conforming: Fannie Mae & Freddie Mac Announce 2012 Conforming Loan Limits for Georgia - 11/25/11 03:42 AM
Fannie Mae & Freddie Mac Announce 2012 - Conforming Loan Limits for Georgia
 
The Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) has announced 2012 conforming loan limits.  The agency base conforming and high-cost area loan limits will remain at the existing 2011 levels through December 31, 2012.  The only county to see an increase is Fairfield County, Connecticut.
 
The base conforming loan limit remain at its current level ($417,000 for 1-unit properties in the contiguous United States). Some high-cost areas of the country can exceed the $417,000 limit though.  For those areas, the current maximum high-cost limit is $625,500 for a 1-unit single-family property in the … (2 comments)

conforming: Fannie Mae & Freddie Mac Announce 2012 Conforming Loan Limits for Alabama - 11/23/11 09:16 AM
Fannie Mae & Freddie Mac Announce 2012 - Conforming Loan Limits for Alabama
 
The Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) has announced 2012 conforming loan limits.  The agency base conforming and high-cost area loan limits will remain at the existing 2011 levels through December 31, 2012.  The only county to see an increase is Fairfield County, Connecticut.
 
The base conforming loan limit remain at its current level ($417,000 for 1-unit properties in the contiguous United States). Some high-cost areas of the country can exceed the $417,000 limit though.  For those areas, the current maximum high-cost limit is $625,500 for a 1-unit single-family property in the … (2 comments)

conforming: Georgia Conforming Loan Limits - 2010 - 03/21/10 08:02 AM
For 2010, the conforming loan limits remain unchanged from last year. 
                                              One-Family      Two-Family      Three-Family       Four-Family
Georgia (except Greene)      $417,000          $533,850           $645,300             $801,950
Greene County                        $662,500          $848,100        $1,025,200         $1,274,050
 
Loan limits are set equal to 115% of local median house prices and they cannot exceed 150% of the standard limit.  The standard limit is $625,500 for one-unit homes in the continental US.
 
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