What Is Section 502 (USDA Rural Development Loan)?
Section 502 of the Housing Act of 1949 authorizes the USDA Rural Development's two primary homeownership programs: the Single Family Housing Guaranteed Loan Program, which backs loans made by private lenders in rural areas, and the Direct Loan Program, which provides subsidized financing directly to very-low-income borrowers. Together these programs finance approximately 100,000 homes annually in rural and small-town America.
Key Facts
- The USDA Guaranteed Loan Program requires no down payment and no monthly mortgage insurance premium — instead, it charges a 1% upfront guarantee fee and 0.35% annual fee, making it significantly cheaper than FHA for eligible borrowers
- Approximately 97% of U.S. land area qualifies as 'rural' under USDA's eligibility maps — including many suburban areas on the edges of metropolitan cities. Eligibility is not limited to farmland or small towns
- Income limits for the Guaranteed program are set at 115% of area median income, making it accessible to moderate-income households. The Direct program serves very-low-income borrowers (below 80% AMI) and low-income borrowers (below 50% AMI for the most favorable terms)
- The USDA Direct Loan Program can subsidize interest rates as low as 1% through payment assistance — making it one of the most generous housing programs in the federal government, but availability is limited by annual appropriations
- USDA delinquency rates are not tracked separately in most industry surveys (MBA's National Delinquency Survey groups them with conventional), making USDA borrower distress less visible than FHA — a data gap in national housing analysis
How Do USDA Section 502 Loans Work?
Section 502 authorizes two distinct programs:
Guaranteed Loan Program
This is the larger program, financing approximately 80,000-100,000 homes annually:
- Private lender origination: The borrower applies with a USDA-approved private lender (bank, credit union, or mortgage company). Underwriting follows USDA guidelines.
- USDA guarantee: USDA guarantees 90% of the loan against default — this guarantee (not insurance) enables the zero-down-payment feature.
- Fees: 1% upfront guarantee fee (can be financed) + 0.35% annual fee. Significantly cheaper than FHA's 1.75% upfront + 0.55% annual MIP.
- Eligibility: Income at or below 115% of area median, credit score typically 640+ (varies by lender), property in an eligible rural area.
Direct Loan Program
A smaller program serving the lowest-income rural borrowers:
- Government lending: USDA lends directly — no private lender involved. The loan comes from federal appropriations.
- Payment assistance: USDA can subsidize the interest rate down to as low as 1% based on income. This subsidy is recaptured proportionally if the borrower sells within the first few years.
- Income limits: Very-low-income (50% AMI) or low-income (80% AMI). Priority given to very-low-income applicants.
- Terms: 33-year term standard, 38-year term available for very-low-income borrowers who cannot afford the 33-year payment.
What Areas Are Eligible for USDA Loans?
USDA defines "rural" more broadly than most people expect. Eligible areas include:
- Any area with a population below 35,000 that is not within a Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA)
- Areas that were rural in a prior census but have since grown — "grandfathered" eligibility
- Suburban areas on the fringe of cities that fall outside MSA boundaries
Check property eligibility at the USDA eligibility map: eligibility.sc.egov.usda.gov. Many borrowers are surprised to find their desired property qualifies.
USDA vs. FHA vs. VA: Zero or Low Down Payment Comparison
- USDA Guaranteed: 0% down, 1% upfront + 0.35% annual fee, income limits apply, rural areas only
- FHA: 3.5% down, 1.75% upfront + 0.55% annual MIP (for life), no income limits, any area
- VA: 0% down, 0.5%-3.3% funding fee (one-time), no MI, no income limits, veterans/military only
- Conventional 97: 3% down, PMI until 80% LTV, no income limits (some exceptions), any area
For eligible rural borrowers below 115% AMI, USDA Guaranteed offers the lowest total cost among government-backed options.
State-by-State Variations
USDA loan availability varies dramatically by state based on rural population share, income levels, and property eligibility. Some states have extensive eligible areas while others (heavily urban states) have limited coverage.
| State | Key Difference |
|---|---|
| Texas | Extensive rural eligibility — nearly 90% of Texas land area qualifies. Strong USDA loan volume. Rural Texas faces unique challenges: distance from services, limited internet, extreme weather. |
| California | Limited eligibility due to high urbanization and high home prices that may exceed USDA loan limits. Central Valley, Northern California, and eastern rural counties have eligible areas. |
| Mississippi | Highest rural population share of any state. Very high USDA Direct Loan utilization. Income limits are low in absolute terms due to lower area median incomes. |
| New York | Upstate New York has extensive USDA eligibility. Long Island and the NYC metro area are excluded. Significant income variation between upstate and downstate affects program utilization. |
| Montana | Nearly the entire state qualifies as rural. USDA is a major lending program. Bozeman-area growth has eliminated eligibility in some previously rural zones. |
Frequently Asked Questions
Do USDA loans really require zero down payment?
Yes. The USDA Guaranteed Loan Program allows 100% financing — no down payment required. The 1% upfront guarantee fee can be financed into the loan amount. Closing costs must be paid, but they can often be covered by seller concessions (up to 6% of the purchase price).
How do I check if a property is USDA-eligible?
Use the USDA's eligibility map at eligibility.sc.egov.usda.gov. Enter the property address to see if it falls within an eligible rural area. Eligibility can change when USDA updates its maps (typically every few years based on census data), so verify for the specific property before making an offer.
What are the income limits for USDA loans?
The Guaranteed program limits household income to 115% of area median income. The Direct program limits to 50-80% AMI. Income limits vary by county and household size. Check limits at rd.usda.gov/programs-services/single-family-housing-programs.
Can I use a USDA loan for a second home or investment property?
No. USDA loans are for primary residences only. The borrower must intend to occupy the home as their principal residence. Investment properties, vacation homes, and income-producing farms are not eligible for Section 502 programs.
What happens if I default on a USDA loan?
The loss mitigation process is similar to other government-backed loans: your servicer must evaluate you for workout options (forbearance, repayment plan, loan modification) before foreclosure. USDA has its own loss mitigation waterfall. Contact your servicer or call USDA Rural Development at 1-800-414-1226 for assistance.