Jumbo Loan Requirements Arizona: What You Actually Need to Qualify in 2026
Mike Certo · Cornerstone First Mortgage · NMLS #260555 ·
Jumbo loans in Arizona operate outside the guidelines set by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which means every lender sets its own requirements. That creates variation — and also opportunity. If you have been told you can't qualify for a Jumbo loan based on one lender's criteria, the guidelines at another lender or program may tell a different story.
This page breaks down what Jumbo loan requirements actually look like in Arizona for 2026, by program type. Not a single list of rules — because there isn't one — but a clear breakdown of what each program requires so you can match your situation to the right fit.
What Makes a Loan Jumbo in Arizona
The 2026 conforming loan limit in Arizona is the same in every county:
- Statewide single-family limit: $832,750. Loans above that are Jumbo.
- No Arizona county has a high-cost (high-balance) conforming designation, so the threshold does not change between the Phoenix metro and the rest of the state.
This means a $700,000 loan is conforming everywhere in Arizona — in Maricopa County (Phoenix), Pima County (Tucson), Yavapai County (Prescott), and Coconino County (Flagstaff) alike. The Jumbo line sits at $832,750 no matter which county you buy in.
One practical note: because the baseline is uniform, there is no separate "high-balance conforming" tier in Arizona the way some high-cost markets have. A single-family loan is either standard conforming (at or below $832,750) or Jumbo (above $832,750). If you are right at the line, the choice is simply between a conforming loan and a Jumbo loan based on the loan amount.
Jumbo Loan Requirements by Program Type
Arizona Jumbo loans are not one-size-fits-all. Requirements differ significantly by how income is documented. Here is how each major program type works:
Full Doc Jumbo
Full doc Jumbo uses traditional income documentation — W-2s, tax returns, pay stubs, and employer verification. It is the most common path for W-2 employees buying luxury or move-up properties in Scottsdale, north Phoenix, Paradise Valley, or Chandler.
- FICO minimum: 680–700 (varies by loan amount and LTV)
- Reserves: 12–24 months of Principal, Interest, Taxes, Insurance, and Association dues (PITIA)
- DTI: Maximum 43–45%, some lenders to 49% with strong compensating factors
- LTV: Up to 80–85% (15–20% down) on most programs; some lenders allow 10% down with stronger FICO and reserves
- Loan limits: Available to $3M+ at most lenders; terms tighten above $2M
For the full picture on this program, see the full doc Jumbo page.
Bank Statement Jumbo
Bank statement Jumbo is designed for self-employed borrowers whose tax returns don't reflect actual cash flow. Instead of tax returns, lenders use 12 or 24 months of bank deposit history with an expense factor applied to derive qualifying income.
- FICO minimum: 660–700 (varies by lender)
- Reserves: 6–12 months of PITIA in liquid assets after closing
- DTI: Typically capped at 43%
- LTV: Up to 80% (20% down) on most programs
- Income calculation: Business deposits × expense factor (often 50%) ÷ months = monthly qualifying income. Personal deposits typically receive a higher factor.
- Loan limits: Available to $3M at most lenders
Important note on bank statement income: 100% of deposits are NOT counted as income. A 50% expense factor on business deposits means $20,000 per month in business deposits qualifies you at $10,000 per month in income. This is not a workaround — it is a formal lender calculation built into the program.
Asset Utilization Jumbo
Asset utilization programs are for borrowers who are asset-rich but income-light — retirees, business sellers, real estate investors, or wealthy borrowers who take minimal W-2 or self-employment income. The lender divides liquid assets by a structured formula (often a 60- to 84-month divisor) to create a monthly qualifying income figure.
- FICO minimum: 700+
- Reserves: Substantial — the assets being utilized are the reserves
- DTI: Calculated against derived income figure
- LTV: Up to 75–80% depending on lender
- Asset types: Checking, savings, money market, taxable brokerage, retirement accounts (at 60–70% of balance)
Super Jumbo ($3M+)
Super Jumbo loans above $3 million have the tightest requirements of any residential Jumbo program. Lenders at this tier typically hold the loan in portfolio and underwrite it manually.
- FICO minimum: 720–740
- Reserves: 12–18 months of PITIA in liquid assets
- DTI: 40–43% is common; less flexibility than standard Jumbo
- LTV: 70–75% (25–30% down) is standard
- Documentation: Full doc is most common; alternative doc programs exist at some lenders but are rarer above $3M
Conforming vs Jumbo: Requirements Side by Side
| Factor | Standard Conforming | Full Doc Jumbo | Bank Statement Jumbo |
|---|---|---|---|
| FICO minimum | 620 | 680–700 | 660–680 |
| Reserves | 0–2 months | 12–24 months PITIA | 6–12 months PITIA |
| Max DTI | 45–50% | 43–45% | 43% |
| Min down payment | 3–5% | 10–20% | 20% |
| Income docs | W-2 / tax returns | W-2 / tax returns | Bank statements (12–24 mo) |
What Disqualifies a Jumbo Borrower
The most common reasons Jumbo applications fail in Arizona:
- Recent bankruptcy: Chapter 7 typically requires a 2–4 year waiting period after discharge; Chapter 13 varies by lender
- Foreclosure or deed-in-lieu: Most lenders require 3–7 years from the completion date
- Multiple 30-day late payments in the prior 12 months: A pattern of lates can disqualify regardless of current FICO
- Insufficient reserves: Not having enough liquid assets post-closing is a hard stop on most programs
- FICO below program minimums: Each program has a floor; going below it disqualifies at that lender
- DTI above cap: High monthly obligations — car payments, other mortgages, credit cards — can push DTI over the program limit
Some of these are absolute. Others can be offset by compensating factors — higher down payment, lower DTI, higher reserves, or a longer history of on-time payments post-credit event. The specific flexibility depends on the program and the lender. This is where talking through your situation before applying matters.
Property Types That Qualify
Jumbo programs in Arizona generally cover:
- Primary residence: Widest program availability and best terms
- Second home: Available on most full doc and bank statement programs, slightly higher down payment and reserve requirements
- Investment property: Programs exist but are more restrictive — typically 25–30% down, tighter DTI, higher reserves
- Condos and planned developments: Review HOA financials and owner-occupancy ratio; some resort-area condos have restrictions
Jumbo loan basics, number by number
The specific figures buyers ask us about most, each answered on its own page:
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Frequently Asked Questions — Jumbo Loan Requirements Arizona
What is the Jumbo loan limit in Arizona for 2026?
The 2026 conforming loan limit in Arizona is $832,750 for a single-family home, and every Arizona county uses that same baseline. No Arizona county carries a high-cost (high-balance) conforming designation, so the Jumbo threshold is the same statewide — in Maricopa County (Phoenix, Scottsdale, Chandler, Mesa), Pima County (Tucson), Coconino County (Flagstaff), and everywhere else. Any single-family loan above $832,750 in Arizona is a Jumbo loan.
What FICO score do you need for a Jumbo loan in Arizona?
The common misconception is that Jumbo loans require a 780 FICO. That is not true for most programs. Full doc Jumbo programs typically require 680 to 700 minimum, depending on the loan amount and loan-to-value ratio. Bank statement Jumbo programs often start at 660 to 680. Asset utilization programs typically start at 700. Super Jumbo loans above $3 million generally require 720 to 740. Credit score requirements vary by lender and program, but the 780 floor is not a rule — it is a myth.
How much do you need in reserves for a Jumbo loan?
Reserve requirements are measured in months of Principal, Interest, Taxes, Insurance, and Association dues (PITIA) — the full monthly housing payment. Full doc Jumbo programs typically require 12 to 24 months of PITIA in verified liquid assets after closing. Bank statement Jumbo programs often require 6 to 12 months. Asset utilization programs start at 12 months. Super Jumbo loans above $3 million commonly require 12 to 18 months. Reserves must be in liquid accounts — checking, savings, money market, or retirement accounts (at a discount). Real estate equity does not count as reserves.
What is the maximum debt-to-income ratio for Arizona Jumbo loans?
Most full doc Jumbo programs cap the debt-to-income (DTI) ratio at 43 to 45 percent of gross monthly income. Some lenders extend to 49 percent with strong compensating factors such as high reserves or a large down payment. Bank statement and alternative documentation programs often have tighter DTI caps — 43 percent is common. Asset utilization programs calculate income differently, so the DTI calculation itself works differently than on income-based programs.
How much down payment is required for a Jumbo loan in Arizona?
Down payment requirements vary by program type and loan amount. Full doc Jumbo programs typically allow 10 to 20 percent down depending on the loan amount and lender. Bank statement Jumbo programs generally require 20 percent down. Asset utilization programs usually require 20 to 25 percent. Super Jumbo loans above $3 million often require 25 to 30 percent down. Some physician loan programs layer into the Jumbo space and allow lower down payments with medical professional credentials.
What disqualifies a borrower from a Jumbo loan in Arizona?
Common disqualifiers include: a recent bankruptcy (typically 2 to 4 years depending on chapter and program), a foreclosure or deed-in-lieu (typically 3 to 7 years), multiple late payments in the prior 12 months, a FICO score below program minimums, insufficient reserves after closing, and a debt-to-income ratio above the program cap. Some disqualifiers are absolute; others can be offset by strong compensating factors. The specific waiting periods and flexibility depend on the lender and program.
Can I get a Jumbo loan in Arizona with a bank statement instead of tax returns?
Yes. Bank statement Jumbo programs allow self-employed borrowers to qualify using 12 or 24 months of personal or business bank deposits rather than tax returns. An expense factor is applied to business deposits — typically 50 percent — to derive qualifying income. Personal deposits can often use a higher portion. Bank statement Jumbo loans are available up to $3 million at most lenders and require a minimum FICO of 660 to 680 and 20 percent down in most cases.
Next Steps
Knowing which Jumbo program fits your situation is the first step. Having a few specifics ready makes the first conversation faster:
- Purchase price or loan amount: Helps confirm whether you are in conforming or Jumbo territory (the line is $832,750 statewide)
- Income type: W-2, self-employed, or asset-based — determines which documentation path applies
- Approximate FICO range: Confirms which program tiers are open
- Liquid assets: A rough sense of available reserves after closing
Additional resources: all Jumbo programs · full doc Jumbo · bank statement Jumbo · super Jumbo ($3M+) · contact Mike