VA Seller Concessions

VA Seller Concessions

The VA allows sellers to pay far more than most buyers realize — and the 4% rule only tells half the story. This page explains what actually counts toward that cap, what does not, and how to structure a VA offer that uses every dollar available to you.

This page covers the VA seller concession rules in full — what the 4% cap actually applies to, what costs fall completely outside it, how seller-paid discount points are correctly treated under VA guidelines, and why a significant portion of what other websites say on this topic is oversimplified or wrong. J.D. Peck and the JD.Mortgage Team specialize in structuring VA purchase offers correctly and are lending in 49 states. If you are trying to figure out how to use seller credits to make a deal work, this is where you start.

What Are VA Seller Concessions?

A seller concession is when the seller agrees to pay certain costs on behalf of the buyer at closing. On a VA loan, concessions can cover a wide range of items — from the VA Funding Fee to existing debt payoffs to rate buydowns. They are negotiated as part of the purchase contract and structured before closing.

Here is where most explanations go wrong: the term “seller concessions” is used loosely online to mean everything the seller pays. Under VA guidelines, it has a specific meaning. Only certain items are classified as VA seller concessions — and only those items count toward the 4% cap. Standard seller-paid closing costs are a separate category with no VA percentage ceiling. Understanding that distinction is the entire ballgame.


The Distinction That Changes Everything: Concessions vs. Seller-Paid Closing Costs

Most buyers, many real estate agents, and a surprising number of lenders treat these as the same thing. The VA does not. These are two different categories with two different sets of rules.

VA seller concessions are items that go beyond standard closing costs — things like paying off a buyer’s car loan, covering the VA Funding Fee, or funding a temporary rate buydown. These are capped at 4% of the home’s appraised value or purchase price, whichever is lower.

Standard seller-paid closing costs are the normal transaction costs a seller can pay on the buyer’s behalf — title fees, escrow fees, recording fees, lender fees within VA guidelines. These have no VA percentage cap and can be paid on top of the 4% concession allowance.

Category Subject to 4% Cap? Examples
VA Seller Concessions Yes — capped at 4% of appraised value VA Funding Fee paid by seller, buyer debt payoffs (car loans, credit cards, collections), prepaid mortgage payments, temporary rate buydown costs, buyer gifts or incentives
Standard Seller-Paid Closing Costs No VA percentage cap Title fees, escrow and settlement fees, recording fees, normal market-rate discount points, lender fees within VA guidelines

What Counts Toward the 4% Cap

The following items are classified as VA seller concessions and count toward the 4% ceiling. The 4% is calculated against the home’s established reasonable value — typically the appraised value or the purchase price, whichever is lower.

VA Funding Fee

When the seller pays the VA Funding Fee on the buyer’s behalf, that payment counts as a concession. At 2.15% to 3.3% of the loan amount, this alone can consume a significant portion of the 4% cap.

Buyer Debt Payoffs

The seller can pay off the buyer’s car loan, credit card balances, or collections at closing. This reduces DTI and can move a borderline approval into a clean one. Counts toward the 4%.

Temporary Rate Buydown

A seller-funded 2-1 or 3-2-1 buydown reduces the buyer’s rate for the first one to three years. The cost to fund the buydown escrow counts as a concession toward the 4%.

Prepaid Mortgage Payments

If the seller prepays mortgage installments on the buyer’s behalf, those payments count as a concession. These are distinct from standard prepaids like interest and insurance.

Buyer Gifts or Incentives

Cash gifts, appliance packages, furniture allowances, or other incentives from the seller to the buyer count as concessions. Common in builder transactions.

Extra Prepaids Beyond Custom

Prepaid taxes, homeowner’s insurance, or HOA dues beyond what is typical for the transaction can be treated as concessions depending on how they are structured.


What Does NOT Count Toward the 4% Cap

Standard closing costs that are customary and reasonable in the local market can be seller-paid without being classified as VA concessions. There is no VA percentage ceiling on these items. A seller can pay the entire amount below and still have room to pay concessions on top.

  • Title insurance and settlement fees
  • Escrow and closing agent fees
  • Recording fees
  • Lender fees within VA guidelines (origination, underwriting)
  • Normal, market-appropriate discount points (see the dedicated section below)
  • VA appraisal fee
  • Credit report fee
  • Flood determination and certification fees

Not sure whether a specific cost counts toward the cap? We review contract structures before you submit the offer.

Ask Before You Sign

The 4% in Real Dollar Terms

The 4% limit is based on the home’s established reasonable value — typically the appraised value or purchase price, whichever is lower. Here is what that looks like in real numbers, and what it can realistically cover.

Home Price Max 4% Concession Example Coverage
$300,000 $12,000 VA Funding Fee (~$6,450) + car loan payoff + prepaids
$500,000 $20,000 Full Funding Fee + debt payoff + 2-1 buydown funding
$750,000 $30,000 Major debt reduction + Funding Fee + prepaid items

Note: These examples assume the buyer is not exempt from the VA Funding Fee. Veterans receiving VA disability compensation pay no Funding Fee — which changes how the concession budget can be used entirely.


Seller-Paid Discount Points: What Most Pages Get Wrong

This is the most misunderstood piece of the VA seller concession rules — and it matters because structuring it wrong can either cost the buyer thousands or create problems at underwriting.

Here is the short version: normal, market-appropriate discount points paid by the seller are not automatically classified as VA concessions. They can be treated as standard seller-paid closing costs — meaning they do not count toward the 4% cap.

Where the Confusion Comes From

VA training materials include an illustrative example referencing two discount points as a reference point for what might be “normal.” That example has been misread, copied, and republished across the internet as a firm rule — specifically as: “sellers can pay 2 discount points before they start counting toward the 4% cap.”

That is not what the guidance says. The example illustrates the concept of market-appropriate points. It was never intended to set a universal two-point ceiling for every transaction in every market in every rate environment.

The Actual Standard: Market-Appropriate Points

The VA guidance is built around whether the discount points are appropriate to the market. Points that reflect normal pricing for the interest rate being offered — consistent with what lenders are pricing in the current rate environment — are treated as normal closing costs, not concessions.

Points that go beyond what the market would normally charge to obtain that rate — used as an additional incentive or inducement rather than as genuine rate reduction — are more likely to be treated as concessions and counted toward the 4% cap.

The Practical Reality in Today’s Market

The phrase “customary to the market” is harder to apply today than many websites suggest. Rate sheets change daily. Pricing varies by lender, loan size, credit profile, and lock period. What is a normal point structure for one file in one market may look aggressive in another.

This is not a reason to avoid seller-paid points. It is a reason to have a lender review the structure before the offer is submitted — not after the contract is signed.

✅ Treated as Normal Closing Cost

  • Points consistent with current market pricing for that rate
  • Points that reflect a genuine rate reduction, not an inducement
  • Points supported by the lender’s rate sheet at time of lock

⚠️ Likely Treated as Concession

  • Points well above what the market charges for that rate
  • Points structured primarily as a buyer incentive, not rate reduction
  • Points that raise questions about whether the sale price was inflated to fund them

The bottom line: seller-paid discount points are a legitimate tool. They are not automatically a concession. The structure matters, and the earlier a lender reviews it, the less likely it is to become a problem at underwriting.


Common Misconceptions — Corrected

The internet is full of oversimplified explanations of VA seller concessions. Here is what is actually true.

❌ Myth: “The seller can only pay 4% total toward the buyer’s costs.”

✅ Fact: The 4% cap applies only to items classified as VA concessions. Standard seller-paid closing costs — title, escrow, recording, normal discount points, lender fees — have no VA percentage cap and can be paid on top of the 4%.

❌ Myth: “All seller-paid discount points count toward the 4% cap.”

✅ Fact: Normal, market-appropriate discount points are treated as standard closing costs under VA guidelines and do not automatically count toward the concession cap. Points become concessions when they exceed what is appropriate to the market.

❌ Myth: “The VA allows exactly 2 discount points — anything above that is a concession.”

✅ Fact: The two-point reference in VA training materials is an illustrative example, not a rule. There is no universal VA-mandated discount point ceiling. The actual standard is whether the points are appropriate to the market — which depends on current pricing, the lender, and the loan structure.

❌ Myth: “A $500,000 VA purchase means the seller can pay a maximum of $20,000 total.”

✅ Fact: The $20,000 is the cap for concession items only. The seller can also pay title fees, escrow fees, recording fees, market-appropriate discount points, and other standard closing costs without those amounts counting against the concession limit.

❌ Myth: “The 4% rule is straightforward — any lender can apply it the same way.”

✅ Fact: How concessions are classified can depend on how costs are categorized on the Loan Estimate, what the lender’s overlays require, and how the contract is structured. A lender who does not specialize in VA loans may apply the rules more conservatively than VA guidelines actually require.


Strategic Ways to Use VA Seller Concessions

Concessions are most powerful when they are part of a deliberate approval strategy — not just a way to reduce closing costs on paper. Here is how we use them.

Cover the VA Funding Fee

At 2.15% to 3.3% of the loan amount, the Funding Fee is the single largest upfront cost on most VA purchases. Having the seller cover it keeps that cash in your pocket — and on a $500,000 loan, that is up to $16,500 you do not have to bring to closing. Veterans with a service-connected disability rating are fully exempt and do not pay the fee at all.

Pay Off Debt to Fix DTI

If your debt-to-income ratio is at or above 41%, having the seller pay off a car loan or credit card at closing can drop your DTI enough to move from a manual underwrite approval to a clean AUS approval — or from a conditional approval to a clear one. This is a negotiation tool built into the offer, not a workaround. We model the DTI impact before we write the concession into the contract.

Use a Temporary Rate Buydown

A seller-funded 2-1 buydown reduces your rate by 2% in year one and 1% in year two before settling at the note rate in year three. The seller funds an escrow account at closing to make up the difference. This lowers your first two years of payments significantly and counts as a concession. In a market where sellers are motivated, this is one of the most effective uses of the concession allowance available.

Pay Off Collections to Strengthen Credit

If you have collections that are hurting your credit score or creating underwriting conditions, having the seller pay them off at closing accomplishes two things: it satisfies any lender requirements around those accounts, and it can improve your credit profile enough to qualify for a better rate. We identify which accounts have the most leverage and build the concession request accordingly.


How to Structure the Concession Request in Your Offer

Asking for concessions effectively starts before the offer is written. The lender and agent need to coordinate so the concession amount is correctly categorized, does not inflate the contract price beyond what the appraisal will support, and covers the right items in the right order.

  1. 1
    Get a lender review before the offer — Confirm which costs will count as concessions versus standard seller-paid costs, and confirm how much concession room you have based on the expected purchase price.
  2. 2
    Be specific in the contract — Vague language like “seller to pay buyer closing costs up to 4%” leaves room for misinterpretation. Specify what is being paid and how it is categorized.
  3. 3
    Confirm the appraisal math — The concession cap is based on the appraised value or purchase price, whichever is lower. If the purchase price is close to market value, this is usually clean. If there is a gap, it affects the concession ceiling.
  4. 4
    Prioritize highest-value items first — If the 4% concession room is limited, use it on items with the biggest financial impact to your approval: Funding Fee, debt payoffs, or buydown funding. Do not spend concession dollars on items that could be covered by standard seller-paid costs with no cap.

Working with a builder? Builder concession structures need a separate review — we handle those before you sign.

Review My Builder Contract

VA Seller Concessions — FAQs

Is the 4% calculated on the purchase price or the appraised value?

The 4% cap is based on the home’s established reasonable value — whichever is lower between the purchase price and the appraised value. On most clean transactions these are the same number. If the appraisal comes in below the purchase price, the concession ceiling drops accordingly.

Can the seller pay more than 4% total?

Yes — but only if the additional amounts are standard seller-paid closing costs, not concessions. Title fees, escrow fees, recording fees, and market-appropriate discount points can be paid by the seller in addition to the 4% concession allowance. The 4% ceiling is not the ceiling on everything the seller pays — it is the ceiling on the concession-classified items only.

Do seller-paid discount points always count toward the 4%?

No. Normal, market-appropriate discount points are treated as standard closing costs under VA guidelines and do not automatically count toward the concession cap. The determining factor is whether the points are appropriate to what the market is charging for that rate. Points that exceed market norms or are structured as an inducement rather than genuine rate reduction are more likely to be treated as concessions. This is one of the most misunderstood pieces of VA loan guidelines — and most competing websites get it wrong.

Is there a hard rule that only 2 discount points are allowed before they count as a concession?

No. The two-point reference in VA training materials is an illustrative example — not a permanent rule, not a VA-published ceiling. The actual standard is whether the points are appropriate to the market. In the current rate environment, “customary” can be difficult to define with precision, which is why lender review before signing the contract matters.

Do seller concessions affect the VA appraisal?

Not directly. The appraisal establishes the home’s reasonable value independently of what the seller agrees to pay. However, if the purchase price was inflated to create room for concessions, the appraisal needs to support that price — if it does not, the concession ceiling drops to 4% of the appraised value, which may be lower than anticipated.

Can a builder offer VA seller concessions on a new construction home?

Yes. Builders frequently offer incentive packages that can include VA-compliant concessions. Builder contracts require careful review — what the builder calls an “incentive” may or may not be categorized the same way the VA classifies concessions. We review builder contracts before signing to confirm the structure is correct and that the concession room is being used on the right items.

What if I am exempt from the VA Funding Fee — how does that change my concession strategy?

Significantly. Veterans receiving VA disability compensation pay no Funding Fee. If the fee is off the table, the full 4% concession allowance is available for other purposes — debt payoffs, buydowns, prepaids, or collections. Exemption status should always be confirmed before the offer is structured.

Can the seller use concessions to pay off my credit cards or car loan?

Yes. Seller-paid debt payoffs are classified as VA concessions and count toward the 4% cap. When structured correctly, this can meaningfully lower your DTI, reduce the monthly obligations that show on your credit report, and in some cases change the underwriting path from a manual review to an automated approval.

What happens if the seller concession exceeds 4%?

Any concession amount above 4% of the appraised value is not allowed under VA guidelines. If the contract is written to exceed this, the lender will require it to be amended before closing. Items that exceed the cap cannot simply be reclassified — the contract needs to reflect the corrected structure.


Let Us Structure Your VA Offer Correctly

Getting the concession structure right before the offer is submitted can save thousands and prevent underwriting problems. We review the full picture — purchase price, appraisal, DTI, credit, and concession allocation — and tell you exactly how to write it.

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