The quick rule is simple: if your home is inside the City of San Diego, you look at SDHC. If it is in unincorporated county, you look at County CalHome. Homes in other incorporated cities usually do not qualify for either.
Targeting the wrong jurisdiction costs you time and leverage in a market with only 1.8 months of inventory. Every dollar of assistance matters when median home prices are near $900,000 and rates sit in the mid-6% range.
If you target a neighborhood that does not meet program geography, you lose time and leverage in multiple-offer situations. You also risk misaligning your budget with price caps and income limits. Knowing exactly where SDHC ends and County CalHome begins lets you move fast, lock the right approval, and keep your offer timeline intact. Whether you are focused on North Park or you are also considering nearby La Mesa and Poway, your jurisdiction line decides which assistance you can use and how much help you can stack for closing.
You need to verify two things up front: where the property sits jurisdictionally, and whether your income and price point fit the program. Geography is the gatekeeper — not your mailing address.
If you plan ahead, you can align your target neighborhood with the right program and avoid last-minute denials.
Compare these two programs on three levels: jurisdiction geography, total assistance amount, and processing speed. Your parcel address decides which program is even available to you.
Start with the parcel’s jurisdiction. If the address is inside the City of San Diego, SDHC is on the table. If the address is outside all incorporated cities and inside unincorporated county, County CalHome is your path.
When you weigh speed, coverage, and the map, you can match your target area to the program that gets you the most help without stalling your escrow.
Key factors to evaluate:
Follow these nine steps to confirm whether your target neighborhood qualifies and to get approved in time to compete on an offer.
1) Pin the jurisdiction precisely. Do not rely on the mailing city. Use the parcel’s jurisdiction in the County Assessor’s records or a city boundary map. Confirm if the property is inside City of San Diego, in unincorporated county, or within another incorporated city.
2) Screen for exceptions. For City of San Diego parcels, check whether the address falls in an excluded coastal redevelopment zone. For County CalHome, verify that the parcel is not in a pre-designated ineligible urban area.
3) Match your income and household size to the program’s AMI band. For SDHC, you should be within about 50% to 120% AMI. For County CalHome, you should be within about 60% to 150% AMI.
4) Check purchase price alignment. If you are targeting a $650,000 single family in City of San Diego, SDHC might work. If you are targeting around $700,000 to $750,000 in unincorporated communities like Lakeside or Ramona, County CalHome may be a better fit.
5) Choose loan type early. Decide if you will use FHA at roughly 6.0% or conventional near 6.4%. Confirm that the assistance program allows your loan choice and property type, including condos.
6) Complete the homebuyer class immediately. SDHC requires an 8-hour HUD-approved course, with your certificate submitted 2 weeks before application, and the total timeline can run about 4 weeks. County CalHome requires a 6-hour class, with the certificate at application, and can take about 3 weeks.
7) Document your funds to close. SDHC typically requires at least 3% from you, which can be a gift or grant. County CalHome may remove the need for your own cash down if the grant covers 20%.
8) Align your offer strategy with processing time. If you are using SDHC, you should aim for a 60-day close and submit all documents quickly. If you are using County CalHome, you should request reasonable extensions or get pre-underwriting so your seller has confidence.
9) Keep your refinance plans in mind. With SDHC, refinancing above your original balance can trigger repayment. With County CalHome, focus on maintaining owner occupancy for 5 years.
Your program path maps directly to real neighborhoods. SDHC covers City of San Diego parcels, while County CalHome covers unincorporated county pockets — and some incorporated cities fall outside both programs entirely.
San Diego median home value is about $900,000 for single family and $550,000 for condos. That means you should focus your SDHC search on city neighborhoods where pricing trends are closer to program caps, and you should use County CalHome in unincorporated pockets where the AMI-driven schedule gives you room to compete.
Neighborhoods to consider in San Diego:
You may also weigh adjacent communities that match your lifestyle and budget, then confirm which programs apply.
The most common mistake is assuming your mailing address determines eligibility. It does not — a property can carry a San Diego mailing label and still sit outside City of San Diego limits entirely.
Your second common trap is underestimating SDHC price caps. With a $900,000 median for single family, you should expect SDHC to steer you toward condos or smaller homes in specific city neighborhoods. A third mistake is delaying the education course. SDHC requires your certificate two weeks before application, and if you start too late, you can lose a 60-day closing window. Finally, you should not skip condo due diligence. Even if a condo fits the price cap, you still need to confirm owner-occupancy ratios, HOA litigation, and project standards your lender requires. When you verify the jurisdiction, line up your price point with program limits, and front-load the class and documentation, you give your offer a clean path to close.
Start with the County Assessor’s parcel record to see the jurisdiction. Then verify using a city boundary map to confirm if the parcel is inside City of San Diego. If it is not inside any incorporated city, it is unincorporated and may fit County CalHome.
Yes, both SDHC and County CalHome allow condos, townhomes, and single family homes. For SDHC, you must still meet the condo price cap around $450,000 and program underwriting. For County CalHome, confirm the AMI-based price schedule and any condo-specific requirements.
Yes, the same geography-first logic applies. La Mesa and Poway are incorporated cities that are not the City of San Diego, so they usually do not qualify for SDHC or County CalHome. You should look at city-based programs or state-backed assistance when shopping in those markets.
SDHC averages about 55 days, which fits a 60-day close when your education certificate and documents are ready. County CalHome averages about 65 days, so you should start earlier, request a longer escrow, or secure pre-underwriting to keep the seller confident.
SDHC can cover up to $15,000 in closing costs and offers a deferred loan at 3% simple interest. County CalHome can cover up to $10,000 for closing and may provide a 0% grant that can cover up to 20% down, which can eliminate your minimum cash down requirement.
For SDHC, income must fall within about 50% to 120% AMI, with a 1-person limit near $87,200. For County CalHome, income must fall within about 60% to 150% AMI, with a 1-person limit near $109,500. Both programs use household size to determine the exact limit.
You should decide your assistance path by mapping your target neighborhood to the correct jurisdiction first. Inside City of San Diego, SDHC offers deferred loans and up to $15,000 in closing help, although price caps push you toward condos or smaller homes. In unincorporated county, County CalHome can offer a 0% grant, up to $10,000 in closing costs, and an AMI-based purchase schedule that often fits homes near $700,000. Whether you are buying in North Park or exploring nearby La Mesa and Poway, you will move faster and save more by aligning your address, income band, and price point with the right program on day one.
If you are ready to explore your options for down payment assistance geography in San Diego or nearby communities, Scott Cheng at Scott Cheng San Diego Realtor can walk you through the specifics for your situation.
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