🔔 New: the 1099 & freelance mortgage guide is live — qualify without W-2s.Read it →
Mortgage Merlin
30-YR CONV6.41%▼0.00
FHA6.15%▼0.00
BANK-STMT7.25%▼0.00
DSCR7.60%▼0.00
JUMBO6.70%▼0.00
15-YR5.62%▼0.00
ITIN7.90%▼0.00
30-YR CONV6.41%▼0.00
FHA6.15%▼0.00
BANK-STMT7.25%▼0.00
DSCR7.60%▼0.00
JUMBO6.70%▼0.00
15-YR5.62%▼0.00
ITIN7.90%▼0.00
2026 loan limits

Summit County, Utah loan limits (2026)

Last updated June 2026 · Source: FHFA & HUD (CY2026)

Summit County is a designated high-cost area in Utah. For 2026, its one-unit conforming loan limit is $1,150,000 — set above the $832,750 national baseline based on local median home values. The FHA one-unit limit is set equal to the conforming high-cost limit.

2026 conforming limits in Summit County (1–4 unit)

Units1-unit2-unit3-unit4-unit
Conforming (conventional)$1,150,000$1,472,250$1,779,600$2,211,600

These are Summit County's exact 2026 conforming limits. FHA’s high-cost limit is set equal to the conforming limit; confirm the precise FHA figure via HUD’s lookup below. Figures from the FHFA CY2026 county file (retrieved 2026-06-18).

Above $1,150,000? A larger loan here is a jumbo loan. Size a purchase with the affordability calculator, or for a rental that qualifies on its rent, see DSCR vs. conventional.

What Summit County’s 2026 limit means for buyers

At $1,150,000, Summit County’s one-unit conforming limit runs $317,250 — about 38% — above the $832,750 baseline that applies in standard-cost counties, reflecting Summit County’s elevated local home values.

In practice, that means a buyer here can finance a home up to $1,150,000 with a conforming conventional loan — at conforming rates and guidelines — where a buyer in a $832,750 county would already need a pricier jumbo loan. Cross above $1,150,000 and Summit County buyers enter jumbo territory too: expect higher credit and reserve requirements and lender-specific underwriting.

FHA buyers in Summit County get the same $1,150,000 one-unit ceiling — well above the $541,287 FHA floor used in low-cost areas. And because the multi-unit limits reach $1,472,250 for a duplex and $2,211,600 for a fourplex, a small multi-family in Summit County can often still be financed conventionally — an edge for house-hackers and owner-occupant investors who can count projected rent toward qualifying.

Bottom line: in Summit County the conforming/jumbo dividing line is $1,150,000, not the $832,750 you’d see nationally — so a higher-priced home here may still qualify for a conventional loan. Confirm your exact figure below before you shop, since limits reset every January.

Confirm this county’s exact limit

← All Utah loan limits

Educational information only — not financial advice or an offer of credit. Loan limits change annually and vary by county; always verify the current figure for your specific county with the official lookups above before making decisions.

Related