NoCreativity
Golden Member
Either have a 20% + down payment or practically nothing at all.
Anything < 20% and you're getting an FHA loan with mandatory PMI (Insurance for the bank that you will pay your mortgage, so basically, a ~$50/monthly charge?) See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Private_Mortgage_Insurance
Anything > 20% and you can get a normal 30-Year mortgage and go without PMI (basically throwing money away).
FHA loans have their place. There's nothing better than a 3% APR financed home paying practically nothing month to month. Toss in your extra cash in investments to earn more than what you would gain by paying the loan off early. I'm still crying that I didn't refinance our 5% APR back in July when it was ~3.5%. Now it's back up to ~4.25% and it's not even worth the closing costs ='/
I think you may want to read up on FHA loans because pretty much everything you posted is outdated.
Rules changed mid last year and they severely screw you. You won't pay $50 a month for FHA MIP (FHA's version of PMI). It will be about .13% of the loan value per month for a minimum of 11 years. You also need to pay an up-front MIP payment equal to 1.75% of loan value. On a $200K house that's $260/month MIP and an up-front cost of $3500. Moral of the story: stay far, far away from FHA.
As to the OP, as already mentioned it depends on how rigid your time frame is. If it's definite that you want to buy in 5 years you have to go a little more conservative to make sure you preserve capital. If you are flexible on the 5 year plan you can take a little more risk.