How much income do you actually need to buy a starter home in College Grove, San Diego, in 2026, and what first-time buyer programs can help you close the gap?

[SNIPPET ANSWER: You typically need $134,000 to $179,000 in annual household income to buy a College Grove starter home priced between $250,000 and $500,000, but San Diego first-time buyer programs offering up to $50,000 in combined assistance can significantly reduce that threshold.]
If you’ve been watching San Diego’s housing market with a mix of hope and frustration, I get it. The county median sale price hit $925,000 in May 2026. That number alone can make you close the laptop and say, “Maybe next year.”
But here’s the thing: College Grove is not the county median. This Mid-City neighborhood, tucked between Euclid Avenue to the west and Route 94 to the southeast, is one of San Diego’s most genuinely affordable entry points. Starter homes here range from the mid-$200,000s to just over $500,000. That’s a completely different conversation than the $1,074,000 median for single-family homes countywide.
With 16 years of helping first-time buyers navigate San Diego’s market and over 275 closed transactions, I’ve seen how a clear plan transforms the overwhelming into the achievable. A cloudy mind can’t make decisions, and right now, clarity about what you actually need is the most valuable thing I can offer you.
Before you can figure out income requirements, you need real numbers. College Grove sits in San Diego’s College Area, close to San Diego State University and the Grove Shopping Center with its convenient anchor stores. Its proximity to the interstate gives you easy access to downtown and medical facilities, while the Chollas Lake Recreational Area offers 16 acres of green space and an 8-mile trail right in your backyard.
Here’s what you’re looking at price-wise:
What does that actually mean for your wallet? Let me break it down with two scenarios.
Those numbers are real, but they also don’t account for the programs that exist specifically to bring them down. That’s where things get interesting.
This is the part of the conversation where I watch my clients’ shoulders drop about two inches because the math suddenly starts working. San Diego has some of the strongest first-time buyer assistance in California, and College Grove’s price range puts you in the sweet spot to qualify.
If your household earns between 80% and 150% of Area Median Income, you may qualify for a $40,000 deferred down payment loan plus a $10,000 closing cost grant. That’s $50,000 in assistance. On a $500,000 College Grove condo, that $40,000 alone more than covers your FHA down payment.
Earning under 80% of AMI? You could receive a deferred-payment second loan of up to 19% of the purchase price at just 3% interest, plus a $10,000 closing cost grant.
This program provides a deferred junior loan of 3% to 5% of the purchase price. On a $400,000 townhome, that’s up to $20,000.
GSFA Platinum offers a second lien at 0% interest, repayable when you sell or refinance. The Chenoa Fund covers 3.5% and becomes forgivable after 36 on-time payments. Both pair well with FHA financing.
San Diego’s FHA loan limit of $1,006,250 means virtually every College Grove property qualifies for 3.5% down financing. If you’re connected to the military community near Miramar or Naval Base San Diego, a VA loan paired with closing cost assistance can mean a true zero-out-of-pocket purchase.

Here’s where the before-and-after really clicks. One young couple I worked with was targeting a condo in San Diego’s mid-city area. They were earning about $135,000 combined and assumed they were completely priced out. When we ran the numbers with the SDHC Middle-Income Program, their required out-of-pocket dropped to essentially zero for the down payment, and their qualifying income landed right where they already were. They closed within 90 days.
Let me show you the revised math on a $500,000 College Grove purchase with SDHC assistance:
That’s about $45,000 less income needed compared to the no-assistance scenario. For a two-income household of young professionals, that shifts the entire conversation.
So, is 2026 actually a good time? Let me give you the honest picture.
Mortgage rates averaged 6.33% in April 2026, down from 6.73% a year earlier. That 40-basis-point drop restored meaningful buying power. Countywide pending sales are running 5% ahead of last year, so buyer confidence is clearly returning.
For College Grove specifically, the condo and townhome segment has seen inventory rise 5.6% year over year while detached inventory dropped 24.7%. That means you have slightly more options and slightly less competition in exactly the product type you’re likely shopping for.
What I tell my clients is this: preparation is your competitive advantage. Here’s what that looks like:
Another buyer I worked with recently, a single professional earning around $120,000, initially thought he needed to wait two more years. After we paired a CalHFA MyHome loan with an FHA product and identified a townhome in a neighborhood similar to College Grove’s price range, he was under contract within six weeks. His total out-of-pocket was under $8,000.

You’ll typically need $113,000 to $179,000 in gross household income depending on the purchase price, your down payment, and which assistance programs you qualify for. Using SDHC’s middle-income program on a $500,000 condo, the threshold drops to around $134,000.
If you haven’t owned a home in the past three years, you likely qualify. SDHC’s middle-income program covers households earning between 80% and 150% of Area Median Income. College Grove falls within the City of San Diego, making it eligible for SDHC programs.
With FHA financing, as little as 3.5%, which equals $17,500 on a $500,000 purchase. SDHC’s $40,000 deferred loan can cover this entirely, potentially bringing your out-of-pocket down payment to zero.
Expect $250 to $400 per month for condos and townhomes. These vary by complex and cover exterior maintenance, shared amenities, and insurance on common areas. Always factor these into your monthly budget.
Yes, and this is where working with an experienced real estate broker in San Diego matters. Many programs are designed to layer. For example, CalHFA and SDHC programs can sometimes pair, though each program has specific requirements.
College Grove’s proximity to SDSU, the Grove Shopping Center, and major transit corridors supports long-term value. With prices significantly below the county median, there’s room for appreciation as San Diego’s affordability crisis pushes more buyers toward mid-city neighborhoods.
FHA loans require a minimum 580 credit score for 3.5% down. Conventional loans typically need 620 or higher. SDHC programs may have additional credit requirements, usually around 660.
College Grove sees moderate competition compared to coastal neighborhoods. The median time on market countywide was 21 days in April 2026, but mid-city attached properties tend to sit slightly longer, giving you more breathing room to negotiate.
For most first-time buyers in College Grove, condos and townhomes offer the most accessible entry point at $250,000 to $475,000. Single-family homes in the area top $500,000 and require higher qualifying income. I’d recommend starting with what gets you in the door.
Rates have already improved from 6.73% to 6.33% year over year. Waiting for further drops risks competing with more buyers who are also waiting. Buying now and refinancing later often costs less than paying higher prices in a more competitive market.
College Grove remains one of San Diego’s most realistic starting points for first-time buyers in 2026. The combination of prices well below the county median, strong assistance programs through SDHC and CalHFA, and improved mortgage rates creates a window worth taking seriously.
You don’t need to earn $200,000 to get started here. With the right program stack, $113,000 to $135,000 in household income can work.
With 180 five-star reviews, over 275 transactions closed, and a focus on first-time buyer education, I’m here to help you run your specific numbers and build a calm, clear plan. Reach out to me, Scott Cheng, Associate Broker with Real Brokerage, at 858-405-0002 or visit my office at 16516 Bernardo Center Dr. Ste. 300. Let’s figure out your path into College Grove together.
Scott Cheng provides free, no-obligation consultations for buyers, sellers, and investors.
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