Financing options to compare
Loan
FHA Limited 203(k) Rehabilitation Mortgage
- Eligibility
- Homebuyers and homeowners in Arkansas may use an FHA-approved lender for mostly non-structural repair, modernization, energy, accessibility, or safety work. The borrower must still qualify for the FHA mortgage, appraisal, contractor bids, permits, and mortgage insurance.
- Rate range
- 6.48%
- Maximum amount
- $75,000
- Repayment terms
- Repair funds are escrowed inside the FHA mortgage and repaid on the mortgage schedule, usually 15 or 30 years. HUD lists the Limited 203(k) repair allowance at up to $75,000, subject to county FHA loan limits.
- Caveats
- HUD does not promise a retail rate; the field uses the June 2026 Freddie Mac 30-year benchmark as a current-cycle reference, not an offer. Draw inspections, mortgage insurance, contractor delays, and permits add friction. Compare written lender estimates and consult a financial advisor before borrowing.
Loan
FHA Title I Property Improvement Loan
- Eligibility
- Owners in Arkansas may ask a HUD-approved Title I lender about loans for repairs, alterations, site improvements, manufactured-home work, or basic livability upgrades. The home generally must have been completed and occupied for at least 90 days.
- Rate range
- 11.4%
- Maximum amount
- $25,000
- Repayment terms
- HUD describes Title I property-improvement loans as fixed-rate loans negotiated with the lender. Single-family improvement loans are commonly capped at $25,000, may run up to 20 years, and carry no HUD program prepayment penalty.
- Caveats
- HUD says Title I rates are market based and negotiable, so the field uses the Federal Reserve February 2026 24-month personal-loan benchmark because HUD has no rate table. Balances above $7,500 generally need property security. Verify the lender, fees, APR, and contractor relationship.
Loan
USDA Rural Development Section 504 Home Repair Loan
- Eligibility
- Very-low-income homeowners in eligible rural parts of Arkansas may qualify if they own and occupy the home, cannot obtain affordable credit elsewhere, and meet county income limits. Funds cover repair, modernization, accessibility, and health or safety hazards.
- Rate range
- 1%
- Maximum amount
- $40,000
- Repayment terms
- USDA publishes a fixed 1% rate with repayment over 20 years. The standard loan cap is $40,000, and it may be paired with a Section 504 grant when the applicant also meets age and hazard-removal rules.
- Caveats
- Eligibility is address- and income-specific, and local Rural Development queues can be slow. Larger loans require full title service. It is not emergency cash; confirm timing with USDA and review debt obligations with a financial advisor.
Grant
USDA Rural Development Section 504 Home Repair Grant
- Eligibility
- Homeowners age 62 or older in eligible rural areas of Arkansas may qualify when income is very low and the work removes health or safety hazards. The applicant must own and occupy the home and be unable to repay an affordable repair loan.
- Rate range
- 0%
- Maximum amount
- $10,000
- Repayment terms
- A grant has no scheduled repayment while conditions are met. USDA lists a $10,000 lifetime grant limit, with a higher disaster cap only for homes damaged in a presidentially declared disaster area.
- Caveats
- The grant is for health and safety hazards, not general remodeling. USDA may require repayment if the home is sold too soon, and local funding may be limited. Do not sign contractor paperwork until the agency confirms scope, approvals, liens, and recapture terms.
Grant
Arkansas Weatherization Assistance Program
- Eligibility
- Income-qualified homeowners and renters in Arkansas may apply through the state weatherization network. Priority often goes to households with high energy burden, older adults, disabilities, children, or severe conditions. Renters usually need landlord consent.
- Rate range
- 0%
- Maximum amount
- No fixed cash cap published
- Repayment terms
- Weatherization is usually delivered as no-interest, no-monthly-payment services rather than cash. Local agencies inspect the home and approve measures such as insulation, air sealing, heating safety, ventilation, and related energy work.
- Caveats
- There is usually no borrower rate, so the field is 0%. The agency controls eligible measures, contractors, timing, deferrals, and health-and-safety limits. It may not cover cosmetic work, full HVAC replacement, roofs, or code corrections unless tied to approved weatherization.
Tax credit
IRS Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit
- Eligibility
- This federal credit has ENDED. The IRS Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit (IRC §25C) is no longer allowed for property placed in service after December 31, 2025 (One Big Beautiful Bill Act, Pub. L. 119-21); it cannot be claimed for 2026 or later installs.
- Rate range
- 0%
- Maximum amount
- No fixed cash cap published
- Repayment terms
- Not available going forward; through 2025 it was a nonrefundable annual credit (up to $1,200, plus $2,000 for heat pumps).
- Caveats
- Check current state and utility rebates instead, and consult a tax professional.
Which to pick when
Start with Arkansas Weatherization when the project is energy related and the household may meet income rules; it creates the least debt, but the agency controls scope and timing. Use USDA Section 504 first for rural, very-low-income owner-occupants who need essential repair, accessibility, or hazard removal; the 1% loan and senior grant are strong but narrow. Consider FHA Limited 203(k) when buying or refinancing and rolling repairs into one mortgage is cleaner than arranging separate financing. Title I can fit smaller livability repairs when equity is limited, but the rate is lender-negotiated and should be compared with credit unions, housing agencies, and contractor offers. Use the IRS credit only as reimbursement after eligible work is placed in service, not as upfront cash. This is general education, not financial advice. Before signing a loan, tax filing, assessment, or contractor contract, compare written terms and talk with a HUD-approved housing counselor, tax professional, or financial advisor.
Separate program eligibility from contractor selection
Grants and agency-administered repairs usually approve the scope before work starts. Loan programs still require you to compare written terms, verify contractors, and confirm permits.
Source: ProFix Editorial Team. Last updated 2026-06-09. This guide is informational and is not financial advice, tax advice, legal advice, or a loan offer. Talk with a HUD-approved housing counselor, tax professional, or financial advisor before relying on a program or signing loan documents.