
By Steven J. Thomas
The biggest myth in real estate is that you need 20 percent down to buy a home. You do not. In 2026, first-time buyers across DeSoto and the wider DFW area have access to grants and forgivable loans that cover thousands of dollars in down payment and closing costs, some of which you never pay back. If a down payment is the only thing standing between you and a home of your own, this guide shows you exactly what is available, who qualifies, and how to put it to work in southwest Dallas.
DFW buyers in 2026 can stack several programs. TSAHC offers grants of roughly 3 to 5 percent of the loan amount that never need repayment. The Dallas Homebuyer Assistance Program offers up to $50,000, and Fort Worth offers up to $25,000 for eligible first-time buyers. Most require a 620 credit score and income limits. Start by getting pre-approved so you know which programs fit you.
DeSoto is one of the strongest places in DFW to use assistance, because your dollars stretch. With a median sale price near $329,000 to $350,000 in early 2026 (Orchard, April 2026), a 3 to 5 percent TSAHC grant can cover most or all of an FHA down payment. That means you can buy with very little of your own cash and keep your savings for moving costs and reserves. If you have rented in DeSoto for years, the monthly gap between rent and a mortgage is smaller than you think once assistance closes the down payment. See what is on the market on the Lone Star Living App.
Lancaster and Glenn Heights sit in the entry-to-mid price bands where assistance programs do the most good. Buyers here are usually the most rate-sensitive, so combining a TSAHC grant with a competitive loan can drop both your upfront cash and your monthly payment. These suburbs also have newer inventory, which means fewer surprise repairs for a first-time owner. Curious what you can actually afford? Get pre-approved first and we will map the numbers.
Cedar Hill and Duncanville give first-time buyers a mix of established neighborhoods and solid schools at prices where city and state assistance still applies. Because inventory across DFW is up about 7 percent year over year (DFW market data, 2026), buyers have more choice and more negotiating room than they did two years ago. That is a real advantage when you pair it with a grant that lowers your cash to close.
Pro Tip: Assistance programs have funding caps and can run out mid-year. Getting pre-approved early puts you first in line while funds are available.
Here is what those numbers mean for you. Rates have eased from last year, inventory is healthier, and sellers are more willing to help with closing costs. Pair that softer market with a down payment grant and 2026 is one of the more workable years first-time DFW buyers have seen in a while. The window matters because program funds are limited and the market can shift. You can follow the broader picture on my DFW market statistics page.
"Down payment is the number one barrier for first-time buyers, and most do not realize that grants and forgivable loans can erase it. The buyers who win are the ones who get pre-approved and apply before the funds run dry."
Let us put real numbers on a typical DeSoto purchase so you can see how assistance changes the math.
The point is that the cash you actually need to bring can be far smaller than the sticker shock suggests once a grant and concessions are in place. We figure out your real number when you get pre-approved.
There are three buckets to understand. State programs, city programs, and loan-level help. TSAHC runs the statewide grants, including Home Sweet Texas and Home for Texas Heroes for teachers, first responders, and veterans, with income limits that vary by county and household size. The City of Dallas program, now administered by BCL of Texas as of May 2026, offers up to $50,000 in assistance. Fort Worth offers up to $25,000 within its city limits. Most of these work with FHA, VA, USDA, and conventional loans and require a 620 credit score. Because the rules and funding change, you want a lender who tracks them in real time. That is where being dual-licensed helps, since I handle both the home search and the financing side at once. Start at Get Started.
Getting a grant is only half the equation. The other half is structuring the loan so the assistance actually closes. That means matching the right program to the right loan type, confirming income and credit fit the guidelines before you fall in love with a home, and timing your application while funds are open. I look at your credit, your budget, and your timeline first, then build a plan, so you are not scrambling for paperwork after you are already under contract.
This planning-first approach is why my buyers do not lose deals over financing surprises. One person handles your pre-approval, your assistance application, and your contract, so nothing falls through the cracks between a separate agent and a separate lender. Ready to see what you qualify for? Get pre-approved today.
You do not need a pile of cash to buy a home in DeSoto or the wider DFW area in 2026. Between TSAHC grants, city programs worth up to $50,000, a softer market, and seller concessions, the path to ownership is more open than it has been in years. The buyers who get there are the ones who get pre-approved early, apply while funds last, and work with someone who handles both the loan and the home. Most agents focus on the house. I focus on the full picture, including how you actually pay for it.
Here is how to take the next step:
You're Always Home with Steven J. Thomas.
Start by getting pre-approved with a lender approved for the program you want. The lender confirms your income, credit, and price range, then helps you submit the assistance application alongside your loan. Doing both at once keeps your timeline tight.
It depends on the program. TSAHC grants are gifts you never repay. City programs are often forgivable second liens that are erased after you live in the home for a set period, usually around three years.
Funding is limited and can be exhausted before year end. If one program closes, others may still be open, which is why working with a lender who tracks all of them matters. Applying early protects your spot.
DeSoto, Lancaster, Glenn Heights, Cedar Hill, and Duncanville all sit in price ranges where state and city assistance stretch the furthest, and the City of Dallas and Fort Worth run their own programs within city limits.
Once you are pre-approved, a typical purchase with assistance closes in about 30 to 45 days, similar to a standard loan. Getting your paperwork ready up front is what keeps it on schedule.
Download the Lone Star Living App to browse current DeSoto and DFW listings in the price ranges where assistance programs apply.
Steven J. Thomas is a dual-licensed Texas real estate broker at Refind Realty DFW and loan officer at Envision Home Lenders, based in DeSoto, TX 75115. Call or text 972-846-9170. Equal Housing Opportunity. Program details are based on current conditions at the time of writing, may change, and are not a guarantee of eligibility, price, or timeline.
Site: www.stevenjthomas.com
Call :(713) 505-2280
Email: [email protected]
Office 128 S. Cockrell Hill Rd, DeSoto TX 75115
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