The rules change the moment you already own one. Financing, taxes, and strategy all shift — here's everything you need to know before you start looking.
Your first home and your second home look similar on the surface. The process, the inspections, the closing table — all familiar. But behind the scenes, lenders, the IRS, and your overall financial picture treat them very differently.
Second home vs. investment property — these are not the same thing. A second home is a property you personally occupy for some portion of the year and don't rent out primarily for income. An investment property is one you purchase primarily to generate rental income. Lenders and the IRS treat them differently — and the line between them matters more than most buyers realize.
Second home loans are conventional-only in most cases. You cannot use FHA, VA, or USDA financing on a property that won't be your primary residence. Here's what you're working with.
| Feature | Primary Home | Second Home | Investment Property |
|---|---|---|---|
| Loan Types | FHA, VA, USDA, Conventional | Conventional only | Conventional only (Portfolio loans available) |
| Min. Down Payment | 3–5% (conventional) 3.5% (FHA) |
10% minimum Often 20%+ for best rates |
15–25% |
| Interest Rate | Base rate | +0.5–0.75% Higher | +0.75–1.25% Highest |
| DTI Requirement | Up to 50% (FHA) 43–45% (conventional) |
43–45% max Both mortgages counted |
43–45% May use projected rents |
| Reserves Required | 1–2 months PITI | 2–6 months PITI For both properties |
6+ months PITI |
| Rental Income Counted | N/A | No Important | Yes (75% of gross rents) |
| Occupancy Requirement | Must be primary residence | Must occupy personally Some portion of year |
None required |
Occupancy fraud is a serious risk. If you tell your lender the property is a second home to get the lower rate, then rent it out full-time and never occupy it — that's mortgage fraud. Lenders increasingly require you to personally occupy a second home for some portion of the year. The line is real and enforceable.
Many buyers fund their second home purchase — at least partially — by tapping equity from their primary residence. There are two main vehicles for this.
Variable-rate revolving credit secured by your primary home. You draw as needed, pay interest only on what you use. Good for down payment funds when timing is flexible. Rate risk is real — if rates rise, your payment goes up.
Refinance your primary home for more than you owe, pocketing the difference. You get a fixed-rate lump sum — but you're restarting your primary mortgage clock and likely trading a lower rate for a higher one in today's environment. Run the math carefully.
I see buyers come in with a HELOC lined up thinking it's a done deal. It's not. That HELOC is a debt — it shows up on your credit and your DTI. Your lender for the second home will count it, which can impact how much you qualify for. Coordinate the timing. Talk to both lenders before you open any new credit.
Gift funds are generally not allowed on second home purchases. The down payment typically must come from your own verified assets. Confirm with your lender early — this catches buyers off guard.
The down payment is just the beginning. Here's a realistic picture of the cash you should have ready before you start shopping seriously.
Buying a $550,000 vacation home with 20% down: $110,000 down payment + ~$16,500 in closing costs + reserves for both homes. If your primary home payment is $3,200/mo and your new payment is $2,800/mo, lenders may want $36,000+ in reserve. All-in cash need: $160,000+ before your first mortgage payment.
Tax treatment for a second home depends almost entirely on how you use it. The rules aren't complicated, but you need to understand them before you close — not after your first tax season.
If you itemize deductions, you can deduct mortgage interest on up to $750,000 of combined home loan debt (primary + second home together). This is the $750K cap introduced by the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.
If your combined mortgage balances are under $750K, you're likely in the clear. If they exceed $750K, a portion of your interest becomes non-deductible. Work with your CPA to calculate your specific deductible amount.
Property taxes on the second home are deductible, but subject to the $10,000 SALT cap when combined with your primary home's state and local taxes.
This is the big one. Your primary home gets the Section 121 exclusion — up to $250,000 in gains tax-free ($500,000 for married couples) if you've lived there 2 of the last 5 years.
Your second home gets none of that. When you sell, 100% of the gain is taxable. If you bought for $400K and sell for $700K, that $300K gain is subject to capital gains tax — either 0%, 15%, or 20% depending on your income bracket.
One strategy: convert the second home to your primary residence for 2+ years before selling. You must live there — not just own it — to qualify.
| Usage Pattern | IRS Classification | Tax Treatment |
|---|---|---|
| Personal use only, no rental income |
Personal Residence Second Home | Mortgage interest + property taxes deductible (subject to caps). No rental income to report. No depreciation. |
| Rented out 14 days or fewer per year | Personal Residence Tax-Free Rental | Rental income is 100% tax-free. Expenses still split. This is the "Masters exception" — a legitimate loophole used by homeowners in high-demand areas during events. |
| Rented more than 14 days AND personal use exceeds 14 days (or 10% of rental days) | Mixed-Use Property | Rental income taxable. Expenses must be allocated between personal and rental use. Rental loss deductions limited. Complex — CPA required. |
| Rented more than 14 days AND personal use less than 14 days (or 10% of rental days) | Investment / Rental Property Schedule E | Full rental income taxable. All rental expenses deductible. Depreciation allowed. Subject to passive activity loss rules. Better long-term tax position if it's truly a rental. |
Every situation is different. Your deductibility depends on your income, filing status, and how you use the property. Work with a CPA who has real estate experience before you purchase — not after. The decisions you make at closing affect your tax position for years.
Short-term rental income can make a second home more affordable — but it changes the rules on your loan, your taxes, and your management obligations. Here's what to know before you count on it.
If rental income is a primary goal and you plan to rent extensively, the cleaner path is an investment property loan. Yes, the rate is higher and the down payment is larger — but you get full Schedule E deductions, depreciation, and the lender isn't surprised when you post it on VRBO.
If the property is in a high-demand area — think a beach town during summer, or a ski town during peak season — renting for exactly 14 days or fewer keeps your rental income completely tax-free while maintaining your second home classification. This is legal, intentional, and used by savvy homeowners regularly.
If you're buying in a market where you're not local, budget for professional property management. Typical fees run 20–35% of gross rental revenue for short-term management. It eats into income significantly — but the alternative is self-managing from a distance, which has its own costs.
Before you write an offer on a property you plan to rent, build a full pro forma. I can help you think through realistic occupancy rates, seasonal demand, and true net operating income for any market.
Your second purchase should be more deliberate than your first. You have equity, experience, and more to protect. Here's how experienced buyers approach it.
This matters even more on a second home. Your DTI with two mortgages may be tighter than you expect. Know your number before you tour anything — in MoCo or anywhere else.
Second home or investment property? The answer affects your rate, your down payment, and your taxes. Don't change your mind mid-transaction — lenders notice and it creates problems.
The decisions you make at the closing table — how title is held, purchase price allocation, how you intend to use the property — have multi-year tax implications. A one-hour conversation with your CPA before closing is worth more than years of "I wish I had known."
Two mortgages, two property tax bills, two insurance policies, HOA if applicable, maintenance on a property you're not always at, and capital reserves for the unexpected. Build a 12-month budget that includes all of it — before you're under contract.
Buyers sometimes treat a second home more casually than a primary residence. Don't. A property you're not in regularly can develop problems you don't notice until they're expensive. Full inspection, radon, septic if applicable, and anything market-specific (flood zone, well, aging roof).
Is this a place to enjoy for 10 years and sell? A property you'll eventually move to? Something you'll pass to your kids? The exit matters. A second home that makes sense for a 10-year hold may not make sense for a 3-year hold. Think about the back end before you commit to the front.
If you're buying in a market that isn't local to you, the agent you choose matters more, not less. You can't drive by and check on things. You need someone with real local knowledge — not a referral placement who doesn't know the neighborhood. I can refer you to trusted agents in other markets. If you're buying in or near Montgomery County, I know every pocket of this market personally.
Use this as a gut-check before you go under contract. If you can't check every box, you have a conversation to have first.
Every buyer's situation is different. Let's walk through your numbers, your goals, and what makes sense for you — before you start shopping.