Buying your first home is exciting, expensive, and confusing in roughly equal measure. The general advice for first-time buyers is everywhere; what's harder to find is advice tailored to a specific market. Below is what we tell every first-time East County buyer — the financing programs that work here, the communities that fit a starter budget, what your dollar actually buys, and the mistakes we see most often.
Special Considerations for First-Time East County Buyers
A few things that matter more in East County than in many other markets:
- Mello-Roos special assessments affect total monthly cost in many newer Brentwood and Oakley developments. A $750K home with $3,500/year in Mello-Roos costs $300/month more than one without — easy to miss.
- HOAs are common in newer master-planned developments, ranging from $50/month (basic) to $300+/month (full-service or gated).
- Property tax runs ~1.1–1.25% of assessed value annually. On a $700K purchase, that's $7,700–$8,750/year before Mello-Roos.
- PG&E utility bills are notably high in California — budget $200–$400/month, more in summer with AC.
- School district lines can shift home values by 8–15%. If you have or plan to have kids, school zone matters even more for first-time buyers (you're more likely to be in the home long enough for school years).
Financing Programs to Know
There are more first-time buyer programs available than most buyers realize. The most relevant for East County:
FHA Loans
- Down payment: 3.5% minimum
- Credit score: 580+ for the 3.5% down option; 500+ with 10% down
- Why it matters: lowest barrier to entry. Allows buyers with limited savings to buy in starter price ranges.
- Trade-off: mortgage insurance (MIP) is required for the life of the loan in most cases. Refinancing to a conventional loan once you have 20% equity is the typical exit strategy.
Conventional Loans
- Down payment: 3% minimum (Fannie Mae HomeReady, Freddie Mac Home Possible) for first-time buyers
- Credit score: 620+ minimum, 680+ for best rates, 740+ for top tier
- Why it matters: PMI drops automatically at 80% LTV, no FHA-style life-of-loan insurance penalty.
- Trade-off: stricter underwriting, higher minimum credit score than FHA.
VA Loans (eligible veterans)
- Down payment: 0%
- Credit score: technically no minimum but lenders typically want 620+
- Why it matters: the best loan in America for those who qualify. No down payment, no PMI, competitive rates.
- Trade-off: funding fee (1.4–3.6% depending on circumstances), can be financed into the loan.
CalHFA (California Housing Finance Agency)
CalHFA offers several first-time buyer programs:
- MyHome Assistance Program — provides a deferred-payment second loan up to 3.5% of purchase price for down payment / closing costs. Pairs with CalHFA's first mortgage products.
- CalHFA Conventional / FHA / VA programs — first mortgages with competitive rates for income-eligible borrowers.
Income limits apply (varies by county and household size); check CalHFA's current limits at calhfa.ca.gov.
Contra Costa County / Local Programs
The county and individual cities periodically offer additional first-time buyer assistance, particularly in lower-income brackets. Programs change frequently — ask your lender about current Contra Costa County first-time buyer programs and any city-specific programs (Antioch and Pittsburg have historically had programs) at the time you're looking.: confirm current programs.
Best East County Communities for First-Time Buyers
Where to focus your search if you're entering the market with $500K–$800K:
Antioch ($500K–$725K typical)
The largest pool of starter inventory in East County. Older central neighborhoods offer 3-bed homes in the $500K–$625K range; newer Lone Tree corridor homes run $650K–$850K. Antioch BART makes commute viable. Schools require careful zone research — Hillcrest corridor schools are stronger than central Antioch.
Pittsburg ($480K–$725K typical)
East County's most affordable BART-connected community. Old Town Pittsburg has bungalows and older 3-bed homes starting in the high $400Ks; San Marco hilltop homes in the $600K–$800K range offer views and newer construction. School quality is uneven — research specific schools.
Bay Point ($480K–$650K typical)
Unincorporated and the most affordable BART-adjacent option. Older 3-bed homes start in the high $400Ks. Schools are part of Mt. Diablo Unified — quality varies. Best for first-time buyers prioritizing affordability and BART commute over school zone.
Oakley (entry-level $575K–$725K)
For first-time buyers who can stretch a bit. Older Oakley neighborhoods offer 3-bed homes around $600K–$700K. Stronger school district feeders (Oakley Union elementary + Liberty Union high) than Antioch/Pittsburg. Less BART-convenient but better long-term value retention.
What $500K, $650K, and $800K Actually Buys You
$500K in East County
In Antioch, Pittsburg, or Bay Point, $500K typically gets you:
- 3 bedrooms / 1.5–2 baths
- 1,200–1,600 sqft
- Older construction (1950s–1980s)
- Smaller lots (3,500–6,000 sqft)
- Mature trees, established neighborhoods
- Likely to need some cosmetic updates
A $500K mortgage with 5% down at current rates (~6.5–7%) runs roughly $3,500/month including taxes, insurance, and PMI.
$650K in East County
In Antioch (Lone Tree corridor), Pittsburg (San Marco), or older Oakley, $650K typically gets you:
- 3–4 bedrooms / 2–2.5 baths
- 1,500–2,000 sqft
- 1990s–2010s construction
- Standard lot (5,000–7,000 sqft)
- Modern open-plan layouts
- Move-in ready with minor updates needed
A $650K mortgage with 5% down runs roughly $4,400–$4,700/month all-in.
$800K in East County
In Brentwood (older neighborhoods), Oakley (newer master-planned), or hilltop Antioch, $800K typically gets you:
- 4 bedrooms / 2.5–3 baths
- 2,000–2,800 sqft
- 2000s–2020s construction
- 5,000–8,000 sqft lots
- HOA / Mello-Roos common
- Strong school district zoning options
$800K with 10% down runs roughly $5,400–$5,700/month all-in. With Mello-Roos, add another $200–$400/month.
The Step-by-Step Process (Condensed)
- Get clear on what you want. Single-family or townhome? Communities? Must-haves vs. deal-breakers? The clearer your priorities, the faster the search.
- Get pre-approved. Real pre-approval (not pre-qualification). Pre-approvals last 60–90 days. Talk to multiple lenders and get rate quotes.
- Choose your agent. Local market knowledge matters. East County is a patchwork of micro-markets — the right agent has closed deals where you're looking.
- Tour homes strategically. Take notes. Pay attention to neighborhood, not just house. Drive at different times of day.
- Make a strategic offer. Price + terms (financing, contingencies, earnest money). Your agent should walk you through every choice.
- Get inspected. Standard general inspection, plus property-specific (pest, roof, well/septic where applicable, geological for hillside).
- Lock the loan. With inspection cleared, rate-lock and underwriting begin. Typically 21–30 days.
- Final walkthrough + closing. 24–48 hours pre-closing walkthrough. Sign at escrow. Wire down payment + closing costs.
- Get the keys. Funds wire and deed records same-day or next-day.
For the full 10-step guide, see The Buyer's Guide.
Common First-Time Buyer Mistakes in East County
Mistakes we see most often:
- Stretching to the maximum pre-approval. Just because the lender approves you for $850K doesn't mean you should buy at $850K. Build your real budget around the monthly payment you can comfortably absorb, not the maximum someone will lend you.
- Underestimating Mello-Roos and HOA. A $750K home with $3,500/year Mello-Roos and $200/month HOA costs $500/month more than the home next door without them. Read the disclosures carefully.
- Skipping the well/septic inspection on Discovery Bay or rural Brentwood properties. Failed septic systems can cost $20K–$50K to replace.
- Buying without driving the commute at real-world commute time. A 30-minute Saturday-afternoon drive becomes a 75-minute weekday drive.
- Falling in love with the house, not the neighborhood. Drive the streets at night, weekends, and during morning rush. The neighborhood is what you live with for the next decade.
- Waiving the inspection contingency. Don't. Even in competitive markets, find another way to win — escalation clauses, larger earnest money, faster closings — but keep your inspection rights.
FAQs Specific to First-Time Buyers
How much do I really need for a down payment?
For East County, plan for 5–10% down on a conventional loan. FHA lets you go to 3.5%. VA goes to 0%. Don't forget closing costs — another 2–3% of purchase price ($14,000–$24,000 on a $700K home).
How long does the process take?
From first pre-approval to keys typically 60–90 days. Faster (45 days) if you're already pre-approved and have a clear search. Longer (4–6 months) if you're starting from scratch with credit improvement or savings buildup needed.
Should I get pre-approved with my bank or with a specialized lender?
Either works, but specialty lenders (mortgage brokers, mortgage banks) often have more flexibility and competitive pricing than a big retail bank. We work closely with E3 Realty's in-house lending team because the coordination is faster — but the right answer depends on your specific situation.
Can I afford a home in Brentwood as a first-time buyer?
Possible but stretched for most. Brentwood entry-level is $750K–$850K. With 5% down, that's a $42K–$48K down payment plus $20K closing costs. If you have that and your monthly budget supports a $5,500–$6,000 housing payment, yes. If you're closer to $400K–$600K total budget, focus on Antioch, Pittsburg, Bay Point, or older Oakley first.
What if I don't qualify for any of these programs?
The most common path is improving your credit (60–90 days of focused work often raises scores 20–40 points) and/or building savings to qualify for a conventional 5% down loan. Sometimes the right answer is to wait 6–12 months and buy in a stronger position rather than overstretching now.
We're here for the questions
First-time buying is the kind of thing where small bits of advice matter a lot. We've helped hundreds of East County families through their first home and we're happy to walk through your specific situation — even if you're 6–12 months out from being ready to buy.




