In Wisconsin, statewide down payment assistance runs primarily through Wisconsin Housing and Economic Development Authority (WHEDA), alongside city and county programs. Here are the main programs — and the honest truths about which help is actually free and which you quietly pay for in your rate.
The main down payment assistance programs in Wisconsin
These are the flagship programs — but funding, income limits, and rates change constantly, so always confirm current details at the official source below before you count on one.
WHEDA Easy Close Advantage
A Wisconsin down payment assistance program run through Wisconsin Housing and Economic Development Authority (WHEDA). Funding, income limits, and rates change often, so confirm the current terms at the official source below before you count on it.
WHEDA Capital Access Advantage
A Wisconsin down payment assistance program run through Wisconsin Housing and Economic Development Authority (WHEDA). Funding, income limits, and rates change often, so confirm the current terms at the official source below before you count on it.
Who qualifies in Wisconsin
Most Wisconsin programs share the same gates: income limits (which vary by county and household size), a first-time buyer rule (usually not having owned a home in the last three years — often waived for veterans and in targeted areas), a homebuyer education course, a minimum credit score, and a tighter debt-to-income limit than a standard loan. Because that DTI cap is stricter, qualifying often comes down to restructuring a monthly payment or two — run your numbers here to see what you'd need.
Find & apply in Wisconsin
See how assistance changes what you need
A covered down payment means a lower income to qualify. Run your Wisconsin price and loan type — free, no pitch.
Open the Income Calculator →Frequently asked questions
Educational content only — not financial, mortgage, or legal advice, and not a loan offer or solicitation. Timothy George has been in the mortgage business since 2007; he is not a currently-licensed loan originator and does not originate loans. Wisconsin program terms, funding, income limits, and rates change constantly — confirm every detail with the program administrator, the Wisconsin Housing Finance Agency, and a currently-licensed professional before you act. Linked third-party sites are for convenience and are not endorsements.