How Much Does FHA Mortgage Insurance Actually Cost? (2026)

June 11, 2026 Nate Moghadam

One of the most common questions I get from buyers considering an FHA loan is some version of: "How much extra am I actually paying for mortgage insurance?" It's a fair question — and the honest answer is more than most people realize when they're just looking at the rate.

FHA loans come with two separate mortgage insurance charges. Understanding both — and how they add up over time — is essential before you decide whether FHA or conventional is the better fit for your situation.

The Two Types of FHA Mortgage Insurance

1. Upfront Mortgage Insurance Premium (UFMIP)

Every FHA loan comes with an upfront mortgage insurance premium of 1.75% of the loan amount, charged at closing. This is non-negotiable — it applies to every FHA loan regardless of your credit score, down payment, or loan term.

On common Massachusetts loan amounts, here's what that looks like:

Loan Amount UFMIP (1.75%) New Loan Balance
$300,000 $5,250 $305,250
$400,000 $7,000 $407,000
$500,000 $8,750 $508,750
$600,000 $10,500 $610,500

The UFMIP is almost always rolled into the loan balance rather than paid out of pocket at closing — but it increases your loan balance from day one. That means you're paying interest on it for the life of the loan, which adds to the real cost over time.

Conventional loans have no equivalent upfront fee. This is one of the reasons the rate comparison between FHA and conventional is misleading — the rate alone doesn't capture the full cost of the loan.

2. Annual Mortgage Insurance Premium (MIP)

On top of the upfront fee, FHA charges an ongoing annual mortgage insurance premium paid monthly. For most borrowers in 2026 — loans over 15 years with less than 10% down — the annual MIP rate is 0.55% of the outstanding loan balance per year.

Here's what that looks like in monthly dollars on common loan amounts:

Loan Amount Annual MIP (0.55%) Monthly MIP
$300,000 $1,650/yr $138/mo
$400,000 $2,200/yr $183/mo
$500,000 $2,750/yr $229/mo
$600,000 $3,300/yr $275/mo

And here's the part that matters most: with less than 10% down, this monthly charge lasts for the entire life of the loan — 30 years. It does not cancel when you reach 20% equity the way conventional PMI does.

On a $400,000 loan, that's $183 per month × 360 months = $65,880 in total mortgage insurance if you never refinance. That's in addition to the $7,000 upfront fee.

How Long Do You Pay FHA Mortgage Insurance?

This depends on your down payment:

  • Less than 10% down: MIP lasts for the life of the loan — it never cancels on its own
  • 10% or more down: MIP cancels after 11 years

The only way to stop paying FHA mortgage insurance before it expires is to refinance into a conventional loan. For a full breakdown of the duration rules, see how long does PMI last on an FHA loan.

Want to see the real cost comparison for your situation?

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How FHA MIP Compares to Conventional PMI

This is the comparison that matters most for most buyers. Here's a side-by-side on a $400,000 loan:

Factor FHA MIP Conventional PMI
Upfront fee $7,000 (1.75%) $0
Monthly cost ~$183/mo (0.55%) Varies — often $100–$250/mo
Duration Life of loan (under 10% down) Cancels at 20% equity
Can you remove it? Only by refinancing Yes — automatic at 78% LTV
Total cost (30 yrs, no refi) ~$72,880 Typically $15,000–$30,000

The monthly FHA MIP rate of 0.55% is actually competitive — and for borrowers with lower credit scores, conventional PMI rates can be higher than FHA MIP. But the combination of the upfront fee and the permanent duration makes FHA significantly more expensive over a full loan term for buyers with decent credit.

For a complete comparison including rate differences, see FHA vs conventional in Massachusetts.

When FHA Mortgage Insurance Is Worth It

Despite the cost, FHA mortgage insurance makes sense in specific situations:

  • Lower credit scores. For borrowers with scores below 680, conventional PMI rates can be significantly higher than FHA MIP. At some score thresholds, FHA's total cost is actually lower despite the upfront fee.
  • You can't qualify for conventional. FHA has more flexible DTI limits and credit requirements. For some borrowers, FHA is the only path to homeownership — and getting into a home now at a higher mortgage insurance cost beats waiting years to qualify for conventional.
  • You plan to refinance soon. If you expect to refinance into a conventional loan within 3-5 years as your credit improves or your equity grows, the long-term MIP burden is less of a concern. The upfront fee is a real cost, but the ongoing monthly charge becomes less significant if your holding period is short.

Is There a Way to Avoid FHA Mortgage Insurance?

Not while staying in an FHA loan. Mortgage insurance is mandatory on all FHA loans regardless of down payment or equity position. Your only options are:

  • Use conventional financing instead. If your credit score is 640 or above, conventional with PMI is worth running the numbers on. For many buyers, it comes out ahead over a 5-7 year holding period.
  • MassHousing WorkforceAdvantage (WFA 4.0). For eligible Massachusetts first-time buyers, MassHousing's WFA 4.0 conventional product comes with no borrower-paid mortgage insurance — MassHousing covers the cost. This is one of the most underutilized programs in the state. See MassHousing down payment assistance for details.
  • VA loan. For eligible veterans, VA loans have no mortgage insurance of any kind — no upfront fee, no monthly charge. See VA loans in Massachusetts.
  • Refinance out of FHA. Once you've built sufficient equity and your credit profile supports conventional financing, refinancing eliminates the monthly MIP going forward.

The Bottom Line

FHA mortgage insurance costs more than most buyers realize when they're focused on the rate. The 1.75% upfront fee adds thousands to your loan balance from day one, and the 0.55% annual MIP on a $400,000 loan runs about $183 per month — for the life of the loan if you put less than 10% down.

That doesn't make FHA a bad loan — it makes it the right loan for specific situations. But the decision between FHA and conventional should never be based on the rate alone. Run both scenarios with the full mortgage insurance cost included before you commit.

Want to see FHA vs conventional with real numbers for your situation?

I run this comparison for buyers every day. Book a free call and I'll show you the total cost of each option — rate, mortgage insurance, and everything in between.

Book a free call →  |  Start my pre-approval →

Nate Moghadam is a mortgage loan officer at Fairway Independent Mortgage Corporation, licensed in Massachusetts and 13 other states. NMLS #906770 | Company NMLS #2289.

This content is intended for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or legal advice. FHA MIP rates are subject to change by HUD. Contact a licensed loan officer to confirm current rates and program details for your specific situation. Equal Housing Lender. Fairway Independent Mortgage Corporation Disclosures.

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