a government agency within the Department of Agriculture that operates under the Consolidated Farm and Rural Development Act of 1921 and Title V of the Housing Act of 1949. This agency provides financing to farmenrs and other qualified borrowers who are unable to obtain loans elsewhere.
An agency of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, that provides financing for purchasers of homes and farms in small towns and rural areas.
U. S. Department of Agriculture agency providing financing for farmers, residents of rural areas, etc.
Programs that assist people who want to buy farms and homes in rural areas.
A U.S. Department of Agriculture agency that provides credit to farmers and rural residents.
An agency, within the U.S. Department of Agriculture, that administers assistance programs for purchasers of homes and farms in small towns and rural areas.
An agency of the U. S. Department of Agriculture that provides credit to farmers, rural residences, and certain communities. Currently, FMHA administers two loan programs for rural housing: (1) a direct loan program, and (2) a guaranteed loan program. Properties securing such loans may not be located in urban areas and, like FHA and VA, FMHA requires that the property meet certain minimum requirements. Although there is no statutory loan limit for such loans, the property must appraise for the contract sales price. Information on both loan programs is available from any office of the Farmer's Home Administration.
A federal agency of the Department of Agriculture that provides or assists in providing credit to farmers and others in rural areas, where reasonable financing from private sources is not readily available.
A federal agency that provides credit assistance to farmers and other individuals residing in rural areas of the U.S.
U.S. Department of Agriculture agency, which provides credit to qualified farmers and rural residents.
The government agency that guarantees mortgages secured by residential properties located in rural areas, concentrating on borrowers with income less than HUD's local median income for the area in which they reside. FmHA is now known as Rural Economic and Community Development.