Yes, you can get a mortgage on a barndominium, though it takes more legwork than financing a stick-built house. A lender will write the loan once the building sits on a permanent foundation, is classified as residential real estate, and appraises against comparable homes nearby. Most owners go through a local bank, a credit union, or a farm-credit lender rather than a big national mortgage shop.
This page sits under the metal building homes pillar and answers the financing question on its own terms: which loans fit a barndominium, why the appraisal is the real hurdle, and how to line up approval before you build. For the full money picture, our barndominium financing guide walks construction loans, rates, and lender types in depth. Here we settle the mortgage question itself.
What lenders want
Can you finance a barndominium like a normal house?
You can, as long as the barndominium reads as a permanent residence on paper, not as a shop with a bed in it. A lender finances real estate, so the building has to be fixed to a permanent foundation, served by code-approved plumbing, wiring, and heating, and titled as a single-family dwelling on the land. Meet those marks and a steel-framed home answers to the same underwriting a wood one does.
Where deals stall is classification and finish. A barndominium that is mostly bare shop space with a small living quarter can get flagged as an outbuilding or a mixed-use property, which changes the loan type and the down payment. The fix is to permit and finish it as a dwelling first: full interior, egress, and conditioned living space that a metal building with living quarters counts as a home, not storage you sleep in.
Loan types
Which loans work for a barndominium?
Most barndominiums are financed with a construction-to-permanent loan or a portfolio loan from a local lender, and government-backed programs can fit a finished one. The right product depends on whether you are building from scratch or buying a completed home.
| Loan type | How it fits a barndominium |
|---|---|
| Construction-to-permanent | Funds the build in draws, then converts to a standard mortgage at completion; the common path for a new build |
| Portfolio / local bank loan | A community bank, credit union, or farm-credit lender keeps the loan in house, so it can judge a rural steel home on its merits |
| Conventional mortgage | Available on a finished, conforming barndominium that appraises against nearby homes, like any resale house |
| USDA / VA / FHA | Government-backed loans can work on a permitted dwelling that meets property standards; eligibility and rural limits apply ‹confirm› |
A starting map, not a verdict. Confirm program rules with the lender, since each sets its own property standards.
The pattern most owners follow is a construction loan first, then a refinance into a long-term mortgage once the home is finished and can be appraised as a completed dwelling. Big national lenders often pass on a from-scratch build, so a local bank that knows rural property is usually the better first call. The financing details live in our barndominium financing guide, and the build budget sits in cost to build from a kit.

The real hurdle
Why the appraisal is the hard part
The appraisal, not the steel, is what trips up most barndominium loans. An appraiser values a home against recent sales of similar homes nearby, and in many areas barndominiums are still uncommon, so there are few comparable sales to point to. A thin set of comps can come back with a value below what you spent, which shrinks the loan a lender will write.
Comps decide the number
If barndominiums are rare in your county, ask up front whether your lender works with appraisers who have valued them before and can pull comps from a wider area. A finished, conventional-looking interior appraises closer to a standard home, which is also why a fully finished barndominium protects its resale value far better than a bare shell.
You improve the appraised value the same way you improve resale: finish the home to residential standard. Drywall, real flooring, standard windows, and a conditioned interior all read as a house an appraiser can compare to other houses. A high shop-to-living ratio, an unfinished interior, or an off-grid location pull the number down. The closer the barndominium looks and lives like a conventional home, the cleaner the appraisal and the larger the mortgage.
Get approved
How to line up barndominium financing
Start with the lender before you start the build, because the loan dictates the foundation, the finish, and the timeline. Walk in with a permitted dwelling plan, not a shop-with-a-loft idea, and the conversation gets much easier.
Finance the home, not the shed. The barndominiums that sail through underwriting are the ones built and permitted as full dwellings from day one, with a foundation, a finished interior, and a title that says single-family home.
- Call local lenders first. Community banks, credit unions, and farm-credit lenders fund rural steel homes that national shops decline.
- Permit it as a dwelling. A residential permit and a permanent foundation are what move it from outbuilding to mortgageable home.
- Finish the interior. Drywall, flooring, and conditioned living space help the appraisal and protect your equity.
- Bring strong personal numbers. A solid credit score, a real down payment, and documented income offset a lender’s caution on an unusual property ‹confirm›.
- Weigh the tradeoffs. Read the barndominium pros and cons before you commit, since financing is one of the real friction points.
Treat financing as part of the build plan, not an afterthought. A barndominium that is permitted, foundationed, and finished as a home is a mortgage a willing lender can write. One that blurs the line between house and workshop is the one that gets a no. For where the dollars go before the loan, see what a barndominium costs to finish and the broader metal building kit prices reference.
Related
Read more
This question connects to the cost, the resale, and the broader case for a steel home. Follow these next:
- Metal building homes: the complete guide (the parent pillar).
- Financing a barndominium or metal home (the full loan and lender breakdown).
- What a barndominium costs to finish (the budget the loan has to cover).
- Resale value of metal building homes (why a finished home appraises and sells stronger).
- Barndominium pros & cons (the honest two-sided case, financing included).




