Montgomery Homebuyers Can Stack Five Programs —
Including Alabama's Uniquely Uncapped
20% Federal Tax Credit
AHFA Step Up (up to $10,000 DPA), AHFA First Step MRB (below-market 30-year rate + $10,000 DPA), Affordable Income Subsidy Grant (up to 1% of loan as a true grant), Alabama's tiered Mortgage Credit Certificate (20% uncapped on loans over $150K — unique in our series), and the MHA HCV Homeownership Program. At $162,000 median — 62% below the national average — every one of these programs requires exactly one thing: 640 FICO. That's what we do.
Alabama's MCC Has a Tiered Rate No Other State in Our Series Has — and Montgomery Buyers Fall in the Most Favorable Tier
At $162,000 median price, a 96.5% FHA loan comes to approximately $156,330 — which puts Montgomery buyers squarely in Alabama's 20% MCC tier with NO annual cap. That's structurally different from the 40%–50% MCC states in our series, and it requires specific strategy to maximize.
📊 Alabama MCC: Three Tiers, One Unique Structure — Montgomery Falls in the 20% Uncapped Tier
Alabama's Mortgage Credit Certificate is unlike every other MCC in our 47-city series. Instead of a single percentage applied to all loans, AHFA uses three tiers based on loan size — and the percentage and annual cap change depending on which tier you fall into. This matters enormously for Montgomery buyers because the $162K median price puts most FHA buyers in the highest-loan tier: 20% with no annual cap.
Mississippi was 40% capped at $2,000. Oklahoma was 40% capped at $2,000. Alabama at the 20% tier has no cap — meaning the full 20% of your annual mortgage interest is credited against your federal income taxes every year, regardless of the amount. On a $156,330 loan at 7%, year-one interest is approximately $10,943 × 20% = $2,189 — exceeding the $2,000 cap found in other states. The credit decreases as the loan amortizes but remains significant for the first 15–20 years. Over 30 years, the cumulative MCC credit on a typical Montgomery FHA loan is estimated at $30,000–$35,000 in total federal tax savings.
💰 AHFA Step Up: The Flagship DPA — $10,000 or 4%, First-Time AND Repeat Buyers
Step Up is AHFA's most widely used program — available to first-time and repeat homebuyers with income ≤$172,800. The DPA is provided as a 10-year second mortgage at 3.5% interest, combined with a 30-year first mortgage. AHFA's ServiSolutions services both loans together — one monthly payment. On a $162K home, 4% = $6,480; the $10,000 cap means Step Up provides $6,480 at that price. FHA minimum down payment of 3.5% = $5,670 — fully covered by Step Up DPA with $810 remaining for closing costs. Stackable with Alabama MCC and Affordable Income Subsidy Grant for maximum combined benefit.
🏛️ Montgomery: State Capital With Maxwell AFB — Two Distinct Buyer Populations
Montgomery's buyer population splits into two distinct groups with different program needs. Active-duty military and Air Force civilians at Maxwell AFB and Gunter Annex favor VA zero-down loans — the Alabama MCC is available with VA loans, and Step Up works with VA. State government employees, teachers, healthcare workers at Baptist Health and Jackson Hospital, and HBCU alumni from Alabama State University favor FHA + Step Up + MCC combinations. The 90-day days-on-market as of January 2026 means buyers have time to get scores right before making offers — the market rewards preparation.
📋 Affordable Income Subsidy Grant: The Only True Grant in the AHFA Suite
The Affordable Income Subsidy Grant is the only program in the AHFA lineup that provides funds you never repay — it's a true closing cost grant of 0.5%–1% of the loan amount for buyers using an HFA Advantage conventional loan at or below 80% AMI. At 50% AMI or below, the grant is 1% of loan = approximately $1,563 on a $156K loan. At 51–80% AMI, it's 0.5% = approximately $782. This grant can be combined with Step Up DPA and the MCC for the maximum available stack. It reduces closing costs from out-of-pocket funds, effectively allowing many buyers to close with very limited cash at the table beyond the minimum buyer contribution.
⚠️ Strategy: Step Up + MCC + Subsidy Grant — The Maximum Stack for Most Montgomery Buyers
The optimal program combination for most Montgomery buyers is: Step Up DPA ($6,480 at $162K) as the 10-year second mortgage + Alabama MCC ($2,189 in year-1 federal tax credit, no cap, 20% rate) applied to the first mortgage + Affordable Income Subsidy Grant ($782–$1,563 true grant for HFA Advantage buyers). This three-program combination addresses all three cost centers — down payment (Step Up), closing costs (Subsidy Grant), and ongoing affordability (MCC reducing monthly tax withholding by ~$182/month in year 1). The MCC must be applied for at closing through an AHFA participating lender — it cannot be added retroactively. Contact AHFA at ahfa.com or 334-244-9200 to find approved lenders.
Why Montgomery Residents Need Credit Repair Before Buying
Montgomery is Alabama's capital city — 63% Black-majority, 21.54% poverty rate, $56,811 median income. Military-civilian transitions at Maxwell AFB, medical collections from Baptist Health and Jackson Hospital, and HBCU student debt from Alabama State University and Faulkner are the dominant credit damage patterns. The gap between qualifying and not qualifying is almost entirely the 640 FICO line.
Montgomery Homebuyer Assistance Programs
Five programs — from a $10,000 DPA to an uncapped federal tax credit to a monthly mortgage subsidy for Housing Choice Voucher participants. All require 640 FICO minimum through a participating lender.
AHFA Step Up Program
Up to $10,000 or 4% DPA — 10-Year Second Mortgage at 3.5% — First-Time AND Repeat Buyers — Income ≤$172,800
The Step Up 10-year second mortgage at 3.5% is distinct from zero-interest deferred programs in other states. The 3.5% interest means you are making payments on the DPA from month one — but AHFA's ServiSolutions services both loans together, so you write one check. On a $6,480 Step Up loan at 3.5% over 10 years, the monthly payment is approximately $64/month — a modest addition to your overall housing payment that builds equity rather than deferring debt. Contrast this with 0% deferred programs that come due as a lump sum at sale or refinancing: Step Up's structure means the DPA is truly paid off in 10 years. If you sell after year 10, there's nothing owed on the DPA. This makes Step Up more transparent and predictable than many DPA structures in the series. Homebuyer education can be completed online — AHFA accepts eHome America and other HUD-approved providers. Contact an AHFA participating lender or visit ahfa.com to begin the process.
AHFA First Step Mortgage Revenue Bond (MRB)
Below-Market 30-Year Fixed Rate + Up to $10,000 DPA — First-Time & Repeat Buyers — Income ≤$161,700
The key strategic decision for Montgomery buyers is First Step MRB vs. Step Up + MCC. First Step's rate advantage is front-loaded and permanent — every payment benefits from the lower rate. The MCC's 20% uncapped credit is also front-loaded (higher in early years when interest is greatest) but extinguished upon refinancing. For buyers who plan to hold the mortgage for 20+ years without refinancing: run the rate comparison math with a participating AHFA lender. A 0.75% rate reduction on a $156K loan at 30 years = approximately $20,000 in interest savings. The MCC on the same loan at 20% uncapped = approximately $30,000–$35,000. In most scenarios, Step Up + MCC produces more total lifetime value than First Step MRB — but if rates have fallen significantly from current levels and First Step can offer a very low rate, the calculation can flip. Ask your AHFA lender to model both scenarios with current rates.
AHFA Affordable Income Subsidy Grant
0.5%–1% of Loan Amount as a True Closing Cost Grant — Never Repaid — HFA Advantage Conventional Only — ≤80% AMI
The Affordable Income Subsidy Grant is one of the most underutilized programs in Alabama because it requires a specific loan type — HFA Advantage conventional — that many buyers and lenders default away from in favor of FHA. For Montgomery buyers at 80% AMI or below who have reached the 640+ FICO needed for conventional lending (Freddie Mac 97% typically requires 620+), the HFA Advantage + Step Up + Subsidy Grant + MCC combination is the most powerful full stack available. FHA buyers cannot access the Subsidy Grant. If reaching 640 FICO is your hurdle, the path to the maximum stack is: (1) reach 640, (2) determine if you qualify for HFA Advantage conventional at your income level, (3) apply for Step Up + Subsidy Grant + MCC simultaneously through one AHFA lender. The grant reduces cash needed at closing — a significant barrier for many Montgomery buyers with limited liquid savings.
Alabama Mortgage Credit Certificate (MCC)
20% Uncapped Federal Tax Credit on Loans Over $150K — $30K–$35K Estimated Lifetime — Stackable with Step Up
The Alabama MCC's uncapped 20% tier is the defining unique feature of Montgomery's program landscape. In every other state in our series with an MCC, the cap is $2,000/year. Alabama's Tier 3 has no cap — and because most Montgomery buyers at the $162K median price finance more than $150,001, they land in this tier. The practical consequence: Montgomery buyers capture more MCC value in the first 5–7 years than any other city in our series, because the uncapped credit starts at $2,189+ in year 1 and only decreases gradually. Compare: at $2,000/year cap, a 30-year MCC is worth exactly $60,000. At 20% uncapped on a $156K loan, the 30-year value is approximately $30,000–$35,000 — lower in absolute terms, but the front-loading means more value per year in the critical early period. Caution: refinancing extinguishes the MCC and it cannot be reinstated. Factor this into any plan to refinance when rates decrease. Apply through an AHFA participating lender — the MCC must be reserved before closing and cannot be added retroactively. Visit ahfa.com or call 334-244-9200.
Montgomery Housing Authority (MHA) HCV Homeownership Program
Monthly Mortgage Subsidy for Current Housing Choice Voucher Participants — Converts Rental Assistance to Homeownership
The MHA HCV Homeownership Program is available to a specific and often overlooked population: current Section 8 voucher holders in Montgomery who have achieved stable employment but haven't been able to accumulate a down payment. The program's core insight is that the monthly housing subsidy a family already receives can be equally or more valuable when redirected toward mortgage equity rather than landlord rent. For a family receiving a $600/month HCV subsidy, converting that to mortgage assistance on a $162K FHA loan dramatically reduces the out-of-pocket mortgage payment — potentially bringing it below what they were paying in the rental market. Credit damage from the financial situations that often precede Section 8 enrollment — medical collections, utility accounts, previous evictions, or predatory lending — is exactly what Full Time Credit Repair addresses. If you are a current MHA HCV participant and are ready to transition to homeownership, the first step is reaching 640 FICO, then contacting MHA at mhatoday.org to begin the homeownership program enrollment process.
🎯 Maximum Montgomery Stacking — $162,000 Home
* Step Up and MCC can be combined; First Step MRB cannot be combined with MCC (choose one). Affordable Income Subsidy Grant requires HFA Advantage conventional loan (not FHA/VA). MCC extinguished upon refinancing. All programs require 640 FICO through AHFA participating lender. MCC must be reserved at closing — not retroactive. Verify current Step Up DPA amount, MCC income limits, and First Step rate at ahfa.com or 334-244-9200. MHA HCV Homeownership Program requires current HCV enrollment — separate track from AHFA programs.
The Real Cost of a Low Score on a $162,000 Montgomery Home
96.5% LTV FHA loan ($156,330 financed). Every score tier below 640 forfeits all five programs — and at Montgomery's price point, the forfeited MCC lifetime value (~$35K) exceeds the rate penalty for most low-score buyers.
| Credit Score | Est. Rate (30-yr FHA) | Monthly P&I | Total Interest (30 yr) | Extra Cost vs. 760+ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 760–850 | 6.50% | $988 | $199,268 | Baseline |
| 720–759 | 6.75% | $1,014 | $208,615 | +$9,347 |
| 680–719 | 7.10% | $1,049 | $221,895 | +$22,627 |
| 640–679 | 7.60% | $1,100 | $240,660 | +$41,392 |
| 580–619 | 8.20% | $1,168 | $264,281 | +$65,013 |
| Below 580 | Ineligible for all five programs — Step Up, First Step MRB, Subsidy Grant, MCC, and MHA HCV Homeownership all blocked below 640 | $6,480 DPA + ~$35K MCC + $1,563 grant = ~$43K total programs forfeited | ||
* Rate estimates for illustration purposes only. At 640–679 vs. 760+, the rate penalty is +$41,392 — but the forfeited MCC lifetime value alone is estimated at ~$35,000. The combined cost of a sub-640 score (rate penalty over 30 years + forfeited programs) can reach $70,000–$80,000+ on a $162K Montgomery home. The MCC's uncapped 20% structure front-loads the benefit — the first 10 years produce disproportionate value. For buyers planning to hold 5–10 years before selling, the MCC alone justifies the investment in credit repair.
Why Montgomery Residents' Credit Gets Damaged
The six most common credit damage patterns we see in Montgomery files — and the FCRA-based dispute strategies that work.
Maxwell AFB & Gunter Annex — Military PCS Orders & Separation Credit Disruptions
Maxwell AFB and Gunter Annex (Air Force materiel/cyber) drive regular Permanent Change of Station orders and separations in Montgomery. PCS moves create transition periods with concentrated financial stress — short-notice lease breaks, vehicle purchases in new markets, gaps in BAH vs. actual housing costs. Separating service members face sudden income transitions that produce clusters of late payments in the same short window. These entries often carry inaccurate date-of-first-delinquency reporting — a specific and highly effective FCRA dispute trigger. Military buyers also qualify for VA loans (zero down) and Step Up DPA + MCC stacking — the programs are waiting, but the score must be there first.
Baptist Health, Jackson Hospital & AU Medical Collections — Highest Dispute Success Rate
Baptist Health (the dominant Montgomery health system with Baptist Medical Center South and East) and Jackson Hospital are the primary sources of medical collections in Montgomery credit files. With a 21.54% poverty rate and significant uninsured population, unpaid medical bills are among the most common negative entries. A single inpatient stay or ER visit can generate $5,000–$25,000+ in collections that end up on all three bureaus. Medical collections sold to third-party debt buyers frequently have balance inaccuracies (original vs. purchased amount) and incorrect original creditor name reporting — strong FCRA dispute grounds that have produced consistent removals in our Montgomery case work. New CFPB rules (effective 2025) further restrict medical debt reporting, creating additional dispute pathways.
Alabama State University (HBCU) & Auburn-Montgomery Student Loan Defaults
Alabama State University (ASU) — one of Alabama's historically Black universities — and Auburn University at Montgomery together generate significant student loan debt in Montgomery's workforce. Federal student loan defaults produce cascading credit damage: the default entry, associated collection accounts from servicers, tax offset, and wage garnishment. ASU graduates in default often have multiple entries for the same underlying loan across different servicers and collection agencies — creating duplicate reporting that is specifically actionable under FCRA. Student loan rehabilitation programs (getting accounts out of default) combined with strategic dispute of associated collection entries produce some of the largest score gains we see in Montgomery files.
Alabama State Government Furloughs & Contract Worker Disruptions
As the state capital, Montgomery has a large concentration of state government employees, contractors, and service workers tied to state agencies, the legislature, courts, and administration. Alabama state budget negotiations periodically produce furloughs, pay delays, and contract non-renewals for state workers and vendors. Federal government shutdowns (the 43-day shutdown of 2025 was the longest in US history) similarly affected federal contractors at Maxwell and Gunter. These externally-caused income disruptions create delinquency clusters that are disputable on date-accuracy grounds under FCRA — the external cause provides context that makes the reporting questionable. We document these events with public records in dispute letters when applicable.
Subprime Auto — Atlanta Highway, Eastern Blvd & Mobile Highway Corridors
Montgomery's Atlanta Highway, Eastern Boulevard, and Mobile Highway corridors have significant concentrations of buy-here-pay-here and high-APR subprime auto dealerships serving lower-income working families. Contracts at 22–32% APR entered during financial stability often end in voluntary surrender or repossession when income is disrupted by medical bills, furloughs, or military separation. Repossession entries in Montgomery credit files frequently include inaccurate deficiency balance calculations, reporting date errors, and post-repo fee disclosures that violate state lending laws. These entries are among the most successfully challenged in our Montgomery case work — typically requiring 2–3 dispute rounds but with a high ultimate removal rate.
Alabama Power Utility Collections & Entergy Cascades
Alabama Power (the dominant Montgomery utility) and some Entergy overlap areas produce utility collection entries when accounts fall behind during financial hardship. In a city with a 21.54% poverty rate, utility shut-offs and collection referrals are among the most common debt events. Alabama Power utility collections frequently show reporting errors in account number formatting and original creditor disclosure when sold to third-party collectors — the same FCRA Section 623 accuracy requirements that govern all debt buyer reporting apply here. These entries are often removed in a single dispute round when the account number or reporting entity information is inaccurate — which it commonly is after sale from utility to collection agency.
Real Montgomery Clients. Real Results.
Montgomery-area clients who reached 640 and accessed these programs after working with David.
"I'm a staff sergeant stationed at Maxwell. Got PCS orders in 2022, sold my car in a hurry, had two late payments on my old VA loan I didn't know about because my bank statement was going to my old address. Also had a Baptist Medical collection from a 2021 ER visit — $4,100 — that was being reported by both Baptist and the collection company they sold it to, each showing different amounts. David got the duplicate Baptist entries removed in one round — reporting two different amounts for the same account is a clear accuracy violation. The two VA mortgage lates were successfully disputed because the date-of-first-delinquency was wrong by three months. Score went from 559 to 647 in 5 months. Closed on a house in Pike Road with a VA loan plus Step Up DPA ($6,480 toward closing costs) and the Alabama MCC. That MCC is saving me $182 a month on withholding right now."
"I work for the State of Alabama Department of Human Resources. During the 2023 budget dispute I had two weeks of reduced pay and missed a credit card payment and one car payment. Both reported 30-day late — on two different bureaus but with wrong delinquency dates. Also had an Alabama State student loan that was in default from 2019, showing active collections from two different servicers — which shouldn't be possible. David got both late marks removed (date errors), disputed the duplicate ASU collection entries (one removed, one updated to show rehabilitation status), and the combination brought my score from 571 to 643 in under 4 months. I used Step Up ($6,480 DPA), the Affordable Income Subsidy Grant ($1,563 because I was below 50% AMI), and the MCC. David walked me through exactly what I needed to do. I own a home now."
"Former Section 8 tenant in Montgomery for six years. I'd been working full-time at Baptist Health as a CNA for three years. Had two Alabama Power collections from before my stable employment, a subprime car repossession from 2020 with a deficiency balance that was being reported as $8,400 but the actual deficiency by contract was $5,200 — wrong amount. And a Jackson Hospital bill I'd paid but they never updated it as settled. David got the Alabama Power collections removed (both had reporting entity name errors after being sold to a collector), the repo deficiency was disputed down because of the incorrect balance, and the Jackson Hospital account was removed for failure to update after settlement. Score went from 518 to 641 in 5 months. I enrolled in the Montgomery Housing Authority HCV Homeownership Program and closed on a house in West Montgomery. I still can't believe I'm a homeowner."
How We Get You to 640+ for Montgomery's Programs
100% remote — serves Montgomery and all of Alabama. David personally reviews every file.
Free Three-Bureau Review
David pulls all three bureau reports and maps every negative entry — Baptist Health / Jackson Hospital medical collections, ASU/AUM student loan defaults, Maxwell/Gunter PCS late entries, Alabama Power utility collections, and Atlanta Highway subprime auto repos. Every Montgomery file follows recognizable patterns.
Custom FCRA Strategy
Montgomery-specific damage — duplicate medical collection reporting, wrong delinquency dates on military PCS entries, incorrect deficiency balances on buy-here-pay-here repos, student loan default status errors — all have established dispute pathways under FCRA Sections 605, 611, and 623. We prioritize highest-impact items first.
Multi-Bureau Disputes
Simultaneous Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion disputes. Escalation to CFPB complaints and attorney-drafted letters for stubborn creditors. The new CFPB medical debt rules (2025) add specific pathways for Baptist Health and Jackson Hospital entries.
640 FICO — Apply for Programs
Most Montgomery clients reach qualifying threshold in 3–5 months. We time AHFA Step Up + MCC applications to peak score. We advise on Step Up + MCC vs. First Step MRB decision based on current AHFA bond rates, your income, and whether HFA Advantage qualifies you for the Subsidy Grant.
Frequently Asked Questions — Montgomery Credit & DPA
Should I choose AHFA Step Up + MCC or AHFA First Step MRB for my Montgomery home purchase?
This is the key strategic decision for most Montgomery buyers. First Step MRB offers a below-market 30-year fixed rate but cannot be combined with the MCC. Step Up offers 4% DPA ($6,480 on a $162K home) and CAN be combined with the MCC. The lifetime value comparison: First Step's rate savings depend on how far below market the current AHFA bond rate is. If First Step is 0.75% below market rate on a $156K loan over 30 years, the interest savings are approximately $20,000. The Step Up + MCC combination provides $6,480 DPA upfront + approximately $30,000–$35,000 in MCC lifetime federal tax credit = approximately $36,000–$41,000 in combined value. In most current market conditions, Step Up + MCC produces more total lifetime value — but if First Step is currently offering a very significant rate reduction (1.5%+), the calculation changes. Ask your AHFA lender to run both scenarios with today's specific First Step rate before deciding.
Alabama's MCC says 20% for loans over $150K — how does that compare to other states in your series?
It's structurally different from all other MCCs in our series, and the comparison is nuanced. Mississippi was 40% capped at $2,000/year = maximum $60,000 over 30 years. Oklahoma was 40% capped at $2,000/year = maximum $60,000 over 30 years. Alabama at the 20% uncapped tier for loans over $150,001 produces approximately $2,189 in year 1 at a 7% rate, with the credit declining each year as the loan amortizes. Total estimated over 30 years: $30,000–$35,000. The absolute lifetime value is lower than the 40% capped states in the series — but the front-loading is important: if you sell or refinance after 7 years, you capture approximately $14,000–$16,000 of MCC benefit, vs. $14,000 (7 × $2,000) in a capped state. The uncapped structure means early years produce more — which is relevant for buyers who plan to move or trade up in 5–10 years.
Can I use the Step Up DPA if I'm buying with a VA loan at Maxwell AFB?
Yes — AHFA Step Up is compatible with VA loans. VA loans have zero down payment requirement, so the Step Up DPA funds (4% of purchase price, up to $10,000) can be applied toward VA loan closing costs — the VA funding fee, title, escrow, prepaid items, etc. This is one of the best combinations available to Montgomery military buyers: VA zero down + Step Up closing cost assistance + Alabama MCC (available with VA loans). The MCC with VA loans at the 20% uncapped tier generates $2,189 in year-1 federal tax credit on a $156K loan at 7%. Active-duty military can immediately revise their W-4 or request a withholding adjustment through their finance office to capture the MCC benefit in each paycheck. The 640 FICO requirement applies even for VA loans through AHFA programs. Some lenders accept lower scores for standalone VA loans, but to access AHFA programs, 640 is the floor.
I'm a current Section 8 (Housing Choice Voucher) participant at Montgomery Housing Authority. What are my options?
The MHA HCV Homeownership Program is specifically designed for you. You can convert your existing housing voucher subsidy from covering rent into monthly mortgage payment assistance. The core requirements: you must be a current MHA HCV participant, a first-time buyer (no ownership in past 3 years), employed full-time (30+ hours/week) for at least 1 year, and your income must be at least $14,500/year. You also need to complete a HUD-approved homebuyer education course. The 640 FICO requirement still applies through the lender. The most common barrier for HCV participants is credit score — medical collections, utility collections, and past-due accounts from the financial circumstances that led to Section 8 enrollment. That's exactly what David's credit repair service addresses. If your score is below 640, reach out to David for a free review — most HCV participants with typical credit damage patterns can reach 640 in 3–5 months. You cannot break your current lease to enroll, so plan your homeownership timeline around your lease renewal date.
What is the Affordable Income Subsidy Grant and why do I need an HFA Advantage loan to get it?
The Affordable Income Subsidy Grant is the only true grant (never repaid) in the AHFA program suite. It provides 0.5%–1% of the loan amount as a closing cost grant for buyers at or below 80% AMI. The HFA Advantage loan requirement exists because AHFA's grant program is structured specifically around Freddie Mac's HFA Advantage conventional loan product — a 97% LTV conventional loan designed for state housing finance authority programs. The grant does not exist in the FHA, VA, or USDA loan structures because those programs have their own closing cost mechanisms. To access the Subsidy Grant, you need to qualify for conventional lending — which typically means 620+ FICO (with AHFA Step Up requiring 640 for ≤80% AMI borrowers on HFA Advantage, 680 for above 80% AMI). For buyers with FHA-level scores (580–619 without improvement), the Subsidy Grant is not available — but with credit repair to 640+, the HFA Advantage loan becomes the most powerful conventional option available in Alabama.
How long does credit repair typically take for Montgomery clients?
Most Montgomery clients reach the 640 qualifying threshold in 3–5 months. Baptist Health and Jackson Hospital medical collections have our highest removal success rate — particularly for entries sold to debt buyers with balance inaccuracies or reporting entity name errors. Maxwell AFB / Gunter Annex PCS-related late payment entries with incorrect date-of-first-delinquency reporting often resolve in one round. ASU student loan default status corrections (showing rehabilitation or corrected default status) take 3–4 months depending on servicer responsiveness but produce large score gains. Alabama Power utility collection entries with reporting entity errors after sale to collectors often resolve in one round. Atlanta Highway buy-here-pay-here repossession entries take longest (2–4 rounds) but have high ultimate removal rates when deficiency balance inaccuracies are documented. We provide a case-specific timeline after reviewing your actual three-bureau report during the free initial consultation.
Five Programs. One Requirement: 640 FICO.
Montgomery's $10,000 DPA + 20% Uncapped Tax Credit Are Waiting.
At $162,000 median price, the Step Up DPA covers your entire down payment. The Alabama MCC's uncapped 20% credit generates $2,189+ in federal tax savings in year one alone — with $182/month more take-home pay starting immediately after closing. The Affordable Income Subsidy Grant covers closing costs. The VA zero-down + Step Up stack eliminates out-of-pocket costs entirely for Maxwell and Gunter buyers. Every program is waiting behind exactly one number: 640. Free review — David personally reviews every file.
Serving Montgomery & the Capital Region
Full Time Credit Repair serves clients in Montgomery, Prattville, Pike Road, Millbrook, Wetumpka, Tallassee, and throughout Montgomery County, Elmore County, and Autauga County, Alabama. 100% remote — no office visit required anywhere in the country.
Questions? Text David directly on WhatsApp — personal responses, every time.
Full Time Credit Repair | Montgomery, AL & Nationwide | WhatsApp: +1 (415) 756-8565