VA Housing Assistance: How Veterans Can Buy, Refinance, or Avoid Foreclosure

Mar 27, 2025  •  STAFF

VA loans can open doors—and keep them open—if you know which options fit your situation

Losing sleep over payments or wondering if you can buy with today’s rates? This guide breaks down VA homebuying, refinancing, and foreclosure-avoidance options in plain English. In Phoenix, Arizona, lender offerings, closing costs, and timelines can differ—use local guidance to compare your true monthly costs.

Veterans may qualify for VA home loans, refinancing help, or foreclosure protection — see what’s available.
Get matched with programs that can help — quick, easy, and totally free.

Quick links for Phoenix, Arizona:

Start here: what to do first

  • Confirm eligibility & get your COE. Ask a lender to pull your Certificate of Eligibility (COE) or request it yourself. It shows your entitlement and funding-fee status.
  • Decide your goal. Buying? Lowering your rate? Tapping equity? Catching up on payments? Your goal determines which VA option fits.
  • Talk to the servicer early if you’re behind. Ask for a home retention review (repayment plan, deferment/partial claim, modification). The sooner you call, the more doors stay open.
  • Know the big levers: VA purchase loan, IRRRL (streamline refi), cash-out refi, assumption (buyer takes over a VA loan), and loss-mitigation if you’re at risk.
  • Document everything. Keep a dated call log, income proof, hardship letter (1 page), and a realistic budget you can defend.

Assumable VA loans: a backdoor to lower rates for buyers—and a strategy for sellers

A lesser-known feature of many VA loans is assumability—a qualified buyer can take over the existing loan, keeping its rate and remaining term.

  • Why buyers care: In a high-rate market, assuming a 2–4% VA loan can slash monthly costs without waiting for rates to fall.
  • Why sellers care: Marketing “assumable VA loan” can widen your buyer pool. If the buyer is VA-eligible, you can often restore your entitlement after closing (ask your servicer about full restoration).
  • Cash gap reality: The buyer must cover the difference between your loan balance and the sale price (cash or secondary financing).
  • Gatekeepers: Assumptions require servicer approval and a small VA funding fee (generally 0.5% on assumptions).
  • Example: A veteran selling a home with a $260k balance at 3.0% to a $340k buyer—buyer needs ~$80k to bridge equity (cash or second lien), but keeps the 3.0% rate.
  • Pro move: If you’re selling, screen for VA-eligible buyers to preserve your entitlement. If you’re buying, ask listing agents explicitly whether the loan is assumable and which servicer handles it.

Behind on payments? How VA loss-mitigation actually works (and what to ask for)

If you’ve missed payments, VA wants servicers to evaluate home-retention first—don’t wait for a notice to act.

  • Your first call: Ask for the home retention team. Say you want a complete loss-mitigation review and request a written list of required docs.
  • What they may offer:
    • Repayment plan (spread arrears over several months).
    • Forbearance (temporary pause/partial payments).
    • Loan modification (roll arrears into the balance and adjust rate/term).
    • Partial claim/advanced assistance (where applicable under current VA guidance).
  • If keeping the home isn’t feasible: Ask about assumption by a qualified buyer, short sale, or deed-in-lieu to avoid a full foreclosure mark.
  • Time matters: Opening mail, responding to document requests within days, and keeping a call log can be the difference between a workout and a sale date.
  • Escalation script: “I’m requesting a single point of contact and status on my complete package. Please confirm in writing which options are being reviewed and by what date.”
👉 Want a quick read on eligibility? Check benefits for Phoenix.

FAQs for Phoenix, Arizona

How do I file a VA disability claim?
Use the official VA guide: File a Claim.

Is there a VA benefits office near Phoenix, Arizona?
Find VA benefits locations: Search benefits offices.

What documents help my claim?
Medical records and service records. See the filing guide above for specifics.


References