Sunday, May 31, 2026

Your Credit Score When Buying a Home

Homevets Realty · Veteran-Owned Home Buying Guide

Your Credit Score When Buying a Home: The 2026 Cities With the Highest & Lowest Scores

A new national study ranks where Americans have the strongest and weakest credit. Here is what those numbers mean — and why your credit score when buying a home matters more than your ZIP code ever will.

By Homevets Realty  ◆  Veteran-Owned, Serving Fort Hood Since 2005  ◆  Updated 2026

Credit score when buying a home guide from Homevets Realty serving Killeen and Fort Hood, Texas

Your credit score when buying a home is one of the most powerful numbers in your financial life. It shapes whether a lender approves you, how much house you can afford, and the interest rate you will pay for the next thirty years. So when WalletHub released its 2026 study ranking the U.S. cities with the highest and lowest credit scores, it caught our attention — because behind every one of those numbers is a family trying to buy a home.

At homevetsrealty.com, we have spent three decades guiding military families, veterans, and civilians through the home-buying process in Killeen and the Greater Fort Hood area. As a veteran-owned brokerage, we have seen how much a credit score can help — or hurt — a buyer. Let us walk through what the new rankings show, and what they mean for your own path to homeownership.

Quick Takeaways

◆  WalletHub’s 2026 study compared average credit scores across 182 U.S. cities (data as of Q4 2025).

◆  South Burlington, Vermont ranked highest; Detroit, Michigan ranked lowest at roughly 570.

◆  The national average credit score sits around 713, but city averages range widely.

◆  For a VA loan, most lenders look for about a 620 score — and a higher score can save you tens of thousands in interest.

Cities With the Highest Credit Scores in 2026

According to WalletHub’s 2026 report, the cities where residents manage credit best are concentrated in a handful of high-income, low-unemployment regions. South Burlington, Vermont topped the national list, with California claiming more top-25 spots than any other state. These are places where strong credit is closer to the norm than the exception.

RankCityAvg. Credit Score
1South Burlington, VT~701
2Fremont, CA~688
3Scottsdale, AZ~686
4San Francisco, CA~685
5Huntington Beach, CA~682
6Overland Park, KS~678

Source: WalletHub, “Cities with the Highest & Lowest Credit Scores in 2026.” Figures are approximate city averages and rounding may vary by reporting outlet.

Cities With the Lowest Credit Scores in 2026

At the other end of the ranking, several cities across the South and Rust Belt posted the lowest average scores. Detroit, Michigan ranked last among the 182 cities studied, with an average near 570 — deep in the “fair” range. Cities like Shreveport, Jackson, and Memphis also sat near the bottom. For buyers in these markets, the gap is a reminder that your credit is something you can actively improve, no matter where you live.

RankCityAvg. Credit Score
182Detroit, MI~570
181Shreveport, LA~590
180Jackson, MS~591
179Fayetteville, NC~592
178Memphis, TN~593
177San Bernardino, CA~594

Source: WalletHub 2026. A score in the “fair” range does not shut you out of homeownership — it simply changes your strategy.

Cities with the Highest and Lowest Credit Scores in 2026 - WalletHub study

Source: WalletHub

The most important point: No matter where your city ranks, your individual credit score when buying a home is shaped by your own choices, not your zip code. The strategies that build credit work the same in Detroit as they do in San Francisco — or right here in Killeen.

Why Your Credit Score When Buying a Home Matters So Much

A credit score is more than a three-digit number — it is a snapshot of how you have handled debt, and lenders lean on it heavily. As WalletHub analyst Chip Lupo put it, a good or excellent score opens doors: it helps you get approved, lowers your interest rate, and increases how much you can borrow. When it comes to your mortgage, your credit affects three things:

—  Approval — Most mortgage programs have a minimum score. Clear it, and you are in the conversation; fall short, and you may need to rebuild first.

—  Interest rate — This is where the real money lives. A higher score drops you into a better rate tier, and that rate follows you for decades.

—  Buying power — A lower rate means a lower monthly payment, which means you can afford more home for the same budget.

$40,000+

On a $350,000 mortgage, the rate gap between a 620 and a 740 credit score can add roughly $100 to $175 to your monthly payment — tens of thousands of dollars over the life of the loan. Same house, same loan amount, a different rate driven in part by your credit score.

Credit Scores & VA Loans: What Fort Hood Buyers Should Know

Here is some good news for the veterans and active-duty service members we serve around Fort Hood: the VA does not set a minimum credit score at all. The VA guarantees the loan, but private lenders do the underwriting, so each sets its own floor. In 2026, most VA lenders look for a score around 620, though some go lower with strong compensating factors like steady income and cash reserves.

VA underwriting also weighs residual income — the money left after your major bills — sometimes more heavily than the score itself. That is why a buyer who might struggle to qualify for a conventional loan can often still reach the closing table with a VA loan. And because VA loans require no down payment and carry no monthly mortgage insurance, your credit score on a VA loan mostly affects one thing: your interest rate. Even there, you have options — a rapid rescore through your lender can sometimes lift your score enough to cross into a better tier in just a few days.

How to Improve Your Credit Score Before You Buy

Whether your city topped the list or landed near the bottom, these moves strengthen your credit before you apply for a mortgage:

—  Pay every bill on time — Payment history is the single biggest factor in your score.

—  Lower your credit utilization — Keeping balances below 30% (ideally under 10%) of your limits can lift your score quickly.

—  Do not close old accounts — Length of credit history helps; older accounts work in your favor.

—  Check your report for errors — Disputing inaccuracies is free and can correct a score that is unfairly low.

—  Avoid new debt before applying — Hold off on big purchases or new cards in the months before you buy.

Start early. Even a 30-to-60-day head start on these habits can move your score before you sit down with a lender.

Ready When You Are

Let a veteran-owned team guide your credit and your home search.

Whether your credit is mortgage-ready today or needs a few months of work, Homevets Realty can connect you with trusted local VA lenders and a plan to get you to the closing table.

Start at HomevetsRealty.com

Prefer to talk? Call (888) 953-8387

Frequently Asked Questions

What credit score do I need when buying a home?

It depends on the loan. Conventional loans often want 620 or higher, FHA loans can go lower, and the VA sets no minimum — though most VA lenders look for around 620. A higher score generally earns you a lower interest rate regardless of loan type.

Which U.S. cities have the highest and lowest credit scores in 2026?

In WalletHub’s 2026 study of 182 cities, South Burlington, Vermont ranked highest, while Detroit, Michigan ranked lowest with an average near 570. California held the most spots among the top-ranked cities.

Can I buy a home with a low credit score?

Yes. A lower score may mean a higher interest rate or the need for compensating factors, but it rarely shuts the door entirely — especially with a VA loan, where residual income and overall financial health carry significant weight alongside your credit score when buying a home.

How much can a higher credit score save me on a mortgage?

A lot. On a $350,000 loan, the difference between a 620 and a 740 score can add roughly $100 to $175 to your monthly payment — tens of thousands of dollars over a 30-year term. Improving your score before you buy is one of the highest-return things you can do.

How long does it take to improve my credit before buying?

Some changes work fast. Paying down credit card balances below 10% and requesting a rapid rescore through your lender can lift your score in a few business days. Bigger repairs take a few months, so it pays to start early. Homevets Realty can connect you with local lenders who help with this.

Homevets Realty

Homevets Realty is a veteran-owned brokerage serving Killeen, Harker Heights, Copperas Cove, and the Greater Fort Hood corridor since 2005. When experience matters, hire a real estate veteran. This article is for general information only and is not financial or lending advice. TREC #519202-BB.

homevetsrealty.com  ◆  (888) 953-8387

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