
There have been major updates from both Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac around condo financing—and if you work in the Las Vegas market, especially high-rises, this is something you need to understand right now.
This isn’t just guideline noise.
This is a fundamental shift in how condos get approved, financed, and valued moving forward.
In this breakdown, we’ll cover:
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What each agency changed
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Side-by-side comparisons
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Where each one stands out
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What this means specifically for Las Vegas
Big Picture: What’s Actually Happening
At a high level, both agencies are doing the same thing:
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Reducing friction in approvals
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Tightening financial and insurance standards
Translation:
Easier to get deals done… but only in stronger buildings.
Freddie Mac – What Changed (2026 Bulletin)
Freddie Mac introduced very specific structural updates to condo approvals and insurance requirements.
Key Moves
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Removed owner-occupancy requirements for established condos
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Expanded “Exempt from Review” (2–10 unit projects qualify easier)
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Eliminated the streamlined review process
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Increased reserve requirements (10% → 15%)
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Updated insurance rules (more flexible structure, stricter sufficiency standards)
Freddie’s Core Focus
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Financial stability of the HOA
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Real, measurable reserves (not just paper budgets)
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Insurance that truly protects the asset
Fannie Mae – What Changed
Fannie Mae is aligning closely with Freddie—but with a different strategic angle.
Key Moves
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Removed investor concentration limits
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Expanded waiver of full project reviews
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Eliminated legacy review structures (like limited review)
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Increased scrutiny on reserves and budget health
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Tightened insurance expectations across projects
Fannie’s Core Focus
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Expanding eligibility (more deals approved)
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Standardizing underwriting
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Balancing access with long-term project health
Side-by-Side: Fannie vs Freddie
1. Investor Flexibility
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Fannie Mae: Removed investor concentration limits → major win for investor-heavy buildings
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Freddie Mac: Removed owner-occupancy requirements → also investor-friendly
Winner: Tie
2. Project Approval Process
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Fannie Mae: Expanding waivers → fewer full reviews
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Freddie Mac: Expanded “Exempt from Review” + removed streamlined review
Winner: Freddie Mac (more aggressive simplification)
3. Reserve Requirements
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Fannie Mae: Strengthened expectations (less defined increases)
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Freddie Mac: Clear increase to 15% minimum reserves
Winner: Freddie Mac (significantly stricter)
4. Insurance Requirements
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Fannie Mae: Tightening standards around availability and compliance
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Freddie Mac: More flexible structure (RCV vs ACV), but clearer deductibles and coverage caps
Winner:
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Freddie = more flexible structure
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Fannie = more conservative risk approach
5. Operational Simplicity
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Fannie Mae: Aligning and simplifying
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Freddie Mac: Removing multiple layers entirely
Winner: Freddie Mac (cleaner execution)
Where They Differ (Critical Insight)
Freddie Mac Stands Out
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Stronger emphasis on true financial strength (15% reserves)
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Clearer insurance structure and deductibles
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More streamlined underwriting flow
Fannie Mae Stands Out
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More aggressive in expanding eligibility
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Better scalability for volume lending
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Slightly more conservative in layered risk
What This Means for Las Vegas (Real Impact)
This is where it gets real.
Las Vegas is uniquely exposed due to:
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High-rise condo concentration
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Investor-heavy ownership structures
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Older projects with weaker reserves
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Rising HOA dues and insurance costs
We’re Now Seeing a Split in the Market
Category 1: Strong Buildings (Winners)
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Well-funded reserves
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Clean insurance coverage
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No deferred maintenance
Result:
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Easier financing
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Increased buyer demand
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Stronger resale values
Category 2: Weak Buildings (Losers)
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Underfunded HOAs
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Deferred maintenance
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Insurance gaps
Result:
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Financing challenges
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Deals falling apart
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Downward price pressure
What Realtors Need to Understand
This is the biggest shift:
Not all condos are equal anymore.
Before:
If the buyer qualified, the deal usually worked.
Now:
The building must qualify just as much as the buyer.
Should You Be Concerned?
No—but you do need to adjust.
This is not a market slowdown signal.
This is a quality filter being applied to condo inventory.
My Take (From the Lending Side)
This is one of the most important structural shifts we’ve seen in years:
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Less unnecessary red tape
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More emphasis on real financial strength
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Better long-term protection for buyers
But it also means:
You need to understand the building before you list it, show it, or go into contract.
Final Strategy: What to Do Next
If you’re working with condos in Las Vegas:
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Review HOA reserves upfront
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Analyze insurance before writing offers
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Confirm if the building is financeable
Or skip the guesswork.
I can break down a building in minutes and tell you exactly how it performs under both Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac guidelines.
