
VA Loan Occupancy FRAUD - What ARE The Rules?
Confused about VA home loan occupancy requirements and worried you’ll “do it wrong”? In this video, we walk you through the VA Lenders Handbook and explain what owner-occupancy really means, how “reasonable time” works (typically 60 days), and why there’s no minimum one-year occupancy rule. We’ll cover exceptions for active-duty deployments, spouse/child occupancy, retirement within 12 months, repairs/escrow holdbacks, frequent-travel jobs, and how this all ties into IRRRL (VA Streamline) refinancing—even after you move out.
What you’ll learn
VA loan occupancy rules vs. myths (no 12-month rule)
What counts as “reasonable time to occupy” (generally 60 days)
Active-duty & deployed occupancy: when a spouse or dependent child can satisfy the requirement
IRRRL (VA Streamline) on a home you no longer occupy if you previously lived there
Buying before a PCS or job relocation (supporting docs lenders look for)
Repairs & MPR escrow holdbacks that delay occupancy—but still qualify
Frequent travel / telework and proving your primary residence
Retiring within 12 months: income & employment offer requirements
Using the VA loan for multi-family/house-hack strategies (while meeting occupancy)
Quick takeaways
No one-year requirement. The VA requires intent to occupy as your home within a reasonable time (typically 60 days).
After you’ve met occupancy once, you may later move out and still be eligible for an IRRRL on that loan.
Deployed? You can still buy. Spouse/dependent occupancy can satisfy the rule; single deployed service members may qualify, too.
Lender overlays are real. VA rules allow something doesn’t mean every lender does—work with one who knows VA.
Documentation wins. Job offers, relocation letters, travel schedules, and repair escrows help underwrite edge cases.
