Last Updated: April 1, 2026
Median Price
$239K
Property Tax
1.41%
+0.31% above avg
Closing Costs
~2%
of loan amount
Market
Calculate Your Kansas Mortgage Payment
Pre-filled with Kansas's median home price ($239,111) and property tax rate (1.41%). Adjust the values to match your situation.
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Kansas Mortgage Rates
Compare today's mortgage rates from top lenders in Kansas.
What Affects Your Kansas Mortgage Rate?
Credit Score
Higher scores get better rates
Down Payment
20%+ avoids PMI
Property Type
Primary homes get best rates
Loan Term
15-year has lower rates
Refinancing in Kansas
See if refinancing could lower your monthly payment or help you pay off your mortgage faster.
Good Time to Refinance
- Current rates are 0.5%+ lower than your rate
- Your credit score has improved significantly
- You want to switch from ARM to fixed-rate
- You plan to stay in your home 3+ more years
Consider Waiting If
- Rate difference is less than 0.5%
- You plan to sell within 2 years
- Closing costs exceed potential savings
- Your credit score has dropped
Refinancing costs typically range from 2-6% of your loan amount. Calculate your break-even point to ensure savings outweigh costs.
Compare Kansas Refinance RatesKansas Housing Market Overview
$215,000 median — that's 49% below the national average. Kansas is genuinely affordable, but here's what catches people: your property taxes are higher than you'd expect at 1.41%. On a $215K house, that's around $3,000 annually, which eats into the savings from your lower purchase price.
Right now it's a buyer's market, so you've got room to negotiate and take your time. Sellers are motivated.
Prices swing more than you'd think across the state. Wichita (the big aerospace hub) sits around $180K median, while Kansas City suburbs like Overland Park push $350K-400K. Lawrence, the college town, runs about $280K and surprises people — you're paying a premium for that university vibe and shorter commute to KC.
What really throws buyers: Johnson County suburbs near Kansas City feel nothing like "cheap Kansas." Leawood and Prairie Village have homes hitting $500K-700K regularly. It's not the Kansas most people picture.
The tornado risk is real, not just a movie thing. Budget for a solid homeowner's policy and understand that storm shelters add value here in ways they don't elsewhere. Some buyers from the coasts don't factor this in until they're already closing
Kansas Home Buyer Programs
The Kansas Housing Resources Corporation (KHRC) runs the main first-time buyer program here, and honestly, it's more generous than what you'll find in neighboring states. You can get a below-market interest rate (usually around 0.5% to 1% lower than conventional rates) plus up to $5,000 in down payment assistance. That DPA comes as a second mortgage at 0% interest, and it's forgiven after you live in the home for five years.
The catch is income limits that vary by county and household size. In places like Wichita or Topeka, those limits are more forgiving than you'd expect. But in Johnson County where prices run higher, you might bump up against the ceiling faster. You also can't have owned a home in the past three years, and you'll need to take a homebuyer education course before closing.
If you're a teacher, first responder, or military member, the HERO Program stacks on top of the standard program. You get access to the same interest rate discount and DPA, but with slightly more flexible income requirements. Most people don't realize these programs work with FHA, VA, USDA, and conventional loans—you're not locked into one loan type.
The application goes through participating lenders, not directly through KHRC. So you need to find a mortgage lender approved to offer these programs, and not all of them are. Some lenders don't bother because the paperwork's heavier than a standard loan.
Check current rates and find approved lenders at kshousingcorp.org. Program terms and funding amounts change based on what's available, so what's offered now might shift by next quarter.
Mortgage Regulations in Kansas
Here's the thing about Kansas that trips people up: it's a judicial foreclosure state, which means if you default, the lender has to sue you in court. That sounds scary, but it actually gives you more time – we're talking 4-6 months minimum, sometimes closer to a year in Wichita or Johnson County where courts are backed up. Compare that to Missouri next door where a non-judicial foreclosure can wrap in 60 days.
The flip side? Kansas has a redemption period. After the foreclosure sale, you've got 12 months (or 6 months in some cases) where you can buy your house back by paying what's owed plus costs. Sounds like a safety net, but it creates this weird limbo where the property sits in legal purgatory. If you're buying a foreclosed home around Topeka or Overland Park, just know this can complicate things.
Transfer taxes are pretty minimal here – usually under 0.3% total – so that won't shock you at closing like it would in some states.
One more practical thing: the Kansas Housing Resources Corporation runs first-time buyer programs with down payment assistance, but the funding runs out fast every year. If you're looking in Lawrence or any college town, that money disappears by spring usually.
Consult a local attorney if foreclosure becomes a real concern for your situation.
Tips for Buying a Home in Kansas
Get your homeowners insurance quotes before you make an offer. Kansas insurers are brutal about tornado/hail coverage, and if your house is in the wrong zone or has an older roof, you'll pay 2-3x what you budgeted. I've seen buyers in the Wichita suburbs get quoted $3,500/year when they expected $1,200. Some neighborhoods near Moore (just over the border in Oklahoma, but same risk profile) are nearly uninsurable with standard carriers.
Here's the gotcha nobody mentions: Kansas doesn't require sellers to disclose previous weather damage or insurance claims on the property. So that roof might've been patched after the 2019 hailstorms, and you won't know until your insurer pulls the CLUE report and jacks your rate—or denies you entirely. Ask your agent to run the property's claim history during your inspection period, not after.
The other thing: if you're buying in Johnson County or anywhere near Kansas City, apply for the homestead property tax refund by April 15th of the year after you move in. It refunds a chunk of your property taxes if your income qualifies (up to around $37,500 for most households). The state doesn't advertise it well, and most transplants miss the deadline their first year. That's $700+ you're leaving on the table.
Don't buy in March or April if you can avoid it. That's peak tornado season, and inspectors get slammed.
Frequently Asked Questions About Kansas Mortgages
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Disclaimer: This calculator provides educational estimates only and does not constitute financial, legal, or tax advice. State-specific information is for general reference and may not reflect your individual situation. Actual loan terms, costs, and savings vary by lender, credit profile, and market conditions. Tax laws are complex and change frequently. Consult qualified professionals for personalized guidance.