VA loan vs conventional loan in California: which is better for veterans?

A California veteran with VA eligibility almost always has two real choices: use the VA benefit or take a conventional loan. The math is not obvious. Here is how it breaks down for the California market specifically.

The short answer for most California veterans

For most California buyers using a primary residence and no plans to refinance multiple times in five years, the VA loan wins on three counts: no down payment, no monthly mortgage insurance, and softer underwriting on residual income. Conventional becomes more attractive if you have 20%+ down and want to avoid the VA funding fee, or if you are buying a non-primary residence (a vacation home, an investment property — VA does not cover those).

Side-by-side for California buyers

FactorVA loanConventional
Minimum down payment0% with full entitlement3-5% (low-down programs) or 20% (no PMI)
Mortgage insuranceNonePMI required under 20% down
Up-front feeVA funding fee (2.15-3.3% typical, waived for disabled vets)None
Credit minimumLender-dependent (often 580-620)Generally 620+ for low-down, 740+ for best terms
Property restrictionsPrimary residence only; VA appraisal requirementsPrimary, second home, or investment all allowed
Use limitRestored entitlement allows reuseUnlimited reuses
Loan limitsNo cap for full entitlement$806,500 baseline; jumbo above

Where VA wins in California

San Diego and similar California markets reward buyers who can keep more cash on hand. The VA loan's zero-down structure lets a California veteran preserve closing-cost cash for the inspection report, appraisal repairs, and rate buy-downs — three line items that come up often in California purchases.

The no-PMI advantage matters more in California markets where price-to-income ratios are stretched. A conventional 5%-down purchase at $500,000 carries monthly PMI for several years; the VA equivalent does not. That difference can be $150-$300 per month.

Where conventional may win

If you have 20%+ down already saved for a California purchase, the VA funding fee becomes a meaningful cost that conventional avoids. On a $500,000 first-use VA purchase with zero down, the funding fee is roughly $11,500 (rolled into the loan). On the same conventional purchase with 20% down, there is no equivalent up-front fee. If your funding fee will be waived because you are a disabled veteran, this advantage shifts back to VA.

If you are buying a second home or rental, conventional is the only path. VA loans are primary-residence only.

The disabled veteran case in California

Disabled veterans with a VA-rated service-connected disability are exempt from the VA funding fee. Combined with California's disabled veteran property tax exemption, this stack of benefits typically makes the VA loan the clear winner for disabled veterans buying a California primary residence. The math is rarely close.