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Florida mortgage lending data

South region · HMDA 2023 reporting year

In Florida, the 2023 mortgage denial rate was 23.6% — above the national denial rate (+4.0 points vs the 19.6% national rate), ranking it #7 of 51. Lenders originated about 384,863 home-purchase and refinance loans (rank #2). The home-purchase denial rate was 18.2% and refinance 39.6%. By loan type, conventional loans were 75.3%, FHA 16.3%, VA 8.2% and USDA/RHS 0.2%. Informational data, not lending advice.

Source: HMDA Data Browser (FFIEC / CFPB). Data as of June 2026.

Florida mortgage lending at a glance

IndicatorFlorida
Total originations (purchase + refinance, 2023)384,863
Denied applications118,782
Mortgage denial rate23.6%
Denial-rate rank (1 = highest of 51)#7
Home-purchase denial rate18.2%
Refinance denial rate39.6%
Volume rank (1 = most loans of 51)#2

Source: HMDA Data Browser (FFIEC / CFPB) (2023 reporting year). Data as of June 2026.

Source: HMDA Data Browser (2023), public domain. Denial rate = denied ÷ (originated + denied). Informational only — verify before relying on it.

What the denial rate means

Florida's mortgage denial rate of 23.6% means that for every 100 applications that were either approved-and-originated or denied, about 24 were turned down. That is higher compared with the national figure of 19.6%. Denial rates are driven by applicant credit scores, debt-to-income ratios, the loan type and local home prices — not only by how strict lenders are. Refinance applications are often denied at a different rate than purchase loans: in Florida the purchase denial rate was 18.2% versus 39.6% for refinances.

Florida loan-type mix

How Florida's 384,863 originations break down by loan program. A higher FHA or VA share usually points to more first-time buyers, lower down payments, or a large veteran population.

Loan typeOriginationsShare
Conventional350,97675.3%
FHA75,84616.3%
VA38,2648.2%
USDA / RHS8600.2%

Source: HMDA Data Browser (FFIEC / CFPB) (2023). Data as of June 2026.

See FHA vs VA vs conventional for what each program is. Shares are over loans with a reported type and may not sum to exactly 100% due to rounding.

States with a similar denial rate to Florida

Florida and its nearest peers by denial rate. Source: HMDA Data Browser (2023).
StateDenial rateOriginationsFHA shareVA share
Florida (this state)23.6%384,86316.3%8.2%
South Carolina23.8%98,33015.5%11.1%
Arkansas23.3%45,31415.5%7.9%
Kentucky23.3%65,14514.4%6.4%
Texas23.1%421,65318.4%9.0%
Alabama24.4%79,10916.6%10.7%

Frequently asked questions

What was the mortgage denial rate in Florida in 2023?

In 2023, the mortgage denial rate in Florida was about 23.6% — that is, 118,782 applications were denied out of 503,645 that were either originated or denied. That is +4.0 points versus the national rate of 19.6%, and ranks Florida #7 of 51 from highest to lowest. Figures are from HMDA; verify before relying on them.

How many mortgages were originated in Florida?

Lenders originated about 384,863 home-purchase and refinance loans in Florida in 2023 (HMDA reporting year), ranking it #2 of 51 by volume. Of those, the home-purchase denial rate was 18.2% and the refinance denial rate was 39.6%.

What share of Florida mortgages are FHA or VA loans?

In Florida, FHA loans made up about 16.3% of originations and VA loans about 8.2%, with conventional loans the largest share at 75.3% and USDA/RHS loans 0.2%. Higher government-backed shares often reflect more first-time and lower-down-payment buyers.

Is it harder to get a mortgage in Florida than elsewhere?

Florida's denial rate of 23.6% is above the national denial rate. Denial rates reflect applicant credit, income and debt, loan type and local home prices as much as lender behavior, so a higher rate does not by itself mean stricter lenders. States with the most similar denial rates to Florida are South Carolina, Arkansas, Kentucky.

Keep exploring

Sources & accuracy

All counts are from the HMDA Data Browser (FFIEC / CFPB, 2023 reporting year, public domain). Denial rate, loan-type shares and ranks are transparent calculations over those counts (see methodology). This page is informational and is not financial or lending advice — verify with a licensed lender before making a decision.

Last updated: 2026-06-20