---
title: "Buying Your First Home in Henrico County: A Step-by-Step Guide for 2026"
url: https://www.danielyoonrealty.com/blog/buying-first-home-henrico-step-by-step/
date: 2026-05-22
modified: 2026-05-22
author: "Daniel Yoon"
description: "A practical step-by-step for first-time buyers in Henrico County, VA in 2026, from pre-approval through closing, with timelines and Henrico-specific notes."
categories:
  - "Buyer Resources"
word_count: 1324
---

# Buying Your First Home in Henrico County: A Step-by-Step Guide for 2026

Henrico County is one of the most workable places in Central Virginia for a first-time buyer. The school system is strong, the commute into Richmond is short, the inventory mix is wider than the city, and county-level first-time buyer assistance stacks with state and federal programs.

This guide walks through the actual sequence: what to do, in what order, with realistic timelines for the 2026 Henrico market. The goal is to make the path obvious enough that the next step is always clear.

## Step 1: Decide what "home" actually means for you (week zero)

Before talking to a lender, get specific about three things:

- **Stay length.** Five years minimum is a useful planning floor. Shorter than that, the math on closing costs and modest appreciation rarely works in 2026.
- **Geography.** Henrico is large. Short Pump, Glen Allen, Lakeside, the Far East End, and Varina are five very different markets. Pick two or three to start.
- **Non-negotiables.** Number of beds, garage or no garage, school zone, walk-to-anything, yard size. Three to five real non-negotiables, no more.

This is fifteen minutes with a piece of paper. It saves weeks later.

## Step 2: Talk to a Virginia Housing-approved lender (week one)

Get a real pre-approval, not a pre-qualification. Bring:

- Two years of W-2s or tax returns
- Last two pay stubs
- Two months of bank statements
- Driver's license
- A rough idea of price band

The lender will pull credit, run the file through automated underwriting, and tell you the maximum loan amount, the program, and the monthly payment. They will also flag whether [Virginia first-time buyer programs](/blog/03-virginia-first-time-home-buyer-programs-2026) apply, and whether SPARC funds are still available for Henrico in the current fiscal year.

If the credit score needs work, this is when that becomes obvious. A few months of focused work can move a 580 to a 640 and unlock dramatically better pricing.

For more on what counts as a real pre-approval and what does not, see our [pre-approval guide](/blog/05-pre-approval-vs-prequalification-richmond-lenders).

## Step 3: Pick an agent and define the search (week one to two)

A first-time buyer should interview at least two agents. Things to listen for:

- Specific knowledge of Henrico micro-markets, not generic Richmond talk
- Comfort with first-time buyer programs and condition negotiation
- Communication style that fits how the buyer wants to work
- A clear answer on commission and how buyer-agent compensation is handled

Once an agent is chosen, the search gets sharper. Saved searches in MLS plus a weekly review call beats scrolling Zillow at midnight.

## Step 4: Tour, calibrate, and shortlist (weeks two to six)

Most first-time Henrico buyers tour ten to fifteen homes before making an offer. The first three are calibration. The middle ones are where the real preferences come out. The last few are when shortlisting begins.

Practical notes for Henrico touring:

- Visit at different times of day. Short Pump traffic at 5pm is not the same as 11am Saturday.
- Drive the commute to work, not just look at it on a map. A Glen Allen-to-downtown commute on I-95 versus I-64 is two different lives.
- Check school assignments using Henrico County Public Schools' attendance-zone tool. School boundaries do change, so confirm the current zone for the specific address.
- Look at the neighborhood's sale-versus-list ratio over the past ninety days. The agent can pull this in two minutes.

## Step 5: Write a clean, competitive offer (timing varies)

Once the right house shows up, the offer should go in fast and clean. A typical Henrico first-time buyer offer in 2026 includes:

- Purchase price within recent comp range
- Pre-approval letter from a known local lender (ideally underwritten)
- Earnest money of 1 to 3% of purchase price
- Inspection contingency, seven to ten days
- Financing contingency, twenty-one to thirty days
- Appraisal contingency or appraisal-gap language as appropriate (see our [escalation clause and appraisal gap guide](/blog/21-escalation-clause-appraisal-gap-virginia))
- Seller-paid closing-cost concession of 2 to 3% if the budget needs it

In a true multiple-offer situation, a tiered escalation clause and a slightly faster inspection period sometimes win the contract without the buyer paying significantly more.

## Step 6: Inspection, repairs, and the appraisal (week three to five after contract)

In Henrico, most contracts give five to ten days for inspection. The inspector visits the home, runs through systems and structure, and produces a written report. Buyers should attend the last hour of the inspection, walk the home with the inspector, and ask plenty of questions.

Common Henrico-specific items to watch for:

- Older HVAC systems in 1990s-built homes in Glen Allen
- Crawlspace moisture in lower-lying parts of Varina
- Aging roofs in older Lakeside neighborhoods
- Aluminum wiring in some 1960s-1970s homes (rare but real)

Negotiation after inspection can be a price reduction, a closing-cost credit, or specific repairs. Closing-cost credits are typically the cleanest path for first-time buyers.

The appraisal happens in parallel. If it comes in low, the buyer can renegotiate, walk if the contract allows, or bring extra cash. Plan for this scenario before writing the offer, not during.

## Step 7: Underwriting, conditions, and clear-to-close (week three to six)

Underwriting is mostly paperwork. The lender pulls updated income, asset, and credit information, and asks for explanations on anything unusual. Buyers should:

- Not change jobs
- Not open new credit
- Not move large amounts between accounts
- Not finance furniture, appliances, or anything else
- Respond to lender requests within twenty-four hours

When the file is clear-to-close, the closing date is set, and the closing disclosure (CD) is issued at least three business days before closing.

## Step 8: Final walk-through and closing (last forty-eight hours)

The final walk-through happens within twenty-four to forty-eight hours of closing. The goals are simple: confirm any negotiated repairs are done, confirm the home is in the same condition as at contract, and confirm no new damage.

Closing in Virginia is typically at a settlement attorney's office. The buyer signs the loan documents and the deed, the lender wires the funds, the deed records, and the keys change hands. Bring a government ID and a cashier's check or wire confirmation for the cash to close. Personal checks are not accepted for the cash-to-close amount.

## What it actually costs

A typical Henrico first-time buyer in 2026 buying a $385,000 home with stacked Virginia Housing programs:

- Down payment: 3.5% ($13,475), mostly covered by 2.5% DPA grant
- Closing costs and prepaids: $11,000 to $13,000, mostly covered by 3% seller concession
- Reserves needed after closing: $7,000 to $12,000

Realistic cash to close, all in: $4,000 to $8,000 plus reserves.

For the full closing-cost breakdown, see our [Virginia closing costs guide](/blog/02-virginia-closing-costs-buyer-seller-explained). For school-zone planning, see our [top Henrico and Chesterfield school zones guide](/blog/24-top-school-zones-henrico-chesterfield).

## Frequently asked questions

**How long does it take to buy a first home in Henrico?** From first lender call to closing, six to twelve weeks is typical. Highly motivated buyers in a balanced market can move faster.

**What credit score do I need?** 620 minimum for most Virginia Housing programs. 580 with FHA. 740-plus unlocks the best conventional pricing.

**How much cash do I really need?** With stacked Virginia first-time buyer programs and seller concessions, $4,000 to $8,000 plus three to six months of reserves is workable on a $385,000 Henrico home.

**Should I waive the inspection?** Almost never as a first-time buyer. The cost of an unknown structural or system problem dwarfs the small "edge" a waiver gives in 2026's more balanced market.

**Can I use Virginia Housing in any Henrico zip code?** Almost. There are specific purchase-price and income limits by area. The lender will run program-by-program eligibility on the specific address.

## Want help mapping your first Henrico purchase?

We walk first-time Henrico buyers through this whole sequence on a free first call: lender shortlist, neighborhood narrowing, offer strategy, and what the cash-to-close actually looks like. Reach out to Daniel to get started.

*[Featured image to upload. Image prompt: Photoreal exterior of a classic two-story brick colonial home in Henrico County Virginia, Short Pump neighborhood feel, mature dogwood and oak trees, blue sky with light clouds, no people, editorial real estate photography]*