Should I put money down on a VA loan in California?
The default answer most California veterans hear is "zero down — that is the point of a VA loan." The reality is more nuanced. Here is when putting money down actually helps and when it does not.
Short answer
Most California VA buyers should put $0 down. The exceptions are: when you have a meaningful down payment available and your funding fee waiver does not apply, when you want a lower monthly payment that beats your BAH or rental cost, or when you are buying in a market where keeping cash on hand is less valuable than reducing the loan balance.
How VA funding fees actually work
The VA funding fee is a one-time charge that funds the VA's loan guarantee program. It is calculated as a percentage of the loan amount, and the percentage depends on three things: whether this is your first VA use, whether you put money down, and your veteran status (regular military vs reservist).
For a first-use regular military VA borrower, the fee structure for 2026:
- 0% down: 2.15% of loan amount
- 5-10% down: 1.5% of loan amount
- 10%+ down: 1.25% of loan amount
For subsequent-use borrowers, the fee jumps to 3.3% at 0% down. The progression to lower fees at 5% and 10% remains similar.
Disabled veterans with a VA-rated service-connected disability are exempt from the funding fee entirely, at any down payment.
The down payment math for a California VA loan
Consider a hypothetical San Diego purchase at $500,000:
Zero down scenario
- Loan amount: $500,000
- Funding fee (2.15%, first use): $10,750 (rolled into loan)
- Total loan: $510,750
- Monthly principal + interest based on amortization
- Cash needed at closing: closing costs only (typically 2-3% of purchase = $10-15K)
5% down scenario
- Loan amount: $475,000
- Funding fee (1.5%): $7,125
- Total loan: $482,125
- Cash needed at closing: $25,000 down + closing costs = $35-40K total
- Monthly principal + interest lower than zero-down
The 5%-down scenario saves you $3,625 in up-front funding fee. It also reduces your monthly payment. The cost is putting $25,000 more cash into the deal at closing.
When putting money down makes sense in California
- You are a subsequent-use borrower. The 3.3% fee at 0% down is high enough that 5%+ down meaningfully reduces it.
- You want a lower monthly payment that matches a specific budget target. If BAH does not cover the zero-down payment, putting money down to lower it is rational.
- You have substantial savings beyond emergency reserves. Reserving 6 months of payments in liquid savings is wise; cash beyond that earning low interest can be put to work in the down payment.
- You do not qualify for the disabled veteran funding fee waiver. If the waiver applies to you, the zero-down case becomes much stronger.
When zero down is the right call
- You are a first-use borrower without disabled veteran status. The 2.15% fee is low enough that zero down preserves more cash for the inspection, repairs, rate buy-down, or future renovations.
- You are a disabled veteran. No funding fee means zero down has no up-front cost penalty.
- You are buying in an appreciating market and your cash reserves are not deep. Liquidity is worth more than slightly lower principal.
- You are PCSing to a temporary assignment and may sell in 24-36 months. The funding fee is amortized into the loan; selling soon means you do not capture much of the benefit of having paid more down.
Common questions from California VA buyers
If I put 5% down, can I avoid the funding fee entirely?
No. The funding fee reduces with down payment but does not disappear unless you qualify for the disabled veteran waiver. The reduction at 5% is from 2.15% to 1.5%; at 10% from 1.5% to 1.25%.
Can I finance the funding fee?
Yes. The funding fee is typically rolled into the loan balance, so it does not affect your cash-to-close. It does increase your monthly payment slightly because you are amortizing more principal.
Does the funding fee count toward my equity?
No. The fee funds the VA's guarantee program; it does not become equity in your home.