Teachers and Municipal Employees DPA
Administered by Rhode Island Housing
Forgiven after 10 years of occupancy and employment.
Down payment assistance, grants, forgivable loans, and tax credits available to Rhode Island buyers. Each program below is verified, with eligibility rules, benefit amounts, and a direct link to the official agency.
Administered by Rhode Island Housing
Forgiven after 10 years of occupancy and employment.
Administered by U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
HUD program for teachers and first responders.
Administered by Rhode Island Housing
Special program for municipal employees.
Administered by Rhode Island Housing
Grant program that does not need to be repaid.
Administered by Rhode Island Housing
Grant program for low to moderate income families.
Administered by Rhode Island Housing
Closing cost assistance grant for low income buyers.
Administered by Rhode Island Housing
Special financing for accessible homes.
Administered by Rhode Island Housing
Low-interest rate mortgage for first-time buyers.
Administered by Rhode Island Housing
Mortgage program for previous homeowners.
Most Rhode Island programs require first-time buyer status, but the definition is broader than most people think — the IRS considers you a first-time buyer if you haven't owned a primary residence in the last three years. Each program above lists its specific rules.
Minimum credit scores vary by program. Most Rhode Island programs require 620 to 660, though some lower-tier products accept lower scores with manual underwriting. Check each program's eligibility section above.
Most state programs aren't applied to directly — you go through a participating lender, who handles the program application as part of your mortgage. Each program above links to the official agency page with the current list of approved lenders.
Often yes — many states allow you to stack a state down-payment grant with a federal FHA or VA loan. Some programs explicitly forbid combining; check each program's "special requirements" above.
The programs themselves are free to apply for. Some require completing a homebuyer education course (typically $50–$100, sometimes free). Forgivable second mortgages technically don't cost you unless you sell or refinance early — read the terms carefully.