DeLand Deltona Port Orange Ormond Beach Daytona Beach New Smyrna Beach Palm Coast Blog Buyer’s Guide Seller’s Guide About Robert Contact Robert
★ Buyer's Financing Guide

Volusia County Condo Financing Guide

Before you write an offer or pay for an inspection, find out whether the building is actually financeable. We pulled the current Fannie Mae and FHA approval status on 20 Volusia condo buildings — Ormond Beach, Daytona Beach, Port Orange, New Smyrna Beach — so you know which ones a conventional lender will close on, which are FHA-only, and which are blocked today.

20
Buildings Reviewed
3
Financeable Today
8
Currently Blocked
$500–$1,500
Avg. Loss When Deals Fail
Quarterly
Data Refresh

Why This Matters Before You Offer

Most buyers — and most agents — find out a Volusia condo isn't financeable two weeks into the contract. By that point, you've already paid for an inspection, an appraisal, and the application fee. The deal collapses at underwriting, you walk away with no condo and no money back, and the building goes right back on the market for the next buyer to repeat the process.

A condo building has to be approved by Fannie Mae (for conventional loans) or FHA (for FHA loans) before a lender will close on a unit there. Approvals expire. Insurance gaps, low reserves, deferred maintenance, or a high percentage of short-term rentals can push a building from "Approved" to "Unavailable" or "Rejected" — and the buyer never sees it coming, because none of it shows up on the MLS listing.

Rate environment also matters for your condo purchase. In late April 2026, mortgage rates in Volusia County briefly moved below 6 percent for qualified buyers for the first time since 2024 — improving purchase power at every price point. Knowing your building is financeable and having favorable financing in place is the combination that closes deals. Rate environment remains volatile; call Robert at (386) 387-5887 for current figures.

⚠ The cost of finding out too late

When financing falls apart at underwriting because of building eligibility, here's what a buyer typically loses:

$300–$500
General home inspection
$400–$700
Appraisal fee
$50–$200
Loan application & credit pull
$200+
Wind mitigation, 4-point, condo questionnaire

That's a real $500 to $1,500 hit, plus three to four weeks of opportunity cost while you weren't looking at buildings that actually close. The fix is simple: check the building before you write the offer. That's what this page is for.

Volusia County Condo Financing — Building-by-Building Status

All 20 Volusia County condo buildings on our working list, with current Fannie Mae and FHA approval status as of April 28, 2026. Source data was pulled directly from the Fannie Mae project review system and FHA condominium database by our lender partner Tara Allen at Fairway Mortgage on April 27, 2026.

Financeable Conventional loan approved today
Conditional Approved, pending lender re-cert
FHA-Only FHA buyers welcome, conventional blocked
Blocked No path to financing today
Unknown No project review on file — needs research
Building Status Fannie Mae FHA
Admiralty ClubPort Orange — 55+, riverfront Financeable Approved through 8/22/2026 Not reviewed
Oceans Cloverleaf (south)Daytona Beach Shores — 3 Oceans West Blvd Financeable Approved through 8/7/2028 Expired 2014
Golf Villas at Turnbull BayNew Smyrna Beach — golf community Conditional Approved through 2/5/2027 (lender cert expired) Rejected 2022
Regency PlazaOrmond By The Sea — oceanfront FHA-Only Unavailable (insurance gap) Approved through 8/20/2028
The OrmondyOrmond By The Sea — oceanfront Blocked ★ Just expired 3/29/2026 Not reviewed
Marina Grande on the HalifaxHolly Hill / Daytona Beach — 25-story towers Blocked ★ Just expired 3/25/2026 Not reviewed
Bayshore Bath & Tennis ClubDaytona Beach — twin towers Blocked Expired 2/4/2025 Rejected
Vantage Pointe Pool & RacquetDaytona Beach Blocked Unavailable (reserves under 10%) Not reviewed
Surfside Club NorthOrmond Beach Blocked Unavailable (classified as condotel) Not reviewed
Oceans AtriumDaytona Beach Shores Blocked No review on file Rejected 2020
Oceans Cloverleaf NorthDaytona Beach — 4 Oceans West Blvd (NOT same as south) Blocked Unavailable (insurance), no current review Not reviewed
Daytona Inn Beach ResortDaytona Beach — likely condotel Blocked Not in Fannie database Not in FHA database
The AtlantisOrmond By The Sea — oceanfront Unknown No project review on file Not reviewed
Van Lee CondominiumsOrmond By The Sea Unknown No project review on file Not reviewed
TidesfallOrmond By The Sea Unknown No project review on file Not reviewed
Fairwind ShoresOrmond Beach — oceanfront Unknown No project review on file Not reviewed
Kingston ShoresOrmond Beach Unknown No project review on file Not reviewed
Ocean Shore CondosOrmond Beach Unknown No project review on file Not reviewed
Surfside Club SouthOrmond Beach (sister to North) Unknown No project review on file Not reviewed
Symphony Beach ClubOrmond Beach Unknown Not in Fannie database (legal name verification needed) Not in FHA database
Ormond RenaissanceOrmond Beach — 55+, built 2020 Unknown Not in Fannie database Not in FHA database
Oceans ThreeDaytona Beach Unknown No project review on file Not reviewed

"Unknown" is not the same as "Blocked." It just means no lender has commissioned a Fannie review for that building yet — and any qualified buyer can request one. If you're interested in a building marked Unknown, ask before you offer. Project reviews typically take 5–15 business days.

Featured Buildings — Detailed Look

The four buildings buyers ask about most often. Two are financeable today, two recently lost approval and need recertification.

Admiralty Club
3606 S Peninsula Dr, Port Orange, FL 32127 — 55+, built 1974
★ Financeable Today
55+ Active Adult Riverfront / Halifax 8-Story Tower VA Eligible

Admiralty Club is the cleanest condo financing story in the Port Orange / Daytona corridor right now. Fannie Mae approval runs through August 22, 2026, the building is well-maintained, and the 55+ profile keeps the rental percentage low — which is exactly what underwriters want to see.

Conventional Financing Approved through 8/22/2026 — full doc, no project review delay
Buyer Profile That Works 55+ retiree with conventional or VA financing, looking for a riverfront primary or seasonal home in the $200k–$400k range
Why It's Worth Highlighting Buildings like this — approved, 55+, riverfront, in this price band — are rare in Volusia. If a unit comes up and the price is right, it should sell quickly to a financed buyer.
The Oceans Cloverleaf (south)
3 Oceans West Blvd, Daytona Beach Shores, FL 32118 — IMPORTANT: this is NOT the same as Cloverleaf North
★ Financeable Today
Oceanfront Approved Through 2028 Daytona Beach Shores

There are two Cloverleaf buildings on Oceans West Blvd, and the difference matters. The south building at 3 Oceans West Blvd in Daytona Beach Shores is Fannie-approved through August 7, 2028 — one of the longest active approvals in our entire dataset. The north building at 4 Oceans West Blvd lost approval in 2024 over an insurance gap and has not been reviewed since. Same name, different building, completely different financing outcome.

Conventional Financing Approved through 8/7/2028 — over two years of runway, no recertification pressure
Watch For This An MLS listing or sign that just says "Cloverleaf" without the address. Always confirm 3 Oceans West Blvd vs. 4 Oceans West Blvd before writing an offer.
Golf Villas at Turnbull Bay
138 Turnbull Villas Cir, New Smyrna Beach, FL 32168 — golf community
Conditional — Recoverable
Golf Community Villa-Style New Smyrna Beach

Fannie Mae itself has Golf Villas approved through February 5, 2027 — that's the good news. The complication is that the lender certification (a separate, lender-side requirement) expired in March 2023. That doesn't mean the building is blocked. It means a buyer's lender has to recertify before they can close. Tara at Fairway can run that recertification, and once it's done, the building closes like any other approved project.

Conventional Financing Conditionally available — Fannie approved through 2/5/2027, but lender recertification required first
What This Means For You Don't be scared off — but don't go in assuming a 30-day close either. Build in two extra weeks for the recertification. We coordinate this with Tara at the start of the contract, not at the end.
The Ormondy & Marina Grande on the Halifax
Active Recertification Watch — both lost approval within the last 30 days
⚠ Just Expired

Two of Volusia's higher-profile buildings just lost their Fannie Mae approval. The Ormondy at 1513 Ocean Shore Blvd in Ormond By The Sea expired March 29, 2026. Marina Grande on the Halifax in Holly Hill — the 25-story twin tower complex — expired March 25, 2026. Both expirations are recent enough that recertification is plausible if the HOA submits the updated documentation. Until that happens, conventional financing is off the table.

If You're Interested in a Unit Here We need to talk to the HOA management company before you write an offer. If recertification is in progress, we know roughly when the building comes back online. If it's not, you're looking at cash, FHA (if applicable), or waiting it out.
Why These Are on Active Watch Recently expired buildings are the most likely to come back online. We track them closely so financed buyers can move quickly the moment approval is reinstated.

What "Unavailable" Actually Means

Fannie Mae uses the same word — "Unavailable" — for several very different problems. Some are fixable in 30 days. Some are permanent. Plain English on the four most common reasons a Volusia building gets flagged.

Fannie Sec. B7-3-03

Master Insurance Coverage Gap

The HOA's master insurance policy doesn't meet Fannie's minimum coverage requirements — typically too low a wind/hurricane limit for a coastal Florida building, or missing required endorsements.

Fixable? Yes, but it requires the HOA board to bind a new or supplemental policy, which usually means a special assessment. Timeline: 60–180 days. Examples in our dataset: Regency Plaza, Oceans Cloverleaf North.

Fannie Sec. B4-2.2-02

Reserves Below 10%

Fannie requires the HOA to allocate at least 10% of annual budgeted income to reserve accounts. Buildings flagged here are running too lean — often a symptom of artificially low HOA dues that don't match the building's actual long-term maintenance liability.

Fixable? Yes, but only by raising HOA dues or commissioning a reserve study. Timeline: 90–180 days, plus owner approval. Example in our dataset: Vantage Pointe Pool & Racquet.

Fannie Sec. B4-2.1-03

Condotel Classification

Fannie classifies a building as a "condotel" when it operates with hotel-style services, daily/short-term rentals, or hotel marketing. These buildings are intentionally excluded from conventional financing — Fannie won't insure them at all.

Fixable? Almost never. Reversing this classification requires the HOA to fundamentally change how the building is run and rented. Realistically: cash buyers only. Example in our dataset: Surfside Club North.

Lender Side

Lender Cert vs. Project Approval

Two different approvals. The project can be Fannie-approved while a specific lender's certification for that project has lapsed. The building is fine — but until the lender recertifies, they personally can't close on a unit there.

Fixable? Yes, quickly. A lender like Tara at Fairway can recertify in 1–2 weeks for an approved project. Build the time into the contract. Example in our dataset: Golf Villas at Turnbull Bay.

Verify It Yourself

Don't take our word for it. Both Fannie Mae and FHA publish their condo project approval databases publicly. You can look up any Volusia County building yourself:

Fannie Mae Condo Project Manager (CPM) database — official Fannie project approval lookup tool

FHA Condominium Database (HUD) — official FHA-approved condo project lookup

Searching by project legal name often returns no result even when the building is approved — Tara matches against Fannie's internal Project ID for accuracy. If you can't find a building in either database, that's a flag, not a confirmation.

Get a Building Status Report

Tell me which Volusia condo building you're interested in. I'll send you the current Fannie/FHA status, any recent flags, and what your financing options realistically look like — usually within one business day.

No spam. No drip. One personal email back from Robert with the actual financing status. Usually within one business day.

Got it — your request is on its way to Robert.

You'll get a personal email back, usually within one business day, with the current Fannie Mae and FHA status on the building you asked about.

Need it sooner? Call or text Robert directly: (386) 387-5887

Prefer to talk it through? Call or text Robert directly: (386) 387-5887

Our Lender Partner — Tara Allen, Fairway Mortgage

All of the Fannie Mae and FHA data on this page comes directly from Tara Allen's project review system. She runs the queries, I check the buildings, and any pre-qualified buyer who comes through this guide goes to her first.

Tara Allen — Volusia County condo financing specialist, Fairway Independent Mortgage, NMLS 509823

Tara Allen

Loan Officer — Fairway Independent Mortgage Corporation

NMLS: 509823

Office: Fairway Mortgage, DeLand, Florida

Specialty: Conventional, FHA, VA, USDA — Florida condo project review specialist

"Most condo deals in Volusia don't fall apart because of the buyer — they fall apart because nobody checked the building first. By the time a property hits underwriting, you've already lost three weeks. The fix is to check eligibility before the offer. That's it."

Robert and Tara work together on Volusia condo transactions to confirm building eligibility before contracts are written, not after.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does "Fannie Mae approved" actually mean for a condo building?
Fannie Mae maintains a project approval database for condominium buildings. To get approved, the building's HOA submits documentation showing its insurance coverage, financial reserves, owner-occupancy ratios, litigation history, and rental restrictions all meet Fannie's underwriting standards. When a building is approved, any Fannie-eligible lender can write a conventional loan on a unit there with standard processing — no separate project review required. When a building is "Unavailable" or "No Review," conventional financing either isn't possible today or requires a project-specific review that adds 5–15 business days to closing. FHA runs a parallel system, the FHA condominium database, with its own approval criteria and timeline.
Can I buy a condo with cash if the building is "Blocked"?
Yes — building eligibility only matters for financed purchases. A cash buyer can close on a unit in a Fannie-blocked, FHA-rejected, or condotel-classified building with no issue. The catch is resale: when you go to sell, your buyer pool is limited to other cash buyers and a small number of portfolio lenders, which usually means a longer time on market and often a price discount of 5–15% versus comparable financeable units. If you're buying for cash and plan to hold long-term, blocked buildings can be a real opportunity — sometimes you can buy 10–15% below market. If you might need to sell in 3–5 years, factor the resale risk into your offer price.
How is FHA-approved different from Fannie Mae-approved?
They are completely separate approval systems with different criteria. Fannie Mae approval makes a building eligible for conventional loans (typically 5–20% down for primary residences, with lower interest rates for borrowers with strong credit). FHA approval makes a building eligible for FHA-insured loans (3.5% down, more flexible credit requirements, mortgage insurance required for the life of the loan). A building can be approved by one and not the other — Regency Plaza is the textbook example, FHA-approved through 2028 but Fannie-unavailable. If you're putting 3.5–10% down with FHA, you need FHA approval. If you're putting 20% down conventional, you need Fannie approval. Most buyers default to conventional unless their down payment or credit profile points them to FHA.
What is a "condotel" and why does it block financing?
A condotel is a condominium building that operates more like a hotel than a traditional residential building — daily or short-term rentals, hotel-style front desk and concierge services, marketing to vacationers, and often a high percentage of investor-owned units. Fannie Mae specifically excludes these properties from conventional financing under Selling Guide Section B4-2.1-03 because the rental volatility and operational profile make the loans too risky for the secondary mortgage market. The classification is rarely reversed — it would require the HOA to fundamentally change how the building is operated, which most owners don't want. In practice, condotel buildings in Volusia are cash-buyer-only properties. Surfside Club North in Ormond Beach is the clearest example in our dataset.
How often does this guide get updated?
The Fannie Mae and FHA approval databases are updated continuously by the agencies, but we refresh this page on a quarterly schedule — typically January, April, July, and October. Tara at Fairway re-runs the project review query for all 20 buildings, I update the spreadsheet, and the table on this page refreshes. If a building you're interested in is on the borderline — recently expired, or pending recertification — request a building report through the form above. We'll check it the same day rather than waiting for the next quarterly refresh, because for buildings in transition, status can change in either direction within a few weeks.
Robert Wrieden
REALTOR® — Summer Wind Realty Central Florida
Specializing in Volusia County condos, 55+ communities, and oceanfront properties. Building eligibility checks before every offer.

Don't Lose Money on a Deal That Was Never Going to Close

Ten minutes of building research before you write the offer beats three weeks of wasted contract.

Get a Building Report Call Robert: (386) 387-5887

Data Source & Methodology: All Fannie Mae and FHA approval status pulled directly from the agency project review systems by Tara Allen, Fairway Mortgage (DeLand), NMLS 509823, on April 27, 2026. Approval status changes frequently — recertify any specific building before writing an offer.

Last refreshed: April 28, 2026 — Next scheduled refresh: July 2026

Information herein is deemed reliable but not guaranteed. This guide is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute lending, legal, or tax advice. Approval status of condominium projects with Fannie Mae and FHA is subject to change at any time without notice. Buyers should verify current building eligibility with their lender of choice before entering into a purchase contract. Summer Wind Realty Central Florida Inc. — REALTOR®. Equal Housing Opportunity.

🏠 Estimate Your Payment
Mortgage Calculator
Home Price $350,000
Down Payment 20% — $70,000
Interest Rate 6.75%
Loan Term
Estimated Monthly Payment
$2,271
$1,816 Principal & Interest
$292 Est. Taxes
$163 Est. Insurance
Get Pre-Approval Help → 📞 Call Robert — (386) 387-5887
🏠 Estimate Your Payment
Mortgage Calculator
Home Price $350,000
Down Payment 20% — $70,000
Interest Rate 6.75%
Loan Term
Estimated Monthly Payment
$2,271
$1,816 Principal & Interest
$292 Est. Taxes
$163 Est. Insurance
Get Pre-Approval Help → 📞 Call Robert — (386) 387-5887