Build on Your Own Land in Texas with a VA Construction Loan

Texas veteran with American flag — VA construction loan to build on owned land
For Texas Veterans · 2026

Build on Your Own Land in Texas with a VA Construction Loan

Own a Texas lot? Your land equity is your down payment. Build a custom home with $0 down, one closing, and no mortgage payments during construction. Here’s exactly how it works in 2026.

LET’S TALK

By Adam Bartling · Retired Army Captain · Mortgage Broker, NMLS# 2213358 · Published May 20, 2026

Key Takeaways

  • Your land equity counts as the down payment. If your Texas lot appraises high enough, you bring no cash to closing on the build itself.
  • One closing, not two. A VA one-time close (OTC) construction loan rolls land payoff, construction draws, and the permanent mortgage into a single transaction.
  • $0 down with full VA entitlement. No PMI, no monthly mortgage insurance, and no payments during the build.
  • Rate is locked before construction starts. You’re protected from rate increases during the 6–12 month build.
  • 4–5 construction draws released on inspection milestones — your builder is paid as the home progresses.
  • Texas-specific note: VA cash-out refis aren’t allowed on Texas homesteads (Section 50(a)(6)), but VA IRRRL streamlines are fully available after the build.

On This Page

How Land Equity Works in a Texas VA Construction Loan

A VA construction loan to build on your own land in Texas works on a simple idea: if you already own the lot, the appraised value of that land takes the place of a cash down payment. The VA backs the loan up to 100% of the as-completed appraised value of the finished home. As long as the build cost plus any remaining land payoff stays at or below that appraised value, fully entitled veterans bring $0 to the build itself. You’ll still have standard closing costs, most of which can be financed into the loan.

Here’s a quick example. Say you own 5 acres outside Liberty Hill that appraises at $180,000. Your builder’s fixed-price contract to build a 2,400 sq ft custom home comes in at $620,000. The as-completed appraisal — land plus finished house — comes back at $810,000. Your VA loan amount is $620,000 (the build cost), the land’s $180,000 of equity functions as the “down payment,” and you bring nothing to closing for the build itself. You’d cover the VA funding fee (typically financed into the loan), title and recording fees, and prepaids like property taxes and insurance.

This is one of the most under-used VA benefits we see. Most Texas veterans who already own land assume they need to take a regular construction loan first and refinance later. That path works, but it costs more in fees and exposes you to interest-rate risk during the build. The one-time close VA construction loan eliminates both problems if your file qualifies.

For complete program details on the underlying loan, visit our Texas VA Construction Loan cornerstone page. This guide focuses on the land-owner scenario specifically.

Three Land Scenarios — Which One Are You?

Texas veterans come to us with one of three land situations. The VA one-time close construction loan handles all three — but the closing math looks different for each.

1

Best Case

You own the land free and clear

No lien against the lot, deed in your name. The appraiser values the unimproved land, and that full value counts as your down payment toward the as-completed value. With full VA entitlement, you bring $0 for the build. The land essentially “becomes” your equity in the finished home from day one.

Common in Texas Hill Country, Piney Woods, and ranchland areas where families have owned acreage for years.

2

Common

You have a loan on the land

The lot has a mortgage or land loan against it. At your VA construction closing, that lien is paid off using proceeds from the new loan. Whatever land equity remains (appraised value minus payoff) counts toward your down payment. As long as the math works against the as-completed appraisal, you still come to closing with little or no cash for the build.

Example: $200,000 land appraisal − $75,000 lien payoff = $125,000 of equity working as your down payment.

3

Also Works

You haven’t bought the land yet

You found the lot but haven’t closed on it. With a VA one-time close loan, you can put the lot under contract and roll the land purchase into the construction loan. The land payoff happens at the VA closing — same closing that funds your first construction draw. You don’t need to buy the land separately first.

Important: the VA won’t finance raw land alone. You must be building immediately. No “buy land now, build later” with the VA loan.

Texas veteran family — building a custom home on their own land with a VA construction loan

“Most Texas veterans who already own land don’t realize the lot is the down payment. We shop multiple VA construction lenders for you — start with the lender, not the lot.”

— Adam Bartling, Retired Army Captain · NMLS# 2213358

How You Qualify for a Texas VA Construction Loan

Borrower qualification for a VA construction loan is essentially the same as for a standard VA purchase loan. Three pillars: credit, income, and assets. The harder side is the property — the land, the builder, and the plans. Here’s what lenders look for from you personally:

Credit Score

Middle FICO of 620 or better. The VA itself sets no minimum — that’s a lender overlay. Stronger credit (700+) opens up more lender options because most niche VA construction lenders prefer cleaner files.

Employment

Two years of consistent employment (same job, same field, or military-to-civilian transition). Self-employed veterans need 2 years of tax returns plus a YTD profit-and-loss statement.

DTI Ratio

Typically 45% maximum, though VA loans use residual income as a backup. Strong residual income can compensate for higher DTI — that’s a key advantage VA holds over conventional construction loans.

Entitlement

Certificate of Eligibility (COE). Full entitlement = $0 down regardless of loan size. Partial entitlement (you have an existing VA loan) means we calculate available entitlement against the build amount. We pull your COE for you.

Occupancy

The home must be your primary residence. You’re certifying you’ll occupy the finished home within a reasonable time after completion (typically 60 days). VA loans are not for investment properties or vacation homes.

If you have a more complex situation — recent bankruptcy, prior foreclosure, partial entitlement, deployment timing — those are conversations we have regularly. Most of the “no” answers Texas veterans hear from a single bank are really “no” answers to that one lender’s overlay, not to the VA itself. That’s why we shop multiple VA construction lenders for every file.

What Your Texas Land Must Have

Most Texas lots — suburban, rural, or Hill Country — work fine for a VA construction loan. The handful of deal-breakers are usually solvable if you spot them early. Here’s the VA’s checklist:

🚪 Legal access

A recorded road or recorded easement giving year-round legal access. “Drive across my neighbor’s field” doesn’t qualify. This is the #1 land issue we see in rural Texas.

💧 Water

Public water connection or a permitted private well. Wells need a current potability test before closing. Rainwater-only is not eligible.

🚽 Septic or sewer

Permitted septic system or municipal sewer connection. For new septic, the design must be permitted with the county before the appraisal.

⚡ Power

Utility service connection feasible to the building site. Off-grid solar-only properties have stricter scrutiny — possible but more complicated.

📏 Reasonable acreage

No strict acreage cap, but the parcel should be typical for the area. 5 acres in rural Bell County is normal; 5 acres in a suburban Frisco neighborhood may face scrutiny.

🏠 Buildable & residential

Properly zoned for a single-family residence. Floodplain, deed restrictions, and easements all get reviewed during the underwriting phase.

Texas tip: If the land is in a designated FEMA flood zone, the VA may still approve the loan, but you’ll be required to carry flood insurance, and elevation certificates may be needed. We catch this on day one so you’re not surprised at the appraisal stage.

The 6-Step VA Construction Loan Process

Initial closing takes 45–60 days. Construction itself runs 6–12 months. Here’s exactly how the timeline maps out for a Texas veteran building on owned land.

1

Strategy call & COE pull (Week 1)

We review your goals, land situation, builder progress, and credit picture in a 30-minute call. No upfront credit check on the initial review. We pull your Certificate of Eligibility (COE) and confirm your entitlement amount.

2

Pre-approval & lender shopping (Weeks 1–2)

You provide pay stubs, W-2s, bank statements, and the deed or title work on your land. We submit your file to multiple VA construction lenders. They compete on rate and program fit. Pre-approval typically issues within 3–5 business days.

3

Builder vetting & contract (Weeks 2–4)

Your builder submits license, insurance, 3-year track record, and references. The lender’s construction department reviews. Your fixed-price contract is finalized — no cost-plus, no DIY. Texas doesn’t license general contractors at the state level, so lender vetting takes the place of that.

4

Plans, specs & as-completed appraisal (Weeks 4–7)

Your full plan set and detailed cost breakdown go to the VA-appointed appraiser, who values the property as if the home were already complete. Final loan amount is set based on the lower of build-cost-plus-land or the as-completed appraisal.

5

Closing & construction draws (Weeks 7–10, then 6–12 months)

One closing. Rate locked. Your existing land lien (if any) is paid off. The lender opens an escrow draw account. As construction hits milestones — foundation, framing, dry-in, mechanicals, completion — the builder requests draws and an inspector verifies progress. Most Texas builds run 4–5 draws.

6

Conversion to permanent VA mortgage

Final inspection confirms completion. The construction loan automatically converts to a 30-year fixed VA mortgage. Your first full mortgage payment is typically due 30–45 days after completion. No re-qualification, no second closing costs, no new appraisal.

Texas-Specific Things to Know

Building in Texas has a few quirks that don’t apply in other states. None of them are deal-breakers, but missing them on the front end can cost you weeks or money.

No state-level general contractor licensing

Texas does not license general contractors at the state level. That means your VA lender’s vetting process replaces what a state license would have verified elsewhere — track record, insurance, supplier relationships, and prior project references all become more important. Choose a builder who’s been doing custom homes in Texas for at least 3 years and who has built under construction-loan oversight before.

Texas Section 50(a)(6) limits cash-out on homesteads

VA cash-out refinances are not allowed on Texas homestead property. This matters for your build because it means you can’t take cash out of your finished home through a VA refi later. What is available: the VA IRRRL (Interest Rate Reduction Refinance Loan) to drop your rate without taking cash out. Most Texas vets we work with refinance via IRRRL once rates drop after completion.

County permitting timelines vary widely

Suburban counties like Williamson, Travis, and Collin have organized permit offices and predictable timelines. Rural counties — Burnet, Llano, Mason, and most West Texas counties — operate differently and sometimes don’t require permits at all. The VA appraisal still needs evidence of code-compliant construction, so even where the county doesn’t require permits, plan to use a builder who builds to code anyway. Otherwise you’ll have appraisal problems at completion.

Property taxes during the build

Texas property tax bills are tied to January 1 valuations. If you close on the build in February with bare land, you’ll likely pay only land-value taxes that year. Once the home is complete, the next January 1 valuation will reflect the finished home — your tax bill will jump. Plan for that increase in year two. We model it into your housing payment estimate so it isn’t a surprise.

Homestead exemption — file the year after completion

Once you’re living in the finished home, file your Texas homestead exemption with your county appraisal district. It caps annual valuation increases at 10%, saves you on school taxes, and protects the home from most creditors. Veterans with service-connected disability ratings also qualify for additional exemptions — 100% disability = full property tax exemption in Texas. This is real money. Don’t skip it.

Own a Texas Lot? Let’s Run Your Numbers.

We’ll review your COE, your land’s likely value, and your build cost. Multiple VA construction lenders compete for your file. No upfront credit check on the initial review.

LET’S TALK

Five Mistakes That Cost Texas Veterans Time and Money

  1. Starting with the builder before the lender. Not every VA lender funds construction. The qualification side works the same as any VA loan, but only a small number of lenders run an actual VA construction draw program. Confirm the lender first, then choose the builder who can pass that lender’s review.
  2. Signing a cost-plus contract. VA lenders require fixed-price contracts. Cost-plus, time-and-materials, or “negotiate-as-we-go” contracts get rejected. If your builder usually works cost-plus, ask whether they can structure your project on a fixed-price basis. Many will.
  3. Underestimating site work. Clearing, grading, septic install, well drilling, and a long driveway can add $30,000–$80,000 to a rural Texas build. The appraiser values the finished home including site improvements, but only if site costs are in the original cost breakdown. Don’t try to absorb site work as a side project later.
  4. Forgetting about contingency and soft costs. Your build budget should include 5–10% contingency plus soft costs (architect, engineer, permits, inspections, builder’s risk insurance). All of this can be financed into the VA construction loan if it’s in the budget from day one. Adding it later creates change-order paperwork and possible re-appraisals.
  5. Skipping the disability rating check. If you have a service-connected disability rating of 10% or higher, your VA funding fee is waived entirely. That’s typically 2.3% of the loan amount you keep in your pocket. We confirm this on every file, but bring your disability paperwork to the first call.

Texas VA Construction Loan FAQs

Tap any question to expand the answer.

Can I use a VA loan to build on land I already own in Texas?+
Yes. If you already own the lot in Texas, the equity in your land counts as your down payment on a VA one-time close construction loan. The appraisal assigns a value to the unimproved land, and that value reduces the cash you’d otherwise need to bring to closing. If you have a lien against the land, it’s paid off and rolled into the new VA loan at closing.
Do I need a down payment if I already own land in Texas?+
Usually no. Fully entitled Texas veterans can build with $0 down because land equity functions as the down payment. The VA still requires that the final loan amount stay at or below the appraised as-completed value of the finished home, but you typically won’t bring cash to closing beyond standard closing costs.
What is a VA one-time close construction loan?+
A VA one-time close (OTC) construction loan combines land financing, construction draws, and the permanent mortgage into a single closing. You lock the rate up front, the lender disburses funds to your builder in 4 to 5 stages as construction progresses, and the loan automatically converts to a standard VA mortgage when the home is finished. No second closing, no re-qualification.
How much land can you have with a VA construction loan in Texas?+
The VA does not set a strict acreage cap, but the appraiser must determine that the land is typical for the area. In rural Texas markets, larger parcels are common and usually fine. In suburban Texas neighborhoods, anything significantly larger than surrounding lots may face scrutiny. The land must also be suitable for a primary residence with legal access, water, septic or sewer, and power.
What credit score do I need for a VA construction loan in Texas?+
Most VA construction lenders look for a minimum middle FICO score of 620. The VA itself does not set a credit score minimum — that’s a lender overlay. Stronger credit (700 or higher) opens up more lender options because many of the niche VA construction lenders prefer cleaner files.
Can I be my own general contractor on a VA construction loan?+
No. Lenders require a licensed, bonded, and insured general contractor with at least 2 years of relevant experience. The builder must also be willing to operate under the VA’s escrow draw process. Owner-builder, DIY, or cost-plus contracts are not eligible. Your contract must be fixed-price.
How long does a Texas VA construction loan take to close?+
Initial closing typically takes 45 to 60 days from application — about 2 to 3 weeks longer than a standard VA purchase because of plan reviews, builder vetting, and the as-completed appraisal. Construction itself usually runs 6 to 12 months depending on the build. The good news: you make zero mortgage payments during construction.
What happens to my mortgage payments during construction?+
You make no principal or interest payments during the construction phase. The interest that accrues on funds drawn by your builder is built into the total loan amount up front. Your first full mortgage payment isn’t due until the home is complete and the loan converts to permanent financing.
Are VA cash-out refinances available on Texas construction projects?+
VA cash-out refinances are not available on properties classified as Texas Section 50(a)(6) homestead, which limits the ability to pull cash out against a primary residence in Texas. However, a VA IRRRL (interest rate reduction refinance) is fully available to refinance your construction-to-permanent loan into a lower rate later. We use IRRRLs all the time on Texas builds once rates drop after completion.
What if my builder isn’t VA-approved?+
The VA Builder ID requirement was eased in recent years. Today, the lender vets the builder directly — checking license, insurance, 3-year track record, and references from suppliers and subcontractors. Most established Texas custom homebuilders pass without trouble. If your builder is brand new or hard-to-verify, we can identify that early and either work through it or pivot to a builder who fits.

Related Texas Veteran Home Loan Guides

Adam Bartling — Retired Army Captain and Texas-licensed mortgage broker specializing in VA construction loans

About the Author

Adam Bartling

Retired Army Captain · Mortgage Broker · NMLS# 2213358

Adam is a Texas-licensed mortgage broker and retired Army Captain who specializes in helping fellow veterans build custom homes on their own land. He shops multiple VA construction lenders so they compete for your business — and provides an annual real estate review for every client he closes. Learn more about Adam →

Texas veteran returning home — VA construction loan to build on owned land

Ready to Build on Your Own Texas Land?

We’ll pull your COE, review your land, talk to your builder, and run your numbers across multiple VA construction lenders. From one veteran to another, let’s get this done right.

LET’S TALK

Adam Bartling & Team · Loan Officer NMLS# 2213358 · Serving Texas · Equal Housing Lender

👋 Questions about a Texas mortgage? Ask me — no credit pull.