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Product Details

With a conventional mortgage, lenders make you pay for private mortgage insurance (PMI) on top of your regular mortgage payment if you don’t put down at least 20% when you’re buying your home.

For many borrowers, this makes it difficult to afford their dream homes both upfront and in terms of monthly payments.

Piggyback mortgages are smaller home loans you can take out at the same time you get your primary mortgage to help solve this problem.

When you get a piggyback loan, your larger mortgage might make up only 75% to 80% of your home’s total value, which can help you avoid PMI without paying 20% or more out of pocket.

If you’re considering this loan option, learn about how piggyback loans work in more detail, then review the pros and cons to help you decide if this type of loan is worth it for you.

Piggyback Loans

A Piggyback Loan is a smaller mortgage you can get alongside your main mortgage. It lets you borrow additional funds without needing private mortgage insurance (PMI), which lenders generally charge if you put down less than 20% of the amount of your conventional mortgage.

Frequently Asked Questions

How a Piggyback Loan works
Mortgage FAQ

A piggyback loan is a smaller mortgage you can get alongside your main mortgage.

It lets you borrow additional funds without needing private mortgage insurance (PMI), which lenders generally charge if you put down less than 20% of the amount of your conventional mortgage.

For instance, if you make a 10% down payment and take out a mortgage for the remaining 90%, you’d generally need private mortgage insurance.

However, you could instead put down 10% and borrow a mortgage that’s 80% of the home’s value — then get a piggyback mortgage that covers the remaining 10%.

This way, you’re still borrowing 90% of your home’s value, but your primary mortgage makes up only 80% of your home’s value, which means you can avoid PMI.

Types of Piggyback mortgages
Mortgage FAQ

Piggyback mortgages are described by how much of the home’s price they cover.

The two main types of piggyback loans are 80/10/10 and 75/15/10 configurations.

An 80/10/10 loan involves covering 80% of the home’s value with your main loan, 10% with the piggyback loan, and 10% with the down payment.

Similarly, a 75/15/10 loan means taking out a primary mortgage for 75% of the home’s value, covering 15% of the purchase with a piggyback loan, and putting down 10%.

Can you get a Piggyback Loan to avoid a Jumbo Loan?
Mortgage FAQ

One benefit of a piggyback loan is that it can help you avoid taking out a costly jumbo mortgage.

You can get a primary mortgage that’s below the conforming lending limit, then take out a piggyback loan to get the remaining funds to cover the total cost of the home you want.

Jumbo mortgages are home loans for amounts higher than Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac’s conforming loan limits for a given area.

In most of the U.S., this limit is $647,200 as of 2022, but certain high-cost areas get extended limits up to $970,800.

Jumbo loans aren’t an option for everyone; they’re more difficult to get and typically require a borrower with a high credit score, a low debt-to-income ratio, and several months of cash reserves.

Often, you’ll also have to put down a larger down payment — and interest and fees tend to be higher than with conforming loans.

Mortgage FAQ