual underwriting. LoanGoal has been approving VA loans for veterans with challenging credit since 2001. “Bad credit” is not a disqualifier under VA guidelines — it triggers manual underwriting, which is a strength for us.
Q: What is a lender overlay on a VA loan?
A: A lender overlay is a lending requirement stricter than VA guidelines — like a 620 minimum credit score or a 41% hard DTI cap. LoanGoal is a No-Overlay Lender and follows VA guidelines directly.
Q: What is manual underwriting for a VA loan?
A: Manual underwriting is when a human reviews your full file — not just an algorithm. It allows approval of loans that automated systems decline. LoanGoal specializes in VA manual underwriting down to 500 score.
| Ready to Find Out If You Qualify? Talk to a VA Loan Specialist |
| LoanGoal / Access Capital Group, Inc. has specialized in VA loans since 2001. We are a No-Overlay Lender — meaning we follow the VA’s actual guidelines, not our own stricter policies. We approve VA loans down to 500 credit score via manual underwriting. If you’ve been declined, it may be due to a lender overlay. Call us for a second look. |
| Phone | (602) 648-5860 |
| Website | www.loangoal.com |
| Apply Online | www.loangoal.com/apply-now/ |
| VA Loan Info | www.loangoal.com/loan-options/featured/va-loan-zero-down-loan-500-minimum-credit/ |
| Residual Income Calculator | www.loangoal.com/va-residual-income-calculator/ |
| VA Entitlement Calculator | www.loangoal.com/2026-va-partial-entitlement-calculator/ |
| VA Loan Calculator | www.loangoal.com/va-loan-calculator/ |
| Today’s Rates | www.loangoal.com/todays-rates/ |
| NMLS | #33043 |
| Serving | Veterans and Active-Duty Nationwide Since 2001 |
Thank You for Your Service. Let Us Handle the Loan.
LoanGoal / Access Capital Group, Inc. — Your Mortgage Solution Since 2001 — NMLS #33043




