Non-Warrantable Condo Loan Requirements
Updated: June 26 2026 • 6 min read
Written by
Bennett Leckrone
Writer / Reviewer / Expert
Reviewed by
Jake Driscoll
Reviewer
Key Takeaways
- A non-warrantable condo is a condo that does not meet standard project eligibility rules for conventional financing through Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac.
- Financing may still be possible, but borrowers usually need a lender that offers portfolio, non-QM or other specialty condo loan options.
- The biggest approval issues are usually tied to the condo project, not the borrower. Insurance gaps, litigation, investor concentration, commercial space, deferred maintenance or HOA financial problems can stop a loan.
Explore your condo loan options.
A non-warrantable condo is harder to finance. Even with strong credit, enough income and a solid down payment, the loan can still fail if the condo association does not meet your lender’s project standards.
For a conventional condo loan, the lender has to approve the borrower and the condo project. Fannie Mae says project review is separate from the borrower underwriting, transaction terms and individual unit appraisal. The review looks at risks tied to the project as a whole, including financial stability, condition, marketability, litigation and insurance coverage.
Freddie Mac uses a similar project-review framework for condo unit mortgages. Freddie Mac requires the seller to make sure the condo unit, project and mortgage meet its condo project review requirements unless the loan qualifies for an exempt or certified project path.
In plain terms, a warrantable condo fits the standard agency rulebook. A non-warrantable condo does not. That does not make the unit unbuyable, but it changes the loan search.
Non-Warrantable Condo Loan Requirements Basics
| Requirement | What Lenders Review | Borrower Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Borrower Qualification | Credit, income, assets and ability to repay. | A strong borrower profile helps, but it does not cure a project-level problem. |
| Project Eligibility | The condo association’s budget, insurance, ownership mix, litigation and physical condition. | The lender may decline the loan if the project is too risky. |
| Loan Type | Whether the loan can be sold to Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, insured by FHA or held by the lender. | Non-warrantable condos often need portfolio or non-QM financing. |
| Down Payment Or Equity | How much borrower cash or existing equity supports the loan. | Specialty condo loans may require more cash down than standard conventional condo loans. |
| Documentation | Condo questionnaire, insurance certificates, budget, financials, bylaws, master deed and litigation details. | Missing HOA documents can delay the loan or prevent approval. |
What Is A Non-Warrantable Condo?
A non-warrantable condo is a condo unit in a project that does not meet the eligibility standards required for standard conventional condo financing.
“Warrantable” is mortgage-industry shorthand. It usually means the condo project meets the requirements that allow the lender to sell the loan to Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are government-sponsored enterprises that buy mortgages from lenders and set many conventional loan guidelines.
A non-warrantable condo falls outside that standard box. The issue could be the project’s insurance, financial reserves, legal structure, ownership concentration, commercial space, litigation, deferred maintenance or another project-level risk.
The borrower is not always the problem. The condo association may be the reason the loan cannot use standard conventional financing.
Warrantable vs. Non-Warrantable Condos
The difference is whether the condo project meets the lender’s eligible project standards.
| Condo Type | What It Means | Financing Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Warrantable Condo | The project meets standard agency project eligibility rules. | The borrower may use standard conventional condo financing if the rest of the loan qualifies. |
| Non-Warrantable Condo | The project fails one or more standard agency project requirements. | The borrower usually needs a specialty, portfolio, non-QM or cash option. |
A condo can be desirable, well located and marketable to buyers while still being non-warrantable for mortgage purposes. The lender is not only valuing the unit. It is also evaluating the association that owns or controls the common areas, building systems and shared financial obligations.
Why Condo Warrantability Matters
Warrantability determines whether a standard conventional condo loan is available.
Fannie Mae says the quality of mortgages secured by condo units can be affected by the project as a whole, including the project’s financial stability, condition, marketability, litigation and insurance coverage.
That is why a condo loan can fall apart late in the process. The borrower may qualify, the unit may appraise, and the purchase contract may look clean. Then the condo questionnaire reveals a project issue the lender cannot accept.
The practical consequence is sharp: fewer lenders, fewer loan programs and a higher chance that the buyer needs more cash.
Common Reasons A Condo Is Non-Warrantable
The Project Has Too Much Commercial Space
Mixed-use buildings can create financing problems when too much of the project is commercial or nonresidential space.
Fannie Mae requires no more than 35% of a condo or co-op project, or the building where the project is located, to be commercial space or allocated to mixed use.
That limit can affect downtown projects with restaurants, retail, office space or hotel-style operations in the same building. The issue is not that commercial space exists. The issue is whether the project crosses the program limit.
One Owner Controls Too Many Units
A project can fail review if one person or entity owns too many units.
Fannie Mae’s ineligible-project rules say a single entity may own no more than two units in a project with five to 20 units. In a project with 21 or more units, a single entity may own no more than 20% of the total units.
This rule matters because one owner can control too much of the association’s financial health. If that owner stops paying dues or controls voting power, the risk spreads to every unit in the project.
The HOA Is Involved In Serious Litigation
Not all litigation creates the same lending problem. A routine collection action against an owner is different from litigation tied to structural safety or habitability.
Fannie Mae treats a project as ineligible when the HOA is a party to pending litigation, or when the project sponsor or developer is a party to pending litigation, if the litigation relates to the safety, structural soundness, habitability or functional use of the project.
The borrower-facing risk is simple. If the lawsuit could lead to major repairs, special assessments or questions about whether the building is safe to occupy, standard financing becomes harder.
The Building Has Critical Repairs Or Safety Problems
Deferred maintenance can move a condo from routine review to serious lending risk.
Fannie Mae’s project standards specifically identify project condition and marketability as project-level risks. Fannie Mae also flags inadequate insurance and physical safety concerns as reasons a project can become ineligible.
For a buyer, the problem is not only loan approval. A building with unresolved structural or safety issues can mean large special assessments after closing.
The Association Does Not Have Acceptable Insurance
Condo insurance has become a larger financing issue, especially in markets with rising replacement costs, storm risk or older buildings.
Fannie Mae lists inadequate insurance coverage as a project-level risk in condo, co-op and PUD projects. Freddie Mac also includes insurance compliance in its condo project review framework.
The consequence is immediate. If the master policy, deductible structure or coverage amount does not meet the loan program, the lender may not be able to approve standard financing.
The Project Operates Like A Hotel Or Short-Term Rental Building
A condo project can become non-warrantable if it looks more like a hotel than a residential condo.
Fannie Mae lists projects managed and operated as a hotel or motel as ineligible. It also identifies timeshare or segmented ownership structures as ineligible project types.
This matters in vacation markets. A unit that performs well as a short-term rental may not fit standard residential condo financing.
The Project Is Still Under Developer Control
Newer condo projects can face added review because the homeowners association has not fully transitioned to unit-owner control.
Fannie Mae treats a project as established only when key conditions are met, including that at least 90% of total units have been conveyed to unit purchasers, construction is complete, the project is not subject to additional phasing or annexation, and HOA control has been turned over to unit owners.
A project that does not meet those conditions is not automatically unfinanceable. It may need a different review method, more documents or a lender that works with new condo projects.
Non-Warrantable Condo Loan Options
A non-warrantable condo usually needs a lender that can keep the loan, sell it to a non-agency investor or use a specialty condo program.
| Loan Option | How It Works | Main Limitation |
|---|---|---|
| Portfolio Loan | The lender keeps the loan or applies its own investor rules. | Pricing and down payment requirements vary by lender. |
| Non-QM Loan | The loan uses non-agency guidelines for borrowers or properties outside standard rules. | Rates, fees and reserves can be higher than standard conventional loans. |
| FHA Condo Financing | The project or individual unit must meet FHA condo requirements. | A conventional non-warrantable issue may also create an FHA eligibility issue. |
| Cash Purchase | The buyer purchases without mortgage financing. | Requires enough cash and does not remove project-level risk. |
Portfolio Condo Loans
A portfolio loan is often the most direct path for a non-warrantable condo. The lender either keeps the loan or uses an investor that allows the specific project risk.
Portfolio does not mean loose approval. The lender still reviews the borrower, unit and association. The difference is that the lender is not trying to fit the loan into the standard Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac box.
Non-QM Condo Loans
A non-QM loan can help when the condo project or borrower profile does not fit agency rules.
The tradeoff is cost and documentation. Non-QM condo lenders often require stronger reserves, larger down payments or more detailed project review. Those requirements are lender-specific, so avoid presenting one lender’s minimum score or down payment as a universal rule.
FHA Condo Loans
FHA is not a workaround for every non-warrantable condo. The condo project or individual unit still has to meet FHA requirements.
HUD provides a condo search tool for FHA-approved condominium projects. The tool lets users search by location, name or status. HUD also provides FHA condominium mortgage insurance guidance for lenders and other housing partners.
If a condo fails conventional project review because of insurance, litigation or safety issues, FHA financing may face the same practical barrier.
Typical Non-Warrantable Condo Loan Requirements
Non-warrantable condo requirements are not standardized across all lenders. A portfolio lender and a non-QM lender can set different approval rules for the same building.
Still, most lenders focus on the same core questions.
Borrower Strength
The lender will review whether you can handle the payment and the project risk. Strong credit, verified income, lower debt and cash reserves all help.
For covered consumer mortgages, the CFPB’s ability-to-repay rule requires lenders to make a reasonable, good-faith determination that the borrower can repay the loan before making it.
Larger Down Payment Or More Equity
Specialty condo financing can require more borrower cash than a standard conventional condo loan. The exact amount depends on the lender, occupancy, unit type, project issue and borrower profile.
A larger down payment gives the lender a bigger equity cushion. It does not fix every project issue, but it can help when the building problem is financeable under the lender’s rules.
Condo Questionnaire And HOA Documents
The condo questionnaire is one of the most important documents in the file. Fannie Mae says its Condominium Project Questionnaire, Form 1076, helps lenders collect data to determine condo project eligibility. Fannie Mae says the form is optional, but lenders are encouraged to use and retain it or a substantially similar form.
Expect the lender to request association documents, insurance evidence, budget information, meeting minutes and litigation details. The HOA or management company has to respond quickly enough for the loan timeline.
Insurance Review
The lender needs to see that the project’s master insurance policy meets the loan program or investor rules.
This review can include the type of coverage, deductible levels, replacement cost terms, flood insurance where applicable and whether the policy covers the correct property. If the policy is deficient, the borrower usually cannot fix it alone. The association may need to change coverage.
Litigation Review
Pending litigation is not automatically fatal, but serious litigation can stop the loan.
The lender will look at who is involved, what the claim alleges, whether insurance covers the claim and whether the case could affect safety, soundness, habitability or project finances.
Budget And Reserve Review
A condo association that underfunds reserves can push repair costs onto owners through special assessments.
The lender may review the annual budget, reserve study, assessment history and delinquency levels. The concern is whether the association has enough money to maintain the building without creating a financial shock for unit owners.
How To Tell If A Condo Is Non-Warrantable
Do not wait until final underwriting to ask. The warrantability review should start before or immediately after making an offer.
Ask The Seller Or Listing Agent Early
Ask whether recent financed sales have closed in the project. A recent conventional approval does not guarantee your loan will pass, but it is useful evidence.
Also ask whether any recent sales failed because of the condo questionnaire, insurance, litigation, repairs or investor concentration.
Request The Condo Questionnaire
The questionnaire forces the project issues into writing. It can reveal a high investor concentration, pending litigation, delinquent dues, short-term rental activity, commercial space or insurance problem.
If the HOA will not complete the questionnaire, that is its own warning sign. The lender may not be able to approve the loan without it.
Review The Budget And Meeting Minutes
Meeting minutes can show issues that a listing description will not mention. Look for major repairs, insurance problems, special assessments, owner disputes and reserve shortfalls.
The budget matters because it shows whether the association is collecting enough money to operate the project and prepare for repairs.
Ask The Lender About Project Review Before Paying For Everything Else
Condo project review can save or waste money depending on timing. Ask the lender when project review starts and what documents are needed.
If the project is already known to be non-warrantable, move the file to a lender that handles that type of condo before paying for avoidable third-party costs.
What Makes Approval Harder?
The hardest files usually involve safety, insurance or control problems.
A building with unresolved structural repairs is harder than a building with a minor budget question. A project with unacceptable insurance is harder than a project that needs one missing document. A condo hotel or timeshare structure is harder than a standard residential condo with a few investor-owned units.
Approval also gets harder when the project problem cannot be fixed before closing. A missing document can be supplied. A master insurance policy, active safety litigation or major repair issue usually requires action from the association.
Can You Refinance A Non-Warrantable Condo?
Yes, but the same project issues apply. A refinance lender still reviews the condo project, not just your payment history.
A rate-and-term refinance may be easier than a cash-out refinance with some lenders because the risk profile is different. That is a lender-specific distinction, not a universal rule.
If the condo became non-warrantable after you bought it, refinancing may require a portfolio or non-QM lender. Start with the project issue. The right lender depends on why the condo is non-warrantable.
Questions To Ask Before Buying A Non-Warrantable Condo
Why Is The Condo Non-Warrantable?
This is the first question. A condo with one fixable document problem is different from a condo with serious litigation or inadequate insurance.
Which Lenders Finance This Specific Issue?
Ask lenders directly whether they finance the reason the project is non-warrantable. “We do non-warrantable condos” is not enough. A lender may allow high investor concentration but decline condo hotels or projects with critical repairs.
How Much Cash Will You Need?
Ask for the down payment, reserve requirement, closing costs and any pricing adjustments. A project issue can change the cash needed to close.
What Happens When You Sell?
A non-warrantable condo can shrink the future buyer pool. If the issue remains unresolved, the next buyer may also need specialty financing or cash.
Can The HOA Fix The Problem?
Some problems are curable. The HOA may be able to increase insurance coverage, complete repairs, improve reserves or provide missing documents.
Other problems are structural to the project. A building operated as a condo hotel will not become a standard residential condo just because one buyer needs financing.
Non-Warrantable Condo vs. Warrantable Condo Example
Assume two buyers have similar credit, income and down payment funds.
Buyer A chooses a condo in a project with acceptable insurance, no serious litigation, a stable budget and a normal ownership mix. The lender can review the project under standard conventional condo rules.
Buyer B chooses a unit in a building where one investor owns 30% of the units in a 40-unit project. That crosses Fannie Mae’s single-entity ownership limit for projects with 21 or more units. The borrower may still qualify financially, but the project issue can block standard conventional financing.
That is the core difference. The non-warrantable label is about the project’s eligibility, not just the buyer’s finances.
The Bottom Line
A non-warrantable condo does not meet standard conventional condo project eligibility rules. The issue usually comes from the condo project, not the individual borrower.
Financing can still be possible through portfolio, non-QM or other specialty condo loan options. Those loans can require more cash, stronger borrower qualifications and more project documentation.
Before making an offer, identify why the condo is non-warrantable. Insurance problems, serious litigation, high single-entity ownership, hotel-style operations, too much commercial space or unresolved repairs can change the lender, loan terms and resale outlook.
Frequently Asked Questions
What Is A Non-Warrantable Condo?
A non-warrantable condo is a condo in a project that does not meet standard eligibility rules for conventional condo financing through Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac.
Can You Get A Mortgage On A Non-Warrantable Condo?
Yes, but standard conventional financing may not be available. Buyers often need a portfolio loan, non-QM loan or another specialty condo financing option.
Why Would A Condo Be Non-Warrantable?
A condo can be non-warrantable because of project-level issues such as inadequate insurance, serious litigation, deferred maintenance, too much commercial space, hotel-style operations, high investor ownership or one owner controlling too many units.
Does Non-Warrantable Mean The Condo Is Unsafe?
Not always. Some condos are non-warrantable because of financial, legal, ownership or documentation issues. Safety and structural problems are more serious and can also make financing harder.
Are Non-Warrantable Condo Loans More Expensive?
They can be. Specialty condo financing may carry higher rates, larger down payments, higher reserve requirements or more fees than standard conventional condo financing. The exact terms depend on the lender and the project issue.
Can FHA Finance A Non-Warrantable Condo?
FHA can finance condos only when FHA condo requirements are met. HUD provides a search tool for FHA-approved condo projects, and some individual units may be reviewed under FHA rules. FHA is not a blanket workaround for a condo that fails conventional project review.
What Documents Are Needed For A Non-Warrantable Condo Loan?
Lenders commonly request a condo questionnaire, master insurance policy, HOA budget, financial statements, governing documents, meeting minutes, reserve information and details about litigation or special assessments.
Can A Condo Become Warrantable Later?
Yes. A condo may become warrantable if the project fixes the issue that caused the problem. Examples include resolving litigation, improving insurance coverage, completing repairs or correcting ownership concentration over time.
Is A Non-Warrantable Condo A Bad Investment?
Not automatically. The risk depends on why the condo is non-warrantable. A documentation issue is different from a building with major unresolved repairs or inadequate insurance.
What Should You Do Before Making An Offer On A Non-Warrantable Condo?
Ask why the condo is non-warrantable, confirm which lenders finance that specific issue and review the HOA’s insurance, budget, litigation, reserves and meeting minutes before committing to the purchase.
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