Buying a home in the USA as a new Polish immigrant is feasible but requires preparation. Typically, the process takes 3-6 months from pre-approval to keys. Actual costs = down payment + closing costs + reserves = ~25-30% of the home price in cash. This guide provides a practical pathway.
Can I Buy a Home as an Immigrant
Immigration Status — Mortgage Requirements
| Status | Can Buy a Home? |
|---|---|
| U.S. Citizen | ✅ Yes — all programs |
| Lawful Permanent Resident (GC) | ✅ Yes — all programs |
| H-1B / L-1 / O-1 visa | ✅ Yes — Conventional, jumbo |
| F-1 student | ⚠️ Rarely — special foreign national loans |
| EAD pending I-485 | ✅ Yes — some banks accept |
| Asylum pending | ⚠️ Sometimes — requires mortgage attorney |
| ITIN holder (without SSN, without status) | ✅ Yes — ITIN mortgage from Polish banks |
| Foreign investor (residing in PL) | ✅ Yes — Foreign National Loans (expensive) |
How Much Cash Do You Need
Home $400,000 — Typically
- Down payment 20%: $80,000 (no PMI, best rate)
- Closing costs 3-6%: $12,000 - $24,000
- Cash reserves (bank wants to see 2-6 months of payments): $5,000 - $20,000
- Inspection + appraisal: $800 - $1,300
- Moving + initial setup: $5,000 - $10,000
- Total needed on the side: $103,000 - $135,000
Home $400,000 — Minimum (FHA 3.5% down)
- Down payment 3.5%: $14,000
- Closing costs: $12,000 - $24,000 (sometimes seller covers)
- Cash reserves: $5,000+
- Total minimum: $31,000 - $43,000
Step 1: Build Credit + Save for Down Payment (1-3 years prior)
Building Credit Score
- Goal: 720+ credit score
- See [[credit-score-w-usa-jak-budowac-od-zera]]
- Strategies: secured credit card → unsecured → diversify, timely payments
Saving for Down Payment
- High-yield savings account: 4-5% APY (Marcus, Ally, Capital One 360)
- HSA / 401(k) — DO NOT use for down payment (early withdrawal penalties)
- Gift from family — banks accept with a "gift letter"
- Polish savings — can be transferred via Wise / bank transfer (check FBAR reporting if > $10k)
Step 2: Find a Real Estate Agent (REA)
What Does REA Do
- Represents you in the transaction (buyer's agent)
- Searches for homes, organizes showings
- Negotiates price with the seller's REA
- Assists with paperwork
- Free for the buyer! — the seller pays the commission (typically 5-6%, split between both REAs)
Choosing an Agent
- Polish agent in Polish community areas — recommended for new immigrants
- Experienced in the area where you are looking
- Specializes in first-time buyers, ITIN mortgage, etc.
- Communicative — responds within 24 hours
Polish Agents
- NYC area: NJ, Long Island, Brooklyn, Queens
- Chicago: Belmont/Avondale, Norridge, Niles
- Search at informacja.com/firmy in the "Real Estate" category
Step 3: Pre-Approval (BEFORE searching for a home)
What It Is
- Lender (bank / credit union / broker) checks your finances
- Issues a letter for a specific amount: "Pre-approved for $350,000"
- Gives you negotiation power when making offers
- Sellers take offers with pre-approval seriously
Required Documents
- Pay stubs for the last 2 years
- W-2 / 1099 / tax returns for the last 2 years
- Bank statements for the last 2-3 months
- Investment account statements
- ID (passport, GC, driver's license)
- SSN or ITIN
- Complete application (Uniform Residential Loan Application)
Shop Around — Compare 3-5 Lenders
- Conventional bank (Chase, Wells Fargo, Bank of America)
- Online lender (Rocket Mortgage, Better.com)
- Credit union (PSFCU, PNA FCU)
- Polish mortgage broker
- Compare: rate, APR, fees, monthly payment, total interest
Step 4: Searching for a Home (1-12 months)
What to Consider
- Location — schools, commute, Polish community, safety
- Size — bedrooms, bathrooms, garage
- Condition — fixer-upper vs move-in ready
- Type: single-family, townhouse, condo, co-op
- HOA fees if condo/townhouse
- Property taxes — check carefully (NJ vs FL huge difference)
- Value over the years — is the neighborhood growing or declining
Polish Community Buying Areas in the USA
NYC Area
- Greenpoint, Brooklyn: expensive ($800k-1.5M townhouses)
- Maspeth, Ridgewood, Queens: average ($600k-900k)
- Long Island: home with garden ($500k-1M)
- NJ: Linden, Garfield, Wallington ($400k-700k) — popular for Polish families
- Yonkers, Westchester: upper middle class
Chicago Area
- Avondale, Belmont: $300k-500k
- Norridge, Niles: $400k-600k
- Park Ridge, Des Plaines: upper middle class ($500k-800k)
- Lincoln Park, Bucktown: expensive ($800k-1.5M)
NJ — Most Popular for Polish Families
- Linden, Garfield, Lodi: middle class
- Wallington: densest Polish city per capita
- Saddle Brook, Elmwood Park: home + garden
Detroit Area
- Hamtramck — historic (cheap)
- Sterling Heights, Troy — newer Polish community (average)
Step 5: Offer + Negotiations
What the Offer Includes
- Price — sometimes lower than the listing, sometimes higher (bidding war)
- Earnest money deposit — 1-3% of the price (escrow, refundable if the purchase falls through)
- Closing date — typically 30-60 days
- Contingencies — conditions that must be met:
- Inspection contingency
- Mortgage contingency
- Appraisal contingency
- Sale-of-current-home contingency
- Seller concessions — whether the seller will pay part of the closing costs
Negotiations
- In a buyer's market (more homes than buyers): the buyer has power
- In a seller's market (few homes): the seller has power, sometimes bidding wars
- 2026 typically: balanced market (after the peak of 2021-2022)
Step 6: Inspection + Appraisal
Home Inspection
- The inspector checks the entire structure: roof, foundation, plumbing, electrical, HVAC
- Lasts 2-4 hours
- Cost: $400-700
- BE PRESENT! — ask questions
- You will receive a 30-50 page report
- Negotiate: ask the seller to fix found issues OR reduce the price
Appraisal
- The bank assesses whether the home is worth the mortgage amount
- Independent appraiser
- Cost: $400-700 (paid by the buyer)
- If appraisal < price offer → problem (the bank only lends up to the appraised value)
- Then: the buyer pays cash, the seller lowers the price, or the deal falls through
Step 7: Underwriting (2-6 weeks)
- The bank thoroughly checks everything
- "Conditional approval" → "Clear to close"
- They may request additional documents
- DO NOT do during this time:
- Do not change jobs
- Do not buy a car, furniture
- Do not apply for new credit cards
- Do not deposit large sums from unknown sources
Step 8: Closing (1 day)
What to Bring
- Cashier's check or wire transfer for closing costs + down payment
- ID (passport)
- Pre-approval documents
- Insurance policy (proof that you have it)
What You Sign
- 30-50 documents
- Mortgage Note (promise to repay)
- Mortgage / Deed of Trust (lien on the home)
- Closing Disclosure (already known 3 days prior)
- Deed (title deed)
- Title insurance
- etc.
What You Get
- Keys to the home ✅
- Garage remote, alarm codes
- All documents
- Deed shortly after (registration in county)
After Purchase — What Now
First 30 Days
- Change locks
- Check smoke detectors
- Update utilities (gas, electricity, water, internet)
- Update address with SSA, USCIS (AR-11), bank, DMV
- Set up auto-pay for mortgage
- Set up escrow for property tax + insurance
First Year
- Check escrow — replenish shortages
- Property tax appeal if the assessment is high
- Homestead exemption (if FL, TX) — tax discount
- Mortgage interest deduction on taxes (if itemized)
Polish Tips
- Polish mortgage offices understand ITIN mortgages and Foreign National Loans
- Polish attorney at closing helps (NJ requires an attorney, NY does not)
- Document translations from Poland (if using Polish credit) — by a certified translator
- Powers of attorney from Poland — for family in PL to buy on your behalf (apostille + translation)
Common Mistakes
- No pre-approval before searching
- Neglecting inspection — minor $500 savings → $50,000 repairs
- Being infatuated with the first home
- Not noticing property taxes
- Ignoring HOA if condo
- Applying for credit after pre-approval
- Changing jobs during the process
- No cash reserves after closing
- Choosing an agent recommended by the seller (conflict of interest)
- Not reading disclosures
Useful Links
Related: [[mortgage-w-usa-jak-dziala-typy-koszty]] · [[fha-loan-czy-polak-bez-credit-score-2026]] · [[wynajem-pokoju-roommate-sublease-w-usa]]
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