Data as of 2024-01 - U.S. Census ACS 5-year (2023) & public MLS estimates.
Local Housing Market
Martin County (county seat: Stanton) is a small-market county in the Permian Basin footprint where USDA Rural Development eligibility is common, FHA loan limits stretch further, and inventory turns over more slowly - patient buyers find real value. The largest population centers are Stanton. With a median home price near $195K and a median household income near $72K, the affordability ratio here is one of the key reasons buyers shop Martin County.
Homebuyer Programs in Martin County
Down Payment Assistance
The two statewide programs - TSAHC (Texas State Affordable Housing Corporation) and TDHCA's My First Texas Home - both serve Martin County and can layer down payment assistance on FHA, VA, USDA, and conventional 97% loans. Local DPA is rare in counties this size, but the statewide stack plus a Mortgage Credit Certificate (MCC) is usually enough to cover full closing costs.
First-Time Homebuyer Resources
Both TSAHC and TDHCA define a 'first-time buyer' as anyone who has not owned a primary residence in the last 3 years. Income and purchase-price limits apply and depend on household size.
VA Homebuyer Information
Martin County sees regular VA-loan activity. Most local lenders are comfortable with VA contracts; on resale homes, expect a VA appraisal (with its property-condition requirements) and budget for the VA funding fee unless you are exempt.
USDA Rural Development
Martin County is largely inside the USDA Rural Development eligibility map. For income-eligible buyers this enables a 0% down USDA-guaranteed loan with no monthly mortgage insurance, often the cheapest path to ownership here.
FHA Loans
The 2024 FHA single-family loan limit applicable in Martin County is $498,257. FHA loans require 3.5% down at 580+ FICO and pair well with TSAHC/TDHCA down payment assistance.
Savings Strategies
The fastest way to lower your monthly payment in Martin County is to combine a USDA loan (if eligible) with the TSAHC DPA grant - that combination can close a Martin County purchase with under $1,500 out of pocket including the inspection and appraisal, and to pull the Mortgage Credit Certificate (MCC) when you close - it returns up to $2,000/year in federal tax credit for the life of the loan.
Stack Eligible Savings Programs
- Pair a TSAHC or TDHCA grant with a Mortgage Credit Certificate to compound an ongoing federal tax credit.
- Combine seller-paid closing costs with a lender credit to free up your DPA for the down payment itself.
- Use builder incentives on new construction to fund a permanent 2/1 rate buydown alongside DPA.
- Run an FHA vs. USDA vs. VA scenario side-by-side - the cheapest monthly often isn't the option with the lowest down payment.
