FHA mortgage insurance (MIP) has two separate charges: an upfront fee at closing and an annual fee paid monthly. People mix these up—and that leads to bad payment expectations.
1) Upfront MIP (UFMIP): the one-time charge
For most FHA forward loans, the Upfront MIP is 1.75% of the base loan amount.
How it’s paid:
- You can pay it at closing, or
- Finance it into the loan (most buyers do), which increases your starting loan balance.
2) Monthly MIP: the ongoing charge
Monthly MIP is calculated from an annual MIP rate (a percentage) applied to your outstanding balance and collected monthly.
HUD reduced annual MIP rates for many FHA loans effective for mortgages endorsed on or after March 20, 2023 (the structure most buyers are still under in 2025).
Common 2025 “typical” annual MIP ranges you’ll see quoted for 30-year FHA purchase loans:
- Around 0.55% for high-LTV loans (very common with 3.5% down)
- Around 0.50% for slightly lower LTV tiers
(Exact rate depends on term, LTV, and base loan amount tier—your lender should confirm your specific bucket.)
3) Cancellation rules: when MIP ends (and when it doesn’t)
This is where buyers get wrecked.
For FHA case numbers assigned on/after June 3, 2013 (most modern FHA loans), FHA’s rules are: (HUD)
- If your original LTV is > 90% (example: 3.5% down), annual MIP lasts for the full loan term (or first 30 years, whichever occurs first).
- If your original LTV is ≤ 90% (example: 10%+ down), annual MIP lasts 11 years.
Brutal truth: If you put 3.5% down, you should mentally treat monthly MIP as “permanent” unless you refinance out of FHA later.
4) Miami payment examples (real math, not vibes)
Example A: $500,000 purchase, FHA 3.5% down (common Miami first-time scenario)
- Down payment: 3.5% = $17,500
- Base loan amount: $500,000 − $17,500 = $482,500
- Upfront MIP (1.75% of base): $482,500 × 0.0175 = $8,443.75
- If financed, starting loan ≈ $490,943.75
Monthly MIP estimate (using 0.55% typical bucket):
- Annual MIP: $482,500 × 0.0055 = $2,653.75/year
- Monthly MIP: $2,653.75 ÷ 12 = ~$221/month
Cancellation reality: with 3.5% down (LTV > 90%), monthly MIP typically stays for the life of the loan/term unless you refinance.
Example B: $500,000 purchase, FHA 10% down (when buyers want the 11-year rule)
- Down payment: 10% = $50,000
- Base loan: $450,000
- Upfront MIP: $450,000 × 0.0175 = $7,875
Monthly MIP estimate (using 0.50% typical bucket):
- $450,000 × 0.0050 ÷ 12 = ~$188/month
Cancellation reality: with LTV ≤ 90%, annual MIP is 11 years.
5) Planning moves that actually work
- If you’re putting 3.5% down, price FHA as a “MIP until refinance” loan, not a “we’ll cancel later” loan.
- Compare FHA vs conventional PMI side-by-side using your real numbers (rate + MI + fees), not just the interest rate headline.
- Build your strategy around when you can refinance (equity + credit + rates), because that’s usually how you escape lifetime MIP.
- Payment breakdown basics: https://mymiamimortgagebroker.com/how-to-calculate-monthly-mortgage-payment/
- Lender vetting questions (so you don’t get “surprise-MIP’d”): https://mymiamimortgagebroker.com/questions-to-ask-a-mortgage-lender-before-applying/

