Fannie Mae is a government-sponsored enterprise (GSE) that purchases mortgages from lenders and sells them into the secondary market.
Its official name is the Federal National Mortgage Association.
Fannie Mae does not lend money directly to homebuyers. Instead, it buys eligible conforming loans from lenders, providing liquidity so lenders can continue issuing new mortgages.
Fannie Mae influences:
Because lenders know they can sell loans to Fannie Mae, they are able to:
Borrowers whose loans meet Fannie Mae guidelines often access more predictable pricing and documentation requirements.
Borrowers continue making payments to their mortgage servicer even if the loan is sold.
Fannie Mae → Purchases conforming conventional loans
FHA → Insures government-backed loans
They serve different roles in housing finance.
Does Fannie Mae set my interest rate?
No, but it influences pricing standards.
Are all mortgages sold to Fannie Mae?
No.
Is Fannie Mae a government agency?
It is a government-sponsored enterprise, not a direct federal agency.
Freddie Mac
Conforming Loan
Secondary Mortgage Market
Mortgage-Backed Securities
Loan Limits