Maryland VA loan limits in 2026
Veterans with full VA entitlement do not have a strict loan limit. The number that matters is what your lender will actually fund. Here is how that math works in Maryland — and where it diverges from the simple $832,750 figure most articles print.
The short answer for Maryland buyers
If you are a Maryland veteran with full VA entitlement — meaning you have not used your VA benefit on a prior loan that is still active — there is no county-by-county cap that limits how much home you can buy with a VA loan in 2026. The $832,750 number people quote is the federal conforming baseline; it tells you when the funding fee structure changes, not what your maximum purchase price is.
If you have partial entitlement — because you already have one VA loan active or you defaulted on a VA loan previously — then the county limit matters. In Maryland, that limit varies by county.
2026 county limit structure in Maryland
Montgomery, Calvert, Charles, Prince George's, Anne Arundel, Howard, and Frederick counties trigger high-cost VA loan limits in 2026.
For most Maryland counties, the 2026 baseline VA loan limit follows the standard FHFA conforming figure of $832,750. This is the figure that affects partial-entitlement borrowers and the threshold above which a no-down-payment loan begins requiring proportional cash.
What this actually means for Baltimore and other Maryland markets
In Baltimore and the surrounding metros, listed prices regularly exceed the conforming baseline. A Maryland veteran with full entitlement can still buy at those prices with a VA loan and put zero dollars down. The lender just needs to be comfortable funding above the conforming cap — and most VA lenders are.
What changes above the baseline:
- Funding fee structure stays the same. Whether your purchase is $400,000 or $1.2 million, the funding fee percentage depends on whether this is your first VA use and your down payment. It does not jump based on loan size.
- Underwriting attention deepens. Above $1 million, expect a closer look at residual income, debt-to-income ratios, and reserves. The VA program does not change but lender overlays may.
- Appraisal scrutiny rises. VA appraisals on high-value properties get more eyes on the comparables.
If you have partial entitlement
If you have an active VA loan elsewhere or you defaulted on a prior VA loan, your effective Maryland buying power is calculated against the county limit. The math is:
- Take the county limit (baseline $832,750 for most Maryland counties)
- Multiply by 25% to find your remaining entitlement headroom
- You can buy with zero down up to that headroom; above it, you typically need 25% of the difference in cash
This math is awkward but it is the actual rule. Mike can walk you through your specific entitlement situation in a fifteen-minute call.
How to verify your entitlement
Pull your Certificate of Eligibility (COE) before you make an offer. Mike can pull it for you in most cases — usually within 24 hours. If you have used your benefit before, your COE will show your remaining entitlement and any restored entitlement.
Common Maryland questions
Can I buy above the $832,750 cap in Maryland?
Yes, if you have full entitlement. The cap matters for partial-entitlement borrowers and influences funding fee thresholds, not your maximum purchase price.
Do high-cost Maryland counties get higher VA limits?
Montgomery, Calvert, Charles, Prince George's, Anne Arundel, Howard, and Frederick counties trigger high-cost VA loan limits in 2026. For full-entitlement borrowers, this still does not cap your purchase price — it raises the partial-entitlement threshold.
What if I am stationed in Maryland but my COE shows I used VA in another state?
Your VA benefit is portable. The prior use reduces your current entitlement; what you have left applies in any state. We will walk through the math with you for Maryland specifically.