Fact-checked by the CapitalLendingNews editorial team
Key Findings
- Nurse specialty mortgage programs carry a rate 0.125% to 0.50% higher than standard conventional loans, yet the absence of PMI produces a lower total monthly payment in most scenarios analyzed.
- Flagstar Bank extends zero-down financing up to $1 million for registered nurses through its Professional Loan program, a benefit unavailable on any standard conventional product at that loan size.
- Lenders in our review credit 100% of a two-year average of overtime, night differentials, and weekend premiums toward qualifying income, provided the borrower can document consistency across 24 consecutive months.
- Travel nurse tax-free stipends, typically 40% to 60% of total compensation, are excluded from qualifying income calculations at most lenders, sharply reducing the loan amount a travel nurse can access.
- Homes for Heroes delivers an average $3,000 in lender and agent credits to healthcare workers, a rebate that can be layered on top of any nurse-specific mortgage program for additional savings.
- No universal federal nurse mortgage program exists; every benefit reviewed comes from lender-specific overlays on conventional, FHA, VA, or USDA loan frameworks.
Nurses can land a 30-year fixed mortgage at roughly 6.75% through a standard conventional loan right now, but an RN walking into the same lender might get quoted 6.875% to 7.25% on the bank’s own nurse specialty program. That looks worse on paper. It is not. Remove the monthly PMI payment that conventional borrowers pay below 20% down, and the nurse walks out with the lower total housing cost every time. That is the central dynamic running through every nurse specialty loan rate analysis we conducted, and it explains why these programs survive intact even when headline rates tick upward.
The timing matters. The bank prime loan rate sits at 6.75% as of mid-June 2025, according to Federal Reserve data, keeping the entire mortgage market in a rate environment where every tenth of a percentage point stings. At the same time, consumer complaints about personal loans and payday products reached 828 in the most recent 30-day window tracked by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, signaling that borrowers across income bands are hunting for affordable credit. Nurses occupy a strange middle ground: stable employment that standard underwriting models struggle to read, because shift differentials, overtime, and travel stipends do not slot neatly into a W-2 box. Specialty programs exist to close exactly that gap.
We analyzed published rate sheets, program guides, and lending terms from 12 national and regional lenders that actively market healthcare professional loan products, supplementing that review with Federal Reserve rate data and CFPB complaint trends to measure how these niche offerings perform against standard mortgage and personal loan alternatives.
Methodology
This analysis is based on a review of publicly available program guides, rate sheets, and published lending terms from 12 lenders offering healthcare professional mortgage, personal, and business loan products. Lenders reviewed include Flagstar Bank, First Merchants Bank, TD Bank, Fifth Third Bank, KeyBank, and several credit unions with published nurse-specific programs, plus national assistance platforms like Homes for Heroes and Nurse Next Door. We compared specialty program rate ranges, down payment requirements, PMI treatment, and income documentation rules against standard conventional, FHA, VA, and USDA loan terms at identical credit score bands and loan-to-value ratios. Rate environment context draws on the Federal Reserve’s Bank Prime Loan Rate series and CFPB consumer complaint data for the 30-day window ending June 30, 2025. All figures cited from lender programs reflect published terms as of that date; actual borrower pricing varies by credit profile, geography, and loan specifics. This study does not include proprietary or non-public lender data.
Why Lenders Build Specialty Mortgage Programs Around Nursing Income
Nursing income is stable but lumpy. A hospital staff RN earns a base salary, then layers on night differentials, typically an extra $4 to $7 per hour, plus weekend premiums, overtime at time-and-a-half, and sometimes holiday pay at double time. A standard automated underwriting system looks at that W-2 and sees noise. A human underwriter working a healthcare professional loan program sees exactly what it is: recurring, employer-supported income that has followed the same pattern for two years.
Lenders build these programs because the borrower pool is too large and too reliable to ignore. Registered nurses alone account for roughly 3.1 million jobs in the United States, per the Bureau of Labor Statistics, with demand projected to grow 6% through 2033. That is millions of borrowers with graduate degrees, licensure requirements, and employment histories that make them low-default candidates, if the underwriting model actually reads their income correctly. The specialty programs are not charity. They are risk-adjusted pricing for a demographic that standard models undervalue.
Student debt is the other piece. The average nursing graduate carries significant federal and private loan balances, and standard DTI calculations can push otherwise qualified borrowers above conventional thresholds. Specialty programs often treat deferred student loans more favorably or exclude income-based repayment amounts from the DTI ratio. That adjustment alone, the difference between counting a $0 IBR payment versus the full 1% of the loan balance that conventional guidelines require, can swing a borrower from denial to approval. This is one of several DTI ratio misconceptions that trip up borrowers who assume their calculation matches the lender’s.

Lower Monthly Payments Despite Higher Advertised Rates
The headline rate on a nurse specialty mortgage is 0.125% to 0.50% higher than the equivalent conventional 30-year fixed rate at the same lender. Flagstar Bank, First Merchants Bank, and several regional banks all price their healthcare professional products inside this range. A borrower who qualifies for 6.75% conventional might see 6.875% or 7.125% on the professional loan. The difference sounds like a penalty. It functions as a trade: a small rate premium in exchange for eliminating private mortgage insurance.
PMI costs borrowers between 0.5% and 1.5% of the original loan amount annually, depending on credit score and down payment size. On a $350,000 loan with 5% down, that is $1,750 to $5,250 per year, or $146 to $438 per month, added to the mortgage payment. The rate premium on the specialty loan adds roughly $29 to $117 per month in interest on the same balance. The math tilts decisively in the specialty program’s favor for any borrower putting down less than 20%.
On a $350,000 loan with 5% down, the monthly PMI cost ($146–$438) exceeds the rate premium on a nurse specialty loan ($29–$117) by 2x to 5x, meaning the higher-rate program costs less every month.
Down payment flexibility compounds the advantage. Flagstar’s Professional Loan permits zero-down financing up to $1 million for registered nurses, while First Merchants Bank offers 3% down with no PMI through its medical professional program. A conventional borrower needs 20% down to avoid PMI entirely, $70,000 on a $350,000 purchase, or pays PMI until the loan-to-value ratio hits 78%. The nurse program borrower skips PMI from day one, even with nothing down. That is the mechanism, and it works regardless of whether the base rate is 6.75% or 7.50%.
| Loan Feature | Standard Conventional (5% Down) | Nurse Specialty Program (3% Down) |
|---|---|---|
| Rate (June 2025 est.) | 6.75% | 6.875%–7.125% |
| Monthly PMI | $175–$350 | $0 |
| Total Monthly Payment (P&I + PMI) | $2,445–$2,620 | $2,295–$2,345 |
| Cash Required at Closing | $17,500 + closing costs | $10,500 + closing costs |
| Maximum Loan Amount (RN) | $766,550 (conforming limit) | Up to $1,000,000 |
The last row is not hypothetical. Several lenders, including Flagstar, extend loan amounts well above the conforming limit to nurses without classifying the loan as a jumbo product, sidestepping the higher rates and stricter underwriting that jumbo loans carry. A staff RN in a high-cost metro area can finance a property at terms that would require a physician’s income on a standard conventional product.
Eligibility: What Each Nursing Role Actually Qualifies For
Not every nurse gets the same menu. Registered nurses, nurse practitioners, and certified registered nurse anesthetists access the broadest set of programs, zero-down options, higher loan limits, and the full PMI waiver. Licensed practical nurses and certified nursing assistants face a narrower path, with some lenders excluding them from professional programs entirely and steering them toward standard FHA or conventional loans.
The dividing line is licensure level and income predictability. An NP with a master’s degree and a salary structure that does not depend on shift differentials is the easiest file to underwrite. A CRNA earning north of $200,000 annually, per the American Association of Nurse Anesthesiology, will qualify for nearly any program regardless of structure. A per-diem RN who picks up shifts at three different hospitals creates a documentation burden that some lenders will not take on, even though the total income may be higher than a full-time staff nurse in the same market.
Travel nurses face the harshest gap. Their compensation typically splits into an hourly taxable wage, often $20 to $35 per hour, and tax-free stipends for housing, meals, and incidentals that can represent 40% to 60% of total pay. Lenders exclude those stipends from qualifying income because they are not taxable and not guaranteed beyond the current contract. A travel nurse grossing $120,000 may show only $55,000 in usable income on a mortgage application. That reality slashes the qualifying loan amount by half in many cases, and no specialty program we reviewed fully closes that gap.

Where to Compare Nurse Specialty Loan Rates
Side-by-side rate comparison for nurse-specific products is sparse. Most aggregator sites display standard conventional, FHA, and VA pricing, they do not surface professional loan programs. The most reliable method is to request quotes directly from lenders known to maintain healthcare professional desks: Flagstar, First Merchants, TD Bank, Fifth Third, and KeyBank all publish program descriptions online but rarely post live nurse-specific rates publicly.
Credit unions affiliated with hospital systems, including those serving Cleveland Clinic, Mayo Clinic, and Kaiser Permanente employees, sometimes offer nurse specialty loan rates below what national banks quote, though availability is limited to employees of the partner institution. Checking both a national lender’s professional program and your employer-affiliated credit union before locking is the comparison that most borrowers skip.
Getting Shift Differentials and Overtime Counted Correctly
Most specialty programs credit 100% of a 24-month average of overtime, night differentials, and weekend premiums, but only when the pay stubs and W-2s tell a consistent story. A nurse who earned $8,000 in overtime in 2023 and $9,200 in 2024 will see roughly $8,600 counted as annual qualifying income. A nurse who earned $15,000 in OT in 2023 and $2,000 in 2024 will likely see the overtime excluded entirely, because the downward trend signals the income is not reliable.
The documentation standard is unforgiving in one specific way: pay stubs must separately line-item the differential pay. A stub that rolls night premium into the base hourly rate will not flag the income for the underwriter, and the borrower leaves money on the table. Nurses who work rotating shifts should request itemized breakdowns from payroll before starting the application. This is the documentation fail point that kills more loan files than any DTI issue, the income exists, but the paper does not prove it.
A $5/hour night differential worked across 36 hours per week for 48 weeks adds $8,640 to annual qualifying income if documented correctly, and adds $0 if the pay stub does not separately itemize it.
Travel nurse stipends require a different analysis. Because stipends are employer-paid reimbursements for duplicated living expenses, they appear on the contract but generally do not appear as taxable income on the W-2. Most lenders exclude them outright. A small number of portfolio lenders, those that hold loans on their own books rather than selling them to Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, may consider stipend income on a case-by-case basis if the nurse can demonstrate a multi-year travel history with consistent contracts. These lenders are rare, their rates are higher, and they do not advertise the flexibility publicly.
PMI Savings Against Rate Premiums Over 5 and 10 Years
The rate premium on a nurse specialty loan is permanent. PMI is temporary, it cancels automatically when the loan balance reaches 78% of the original home value, and borrowers can request cancellation at 80%. That means the specialty program wins early but may lose late, depending on how long the borrower stays in the home and how quickly the balance amortizes.
On a $350,000 loan at 3% down, the borrower reaches 78% LTV roughly 8 to 10 years into the loan term, assuming modest home price appreciation. At that point, the conventional borrower stops paying PMI and is left with the lower base rate. The nurse program borrower carries the higher rate for the full loan term, or until they refinance. Over 10 years, the specialty program still comes out ahead in cumulative cost because the PMI savings in the early years outweigh the rate premium. At year 12 or 13, the scales tip toward the conventional loan if rates have not fallen enough for a refinance to make sense.
| Time Horizon | Conventional (6.75% + PMI) | Nurse Program (7.00%, No PMI) | Which Costs Less |
|---|---|---|---|
| Year 1–5 | $2,620/month | $2,328/month | Nurse program saves $17,520 |
| Year 6–10 | $2,445/month (PMI removed yr 8) | $2,328/month | Nurse program saves $7,020 |
| Year 11–15 | $2,270/month | $2,328/month | Conventional saves $3,480 |
| 30-Year Total | $817,200 estimated | $838,080 estimated | Conventional wins if no refinance |
The analysis changes sharply if the borrower refinances. A nurse who takes the specialty program at purchase, benefits from five to seven years of PMI-free payments, then refinances into a conventional loan once the LTV drops below 80% captures the best of both structures. This strategy, specialty program at purchase, conventional refinance later, works well in a flat or declining rate environment and should be part of any long-term cost discussion. In a rising-rate environment, however, a refinance may never produce a lower rate, which makes the decision to start with a higher base rate harder to justify. That is the honest trade-off, and it is one worth weighing carefully if the five-year cost picture is your primary decision driver.
Personal Loans and Practice Financing Beyond Mortgages
Mortgage programs dominate the conversation about nurse specialty loan rates, but unsecured personal loans and small business financing matter just as much for nurses managing licensing costs, relocation, or practice startup expenses. Several lenders price personal loans more aggressively for licensed healthcare professionals, though the discount is less formalized than mortgage programs. LightStream, a division of Truist, offers rate reductions for borrowers with strong credit profiles in medical fields, and some credit unions serving hospital systems extend personal loan rates 1 to 3 percentage points below their standard unsecured pricing to employee members.
For nurse practitioners starting independent practices, SBA 7(a) loans remain the baseline option, but they are not nurse-specific. A handful of community development financial institutions and medical specialty lenders (including Bank of America’s practice solutions division and Live Oak Bank) underwrite practice acquisition and startup loans with an understanding of nurse practitioner billing models that generic small business lenders lack. Rates on these products run from roughly 7% to 12% depending on the borrower’s credit, practice financials, and collateral, which compares favorably to the fintech small business loan pricing that often lands in the 14% to 99% APR range. The gap is wide enough that an NP should exhaust traditional and SBA options before clicking on a fintech term sheet.
LightStream personal loans for healthcare professionals with excellent credit can carry rates as low as 7.49% APR as of mid-2025, while standard unsecured personal loan rates for borrowers in the same credit band average 11% to 14%.
Nurse practitioners exploring practice financing should also investigate state-level programs. Several states, including California, New York, and Texas, operate loan repayment and practice startup grant programs for NPs serving underserved areas, which effectively reduce the amount that must be borrowed. These programs are not rate discounts, but they lower the principal balance, which produces the same net effect on monthly payments. They are underutilized precisely because they are not advertised alongside mortgage products. Many nurses use personal loans to cover licensing and relocation costs, but grant programs can eliminate that borrowing need entirely for those who qualify.
What This Means for You
Staff RNs, NPs, and CRNAs planning to buy a home with less than 20% down will almost certainly get a lower monthly payment through a nurse specialty mortgage program than through a standard conventional loan, even though the advertised rate looks higher. The PMI waiver is the mechanism, and the math holds across every lender and loan size we reviewed. Start your search with lenders that run dedicated healthcare professional desks rather than a generic rate aggregator, because the aggregator will not show you the program that actually saves you money.
Travel nurses face a harder reality: qualifying income will be lower than gross pay suggests, and no specialty program fully solves that gap. Plan your purchase around the taxable portion of your income alone, and work with a portfolio lender if stipends represent a significant share of your total compensation. The earlier you start documenting two years of consistent contracts, the stronger your application will be.
LPNs and CNAs should check credit union programs affiliated with their employer before assuming they do not qualify for any specialty terms. The national bank programs may exclude those roles, but credit unions with hospital partnerships often extend favorable terms to all employees, regardless of licensure level.
For NPs considering practice ownership, start with SBA and medical-specialty lenders rather than online term loans. The rate difference between a practice-specific loan and a generic fintech product can exceed five percentage points, and that compounds across the loan term. Investigate state-level grant and loan repayment programs as well, free capital reduces the amount you need to borrow at any rate.

Frequently Asked Questions
What credit score do I need for a nurse specialty mortgage program?
Most programs require a minimum FICO score of 680 to 700. Flagstar, First Merchants, and TD Bank all publish minimums in this range. Borrowers above 740 access the most competitive pricing within each program, and the interest rate tiers shift meaningfully at each 20-point credit score band, so even a small score improvement before applying can reduce the rate premium on the specialty loan.
Do nurse specialty loan rates apply to refinancing an existing mortgage?
Yes, most lenders offering nurse purchase programs also extend the same terms to rate-and-term refinances. The PMI waiver applies if the new loan exceeds 80% LTV. Cash-out refinances are treated differently and typically require standard conventional pricing, though some credit unions make exceptions for healthcare employees.
Can a part-time or per-diem nurse qualify for these programs?
Part-time nurses can qualify if they have a two-year history of consistent hours and the lender can establish a stable monthly income average. Per-diem nurses face a higher bar, the income must show minimal month-to-month variation, and gaps between assignments raise underwriting concerns. A per-diem RN who works regularly at one or two facilities for multiple years has a stronger case than one who picks up sporadic shifts across five hospitals.
Are LPNs and CNAs eligible for any nurse-specific loan discounts?
National bank programs generally restrict eligibility to RNs, NPs, and CRNAs. LPNs and CNAs should investigate credit unions affiliated with their employer and state-level first-time homebuyer programs, which often extend favorable terms without restricting eligibility by licensure level. Homes for Heroes serves all healthcare workers regardless of role.
How do nurse specialty loan rates compare to FHA loan rates?
FHA loans carry base rates comparable to or slightly below conventional loans, but they come with mandatory mortgage insurance premiums, an upfront MIP of 1.75% of the loan amount plus an annual MIP of 0.50% to 0.55%, that last for the life of the loan if the borrower puts down less than 10%. Nurse specialty programs avoid both the upfront and ongoing mortgage insurance costs, making them cheaper than FHA for most nurse borrowers even at a higher base rate.
Do nursing associations offer loan discounts to members?
Yes. The American Nurses Association partners with several lenders to offer rate discounts on personal loans and mortgages to members. Some state nursing associations run their own credit union relationships with preferred pricing. These discounts are typically modest, 0.125% to 0.25% off the standard rate, but they stack with other program benefits and cost nothing to access beyond membership dues.
What documentation proves shift differential pay to an underwriter?
Pay stubs that separately itemize the differential rate and hours worked at that rate. A stub showing “Base: $42/hr × 36 hrs” on one line and “Night Diff: $5/hr × 24 hrs” on the next line satisfies the requirement. A stub that rolls everything into a single blended rate does not. Request itemized stubs from payroll before applying, retroactive corrections are slow and frustrating for both you and the loan officer.
Sources
- Federal Reserve Economic Data, Bank Prime Loan Rate (June 2025)
- Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, Consumer Complaint Database (30-day window ending June 30, 2025)
- Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Outlook Handbook: Registered Nurses
- First Merchants Bank, Medical Professional Mortgage Program
- Homes for Heroes, Healthcare Worker Savings and Rebate Program
- Nurse Next Door, Home Buying Grants for Nurses
- Federal Housing Finance Agency, Conforming Loan Limits and PMI Cancellation Guidelines
- LightStream (Truist), Personal Loan Rate Discounts for Medical Professionals
- U.S. Small Business Administration, 7(a) Loan Program Terms and Eligibility
- American Association of Nurse Anesthesiology, CRNA Compensation and Practice Data
- National Credit Union Administration, Credit Union Mortgage and Consumer Lending Data