NMHL Mortgage Lending

Mortgage Lender in Helena, MT

Local expertise and competitive rates for Helena homebuyers.

$380,000Median Home Price
33KPopulation
Call Now: (248) 864-2200
Helena, Montana’s capital city, sits where the last-chance gold rush met the Continental Divide, and today that same pioneering spirit shapes a housing market that rewards buyers who act fast but plan smart. With a median sale price hovering around $380,000—roughly 18% below the state-wide resort-town average—Helena offers Rocky Mountain living without the Bozeman price tag. Inventory in the 59601 and 59602 ZIP codes moves quickly because the state-government employment base keeps demand steady; most well-priced listings receive offers within 21 days, and multiple-offer situations are common for homes under $350,000. National Mortgage Home Loans has been helping Montanans in Helena and throughout the Treasure State for more than two decades, and our local loan officers know the difference between a South Hills view that will appraise high and an East Helena fixer that needs a 203(k) rehab loan. Whether you’re a first-time buyer hoping to use Montana Housing’s 80% combined-loan program, a veteran who qualifies for a zero-down VA loan on the edge of the Gates of the Mountains, or a self-employed entrepreneur looking to bank-statement-qualify on Last Chance Gulch, NMHL underwrites and funds right here in Helena—so pre-approval letters carry weight with listing agents who want certainty of close.

Helena Housing Market Overview

Helena is Montana's state capital, offering stable government employment amid stunning Rocky Mountain scenery. The city provides a balance between outdoor access and urban amenities, with prices between the expensive resort towns and more affordable Great Falls.

$380,000Median Home Price
0.82%Avg Property Tax
33KPopulation
Beautiful modern home exterior

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Helena Neighborhoods

Popular areas for homebuyers in Helena, MT

Last Chance GulchSouth HillsEast HelenaMontana CityBroadwater

ZIP Codes We Serve in Helena

Mortgage lending available in these Helena ZIP codes

5960159602

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Your Local Mortgage Partner

We understand the local market dynamics that affect your home purchase. Our team provides personalized loan options based on local property values and regulations.

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Available Loan Programs in Helena

Explore mortgage options tailored to Helena homebuyers

First Time Home Buyer Mortgages

Special loan programs helping newcomers purchase their first home with favorable terms and support.

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Refi-Shield

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Adjustable-Rate Mortgage (ARM)

Financial flexibility and optimal rates with an Adjustable-Rate Mortgage – Your key to a dynamic homeownership journey

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High-Value Appraisal Program

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Interest Only Mortgages

Interest-only mortgages allow borrowers to pay only the interest for a set period, reducing initial monthly payments.

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Home Equity Loans

Access the equity in your home with a fixed-rate home equity loan. Get a lump sum with predictable monthly payments for ...

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FHA Loans

Federal Housing Administration (FHA) loans are government-backed mortgages designed to help first-time homebuyers and th...

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Fixed-Rate Mortgage

Lock in your interest rate for the life of the loan with a fixed-rate mortgage. Predictable monthly payments make budget...

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Bridge Loans

Bridge the gap between buying your new home and selling your current one. Short-term financing that gives you the flexib...

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VA Loans

VA loans are a benefit earned by veterans, active-duty service members, and eligible surviving spouses. Backed by the De...

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Conventional Loans

Conventional loans are not backed by government agencies and typically offer the most flexibility for qualified borrower...

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ITIN Loans

Purchase a home using your Individual Taxpayer Identification Number (ITIN) without a Social Security Number. NMHL is co...

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Jumbo Loans

Jumbo loans exceed conforming loan limits and are designed for luxury properties and homes in high-cost areas. With comp...

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DSCR Investment Loans

Debt Service Coverage Ratio (DSCR) loans qualify based on rental income rather than personal income. Perfect for real es...

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Bank Statement Loans

Bank statement loans are designed for self-employed borrowers and business owners who have difficulty documenting income...

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Reverse Mortgages

For homeowners 62 and older, reverse mortgages allow you to access your home equity without monthly payments. Stay in yo...

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USDA Mortgages

USDA Rural Development loans help moderate-income buyers purchase homes in eligible rural and suburban areas. With no do...

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Helena’s 2024 Housing Market at a Glance

Helena’s housing market is the sweet spot for Montanans who want mountain-town lifestyle without the resort-town premium. The median sale price ended 2023 at $380,000, up 4.2% year-over-year—modest compared with Bozeman’s 11% spike—because steady state-government wages moderate price swings. Active listings hover around 85 homes at any given time, translating to a 2.1-month supply; anything under three months favors sellers, so pre-approval is essential. Entry-level buyers should focus on East Helena (average DOM 18 days) and parts of Montana City where new construction keeps inventory fresher. Move-up buyers looking for South Hills views should budget 5–10% over list and be ready to waive inspection contingencies up to $5,000—something NMHL’s pre-inspection program can help you navigate without added risk.

  • Median list-to-close ratio: 98.6%
  • Share of cash offers: 19% (down from 26% in 2022)
  • Conventional-loan share: 62%
  • FHA/VA share: 27%—well above the national 18%

If you’re relocating from out of state, note that Montana is a non-disclosure state; actual sale prices aren’t public, so rely on your NMHL loan officer’s access to the local MLS for accurate comps rather than third-party sites that often lag by 30–45 days.

Because Helena’s market moves fast, NMHL guarantees a 24-hour pre-underwrite—upload your docs by noon and you’ll have a fully underwritten approval letter by the next morning, making your offer as strong as cash.

Best Helena Neighborhoods for First-Time Buyers

Last Chance Gulch/Downtown: Walkable brick storefronts, craft breweries, and the walking mall. Prices start around $310,000 for 900-sq-ft condos and top out near $550,000 for restored Victorians. Special assessment rules can complicate financing, but NMHL’s condo team keeps an approved-building list so you’re not surprised by a last-minute review.

East Helena: Once a smelter town, now a family-oriented suburb 10 minutes from the Capitol. Expect 1,400-sq-ft three-bed ranches on quarter-acre lots for $295,000–$330,000. The elementary school scores are solid, and the 8,000-ft Mount Helena backdrop gives you bragging-rights views without South Hills price tags.

Montana City: Technically a CDP five miles south, but with Helena mailing addresses. New construction dominates, and builders like Andrich-Wright and Jackson Contracting partner with NMHL on rate-buy-down incentives—often a 2–1 temporary buy-down that cuts your first-year payment by $200.

South Hills: The prestige area winding up into the ponderosa pines. Entry point is $400,000 for a 1970s split-level, but $600,000 buys you a 3,200-sq-ft modern lodge with city-light views. Snow-load roofs and septic vs. city sewer can affect appraisals, so we order Helena-specific inspectors who know the slope-stability addendum.

Broadwater: Clustered around the hot-springs resort, this area attracts buyers who want a vacation vibe year-round. Prices are volatile because short-term rentals skew comps; NMHL removes STR income from qualification calculations to keep your DTI safe.

Ask for NMHL’s Helena Neighborhood Map—an interactive PDF that overlays school boundaries, commute times, and 2024 appreciation forecasts so you can target the right area before you tour.

Montana & Helena Down-Payment-Assistance Cheat Sheet

Montana is one of the few states where you can layer local, state, and lender-specific assistance, often covering all but 1% of the purchase price. Here’s how the math works on a $300,000 Helena starter home:

  • Montana Housing 80% Combined: First mortgage at $240,000 (80% LTV) plus a silent-second at $60,000 (0% interest, no payment, due on sale/refi). You avoid PMI and save $180/month.
  • Lewis & Clark County Workforce Program: $10,000 forgivable after five years; must earn ≤80% AMI ($59,600 for a two-person household).
  • NMHL 1% Down Advantage: We contribute a 2% grant, so you bring $3,000 instead of $9,000.

Stacking all three leaves $2,000–$3,000 in closing costs, which sellers can pay via a $3,000 seller credit—common in East Helena new-build contracts. Veterans can swap the 80% Combined for a 100% VA loan and use the county assistance to cover the funding fee, achieving literal zero cash-to-close.

Self-employed borrowers who report low net income can still qualify for the Score Loan, which uses 12 months of business bank statements and allows a 50% expense ratio. The assistance is a 3% grant, so on a $350,000 South Hills purchase you’d bring $10,500 instead of $17,500.

Assistance funds are released quarterly; apply by the 15th of January, April, July, or October to lock your reservation. NMHL tracks the calendar for you and pre-underwrites so you’re first in line when the funding window opens.

Understanding Helena & Lewis and Clark County Property Taxes

Property taxes here are calculated on 1.35% of assessed market value, then multiplied by local mill levies that total roughly 608 mills for city residents. On a $380,000 assessed home the formula looks like: $380,000 × 1.35% × 0.608 = $3,120 annually, or $260/month. The homeowner exemption shaves $28,000 off the assessed value, saving about $230 per year.

Tax bills arrive in early October; the first half is due November 30 and the second half by May 31. Because lenders escrow 1/12 year-round, you’ll see a line item labeled “County Taxes” on your mortgage statement. If you buy late in the year—say November—you’ll receive a credit from the seller for the days they owned the home, and your escrow account will start building for the next cycle.

Appealing your assessment: Comparable sales must be submitted to the County Appraisal Office by the second Monday in June. If you buy in March, NMHL monitors recent sales and emails you comps; successful appeals lower the taxable value starting the next tax year and we’ll recast your escrow so the savings show up immediately rather than waiting for the annual analysis.

Montana has no sales tax, so your buying power increases roughly 6–7% compared with states that tax every furnishing and closing fee—a hidden benefit most out-of-state buyers overlook.

Montana First-Time Home Buyer Programs That Work in Helena

Montana Housing MBOH First-Time Homebuyer: 30-year fixed at 0.5–1% below market; income limit for Lewis & Clark County is $91,600 for a two-person household. Can be paired with 3%, 5%, or 10% down-payment assistance grant that never has to be repaid.

FHA Edge: 580 minimum score, 3.5% down, and Montana Housing will gift the 3.5% as a grant if your household income is ≤60% AMI. That’s $44,700 for two people—perfect for entry-level state workers.

Score Loan: Designed for borrowers with thin credit or past medical collections. Uses alternative trade lines (utility bills, rent) and still delivers a 30-year fixed at market rate with only 1% down from you.

USDA Rural for Montana City: Technically outside Helena city limits, but still a 59602 ZIP. Zero down, 100% financing, and the guarantee fee can be rolled into the loan.

VA No-NO: If you’re National Guard stationed at Fort Harrison, you can buy with zero down and we’ll roll the 1.25% funding fee into the rate via a lender credit, so you bring literally nothing to closing.

NMHL Community Hero: Teachers, EMTs, and state employees receive a 0.25% rate reduction and $750 toward appraisal. On a $325,000 mortgage that saves $21/month and $7,560 over the life of the loan.

Book a 15-minute Zoom with one of NMHL’s Helena-based loan officers and we’ll run a side-by-side comparison of every program you qualify for so you can see total cash-to-close and 5-year payment scenarios before you ever tour a house.

Why Helena Veterans Choose NMHL for VA Loans

Helena has one of the highest per-capita veteran populations in the Mountain West, thanks to Fort Harrison and the VA hospital. Local listing agents know that a VA buyer using an out-of-state internet lender often hits snags—appraisers unfamiliar with Helena’s well-water requirements, or underwriters who balk at a 1,900-sq-ft home on 1.3 acres labeled “rural.” NMHL’s VA team orders roster appraisers who have done at least 50 Helena-area assignments in the past two years, so they know how to adjust for mountain-view premiums and septic vs. sewer.

We also offer VA IRRRL (streamline) refinances that close in 10 days, helping veterans drop their rate without re-qualifying. If you’re currently at 5.75% on a $350,000 mortgage, today’s market can move you down to the low-5s, saving $140/month with zero appraisal and almost no paperwork.

Surviving spouses can use VA entitlement even if the veteran passed; we walk you through the COE process and waive the 0.5% funding fee. And because Montana is a community-property state, we can exclude a spouse’s debt from the DTI calculation if they’re not on the loan, a nuance many national call-center lenders miss.

VA buyers accepted a $15,000 inspection-repair cap in 2023, making offers competitive with conventional. NMHL pre-approves you with a $10,000 repair escrow so sellers know you can handle minor fixes without renegotiating.

Frequently Asked Questions

Montana-based lenders, including NMHL, can approve FHA loans down to a 580 credit score with 3.5% down, and VA loans with no down payment requirement at the same threshold. Conventional loans in Helena typically require a 620 minimum, but if your mid-score is below that we can pair you with Montana Housing’s Score Loan that wraps in free credit-coaching and still gets you to the closing table with only 1% out-of-pocket. Self-employed borrowers using bank-statement programs usually need a 660 minimum and 12 months of reserves because Helena’s seasonal economy can create income swings.

Yes—Lewis & Clark County partners with NeighborWorks Montana to offer up to $15,000 in silent-second assistance for households earning ≤80% of area median income; the loan is forgivable after five years if you remain in the home. Montana Housing’s 80% Combined Program lets you pair a first mortgage at 80% LTV with a second at 0% interest, eliminating PMI and keeping payments low. NMHL can stack either program with our 1% Down Advantage for qualified buyers, meaning you could close on a $300,000 Helena home with only $3,000 of your own funds.

East Helena and the lower reaches of Montana City still have 1,200-sq-ft ranches trading between $280,000–$330,000, especially east of Hauser Boulevard where lots are larger but commute times to the Capitol remain under 12 minutes. Broadwater, near the hot springs, offers 1970s split-levels that routinely appraise for $315,000 and can be snagged with a renovation loan if the mineral-water infrastructure needs updating. South Hills has pricier vistas, but micro-pockets north of Sierra Road occasionally list in the mid-$300s if you’re willing to accept a shared driveway.

Lewis & Clark County’s average effective rate is 0.82%, so a $380,000 assessed home runs about $260 per month in taxes—well below the national 1.07% average. Montana’s homestead exemption knocks another $28,000 off the taxable value for owner-occupants, saving roughly $20/month. Because taxes are paid in two installments (November and May), lenders collect 1/12 in escrow year-round; NMHL’s Helena team makes sure your Good Faith Estimate reflects the homestead reduction so your debt-to-income ratio qualifies smoothly.

Not with NMHL. Roughly 14% of Helena’s workforce is self-employed ranchers, consultants, or remote tech workers, so our Montana underwriters are comfortable with bank-statement and 109-only programs. We average the last 12 or 24 months of business or personal bank statements, allow expense-ratio add-backs, and will gross-up non-taxable income. As long as you have a 660 score and can document two years of steady receipts—whether from a ranch outside Augusta or a software contract—you can qualify for the same rates as a W-2 state employee.

NMHL’s Helena branch currently closes purchase loans in 24 days on average, three days faster than the local market norm. Government-backed loans (FHA, VA, USDA) take about 26 days because we order the FHA roster appraiser or VA Tidewater review immediately after pre-approval. If you’re buying in the historic Last Chance Gulch district and the home needs a Helena-specific preservation review, budget an extra five days for title work; otherwise you’ll beat the standard 30-day closing window and sellers love the certainty.

Absolutely—Montana has no VA loan limit for borrowers with full entitlement, so if you sold and restored entitlement you can buy again at 100% financing up to any compliant price. If you’re carrying an existing VA loan, NMHL can run a second-tier calculation; in Helena’s price range most buyers have enough remaining entitlement to cover the $380,000 median without a down payment. We also waive the 1% VA funding fee for veterans with a 10% or greater service-connected disability, saving roughly $3,800 upfront.

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