The VA home loan benefit is one of the most generous mortgage programs in the country — but eligibility isn't automatic. You need to meet specific service requirements, obtain a Certificate of Eligibility, and satisfy credit and income standards set by lenders. This guide walks through every VA loan eligibility requirement for Florida veterans in 2026, so you know exactly where you stand before making a move.
I'm Joe Pistone, Originating Branch Manager at CrossCountry Mortgage (NMLS# 2087918). I've helped veterans and active-duty service members across Florida navigate the VA qualification process — including cases other lenders said were impossible. Let's break it all down.
Step 1: Service Requirements — Do You Qualify as a Veteran?
The foundation of VA loan eligibility is your military service record. The VA has established minimum service requirements that determine whether you're entitled to the benefit. These vary based on when and how you served.
Current Active-Duty Service Members
Active-duty service members are eligible after serving 90 continuous days. You don't need to wait until you're discharged — you can use your VA benefit while still serving, which many active-duty members stationed at Florida bases (MacDill AFB, Patrick SFB, Eglin AFB, NAS Pensacola, etc.) take advantage of.
Character of Discharge
Your discharge status matters. The following discharge types generally qualify:
- Honorable Discharge — Always qualifies
- General Discharge (Under Honorable Conditions) — Qualifies in most cases
- Other Than Honorable (OTH) — Subject to VA Character of Discharge review; not automatic
- Dishonorable Discharge — Does not qualify
- Bad Conduct Discharge — Case-by-case review required
If you received an OTH discharge and believe it was unjust or based on circumstances related to your service, you can apply for a Character of Discharge review with the VA. Many veterans who were initially denied have successfully obtained benefit eligibility through this process.
Step 2: Certificate of Eligibility (COE) — Proving Your Entitlement
Your Certificate of Eligibility (COE) is the official document that proves to a lender that you meet the VA's service requirements. Every VA loan application requires a COE — but obtaining one is typically simple and fast.
Through Your Lender (Fastest — Minutes)
Most lenders, including CrossCountry Mortgage, can pull your COE electronically through the VA's WebLGY system in minutes. I can typically confirm your COE status on the first call. This is the easiest option for the majority of veterans.
Online at VA.gov (1–3 Days)
Visit VA.gov and apply through the online portal using your DS Logon, My HealtheVet, or Login.gov credentials. For most veterans with electronic records, this is instant.
By Mail with VA Form 26-1880 (Weeks)
Veterans with older service records or complex service histories may need to submit VA Form 26-1880 by mail to the VA Regional Loan Center. This takes longer but is necessary when electronic records are incomplete.
VA Regional Loan Center — Atlanta Serves Florida
Florida veterans are served by the Atlanta Regional Loan Center. For complex COE situations or disputes, you can contact them directly at 1-888-768-2132.
Your COE also shows how much entitlement you have available. Full entitlement (shown as a "basic" plus "bonus" entitlement) means no loan limit applies to your purchase. Reduced entitlement — from a previous VA loan still active — may limit your zero-down purchasing power on a new home.
Step 3: Credit Requirements — What Lenders Actually Need
The VA itself sets no minimum credit score. However, every lender that offers VA loans sets its own credit overlay. In 2026, the practical credit floor for most VA lenders, including CrossCountry Mortgage, is:
| Credit Score Range | VA Loan Outcome | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 760+ | Best rates and terms available | Prime qualification |
| 720–759 | Excellent — strong rate pricing | Competitive terms |
| 680–719 | Good — qualifies easily | Minor rate adjustment possible |
| 640–679 | Qualifies — additional scrutiny | Compensating factors strengthen file |
| 620–639 | Minimum threshold — most lenders | Strong compensating factors required |
| Below 620 | Difficult — specialized lenders only | Manual underwrite with strong factors |
What If My Score Is Below 620?
Don't give up. If your credit score is below 620, here's what I recommend:
- Pull your credit report from all three bureaus and dispute any inaccurate negative items
- Pay down revolving credit card balances below 30% utilization (ideally below 10%)
- Avoid opening any new credit accounts for 6–12 months
- Address any collections accounts — paid collections are treated more favorably
With a strategic credit improvement plan, many veterans move from below-620 to 640+ in 3–6 months. I work with veterans in this situation regularly and can map out a specific path for your file.
Step 4: Residual Income — The Requirement Unique to VA Loans
This is the VA requirement that most lenders and borrowers don't discuss enough — and it's the one that truly sets VA underwriting apart from every other loan program.
Residual income is the money left over each month after paying all major financial obligations, including your new housing payment (principal, interest, taxes, insurance, HOA), all installment debts (car loans, student loans), and revolving minimums. It represents your ability to meet basic living expenses — food, utilities, maintenance, childcare — after all debt is serviced.
Southeast Region Residual Income Requirements (Florida)
The VA uses regional tables to set residual income minimums. Florida falls in the Southeast region. Minimums are based on loan size and family size:
| Family Size | Loans Under $80,000 | Loans $80,000 and Over |
|---|---|---|
| 1 person | $390 | $441 |
| 2 persons | $654 | $738 |
| 3 persons | $788 | $889 |
| 4 persons | $888 | $1,003 |
| 5 persons | $921 | $1,039 |
| Add for each additional | +$75 | +$80 |
For a family of four purchasing a $400,000 Florida home (loan well over $80,000), the VA requires at least $1,003 per month in residual income after all obligations. This is not a high bar for most working households — but it can affect approvals for veterans with very high debt loads relative to income.
The VA's residual income requirement has a documented track record of producing exceptionally low default rates compared to other loan programs. It's not an obstacle — it's the VA looking out for veterans and making sure homeownership is truly sustainable for your family.
Step 5: Debt-to-Income (DTI) Ratio — Flexible, Not Fixed
The VA's guideline DTI is 41%, meaning your total monthly debt obligations (including the new housing payment) should not exceed 41% of your gross monthly income. However, unlike conventional loans with hard cutoffs, VA DTI guidelines are genuinely flexible when compensating factors are present.
Compensating Factors That Allow Higher DTI
A VA loan can be approved with DTI above 41% when the borrower demonstrates:
- Exceptional residual income — significantly above the regional minimum
- Low loan-to-value ratio — putting money down reduces risk
- Strong credit score — 700+ offsets income concerns
- Long-term stable employment — 5+ years with the same employer
- Tax-free income — VA disability or other non-taxable income increases effective buying power
- Minimal discretionary debt — few credit cards, no luxury vehicle payments
- Significant assets/reserves — substantial liquid savings post-closing
I've helped veterans close VA loans with DTI ratios as high as 55–58% when strong compensating factors were documented. The key is presenting the complete picture — not just the number.
Step 6: VA Property Requirements — What Qualifies
Primary Residence Only
VA loans are for primary residences only. You must intend to occupy the property as your primary home within a reasonable time after closing (typically 60 days). This disqualifies vacation homes and investment properties.
Eligible Property Types in Florida
- Single-family detached homes
- Townhomes and attached housing
- VA-approved condominiums (VA maintains a specific approved list)
- Manufactured/mobile homes (with specific foundation and titling requirements)
- Multi-unit properties up to 4 units (veteran must occupy one unit)
- New construction (VA construction-to-permanent loans available)
VA Minimum Property Requirements (MPRs)
The VA appraisal is not just a valuation — it's also a condition inspection. The appraiser checks that the property meets VA Minimum Property Requirements (MPRs), which ensure the home is safe, structurally sound, and sanitary. Key MPR categories include:
- Roof condition — must have at least 2 years of remaining useful life (Florida's frequent storms make this a common issue)
- Electrical system — must be safe and functional; no exposed wiring or panels requiring immediate replacement
- Plumbing — must have adequate water supply and waste disposal
- Heating system — must adequately heat the home (relevant even in Florida during winter months)
- Pest/termite inspection — required in Florida; any active infestation must be treated before closing
- No health/safety hazards — peeling lead paint in pre-1978 homes, broken windows, structural defects
- Space requirements — adequate space for living, sleeping, and sanitation
Florida's humid climate and storm exposure mean VA appraisers pay close attention to roof condition, signs of water intrusion, mold, and termite damage. In high-wind-zone counties (coastal areas), a 4-point inspection is commonly required for insurance and can also surface VA MPR concerns early. Always request seller disclosures and schedule a thorough independent home inspection in addition to the VA appraisal.
VA-Approved Condominiums
Not all Florida condominiums are VA-approved. The VA maintains a searchable database of approved condo projects at benefits.va.gov/homeloans. If a condo complex you're interested in is not on the approved list, it can potentially be submitted for VA approval (a process that takes 4–8 weeks). Many popular Florida condo developments are already approved — but verify before making an offer.
Summary: VA Loan Eligibility Checklist for Florida Veterans (2026)
| Eligibility Category | Requirement | Flexibility |
|---|---|---|
| Service History | 90 days wartime / 181 days peacetime / 6 yrs Guard | Fixed by VA |
| Discharge Type | Honorable or General (Under Honorable Conditions) | OTH reviewed case-by-case |
| Certificate of Eligibility | Required for all VA loans | Easy to obtain through lender |
| Credit Score | 620+ (most lenders) | VA has no minimum; lender overlays apply |
| Residual Income | $1,003/mo (family of 4, Southeast) | Fixed VA table |
| DTI Ratio | 41% guideline | Flexible with compensating factors |
| Occupancy | Primary residence only | No exceptions |
| Property Type | SFR, VA-approved condo, manufactured, 2-4 unit | Investment/vacation not eligible |
| VA Appraisal / MPRs | Property must meet safety and condition standards | Seller repairs can satisfy MPRs |
Frequently Asked Questions
The Joe Pistone 60-Second Guarantee
Submit your official application through CrossCountry Mortgage and I will personally call you within 60 seconds — or you get $500 off your closing costs. No automated system. No hold queue. Just me picking up the phone for the veteran on the other end. Valid Mon–Sat, 8am–8pm ET. Start your application →
Not Sure If You Qualify? Let's Find Out Together.
VA loan eligibility questions are exactly what I do. Start with a free, no-credit-pull eligibility check, and I'll tell you exactly where you stand — service requirements, COE status, credit, and income. Or apply now and I'll call you within 60 seconds.
Or call Joe directly: (941) 260-3051