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How Much House Can I Afford? (Based on My Income & Debt) hero

How Much House Can I Afford? (Based on My Income & Debt)

Find out how much house you can afford

About the Calculator

House hunting is exciting until the numbers get real. This calculator gives you a price range that fits your income, debts, and down payment, not just what a lender might approve. It accounts for rates, credit, and comfort level so you can see a budget that feels sustainable. Use it to set boundaries before you fall in love with a listing, and to compare options with clarity. Try adjusting down payment, debts, or rates to see how much the target price moves. A few small changes can shift your range by tens of thousands, which is powerful when you are searching seriously.

$

Before taxes. Include salary, bonuses, commissions

Your actual rate depends on credit score and lender

Down Payment

$
%

✓ Great! 20%+ down means no PMI

Monthly Debt Obligations

$/mo
$/mo
$/mo
$/mo
$/mo
Total Monthly Debts:$0

You Can Afford a Home Up To:

$331,000 - $365,000
Recommended Budget: $348,000
Your estimated monthly payment:
$2,100

Affordability Range

ConservativeComfortableAggressive
$295,800$348,000$400,200

Monthly Payment Breakdown

(Based on $348,000 home price)

Principal & Interest$1,631
Property Tax$319
Home Insurance$150
HOA Fees$0
TOTAL MONTHLY PAYMENT$2,100
+ Existing Debt Payments$0
TOTAL HOUSING + DEBT$2,100

Monthly Budget After Housing:

Gross Monthly Income:$7,500
- Taxes (~25%):-$1,875
- Housing Payment:-$2,100
- Existing Debts:-$0
- Utilities (~$200):-$200
Money Left for Everything Else:$3,325

Food, gas, entertainment, savings, emergencies, etc.

Financial Health Indicators

Debt-to-Income Ratio
28%Excellent
0%28%36%43%50%
28% or less: Excellent (Prime for best rates)
29-36%: Good (Most lenders comfortable)
37-43%: Fair (Higher risk, higher rates)
44%+: Poor (May not qualify)
Housing Expense Ratio
28%Good
0%28%36%

Housing costs as % of gross income

Under 28%: Recommended

28-36%: Manageable

Over 36%: Risky

DTI under 28% - Excellent! Plenty of breathing room

Comparison by Home Price

How different home prices affect your monthly payment and DTI

Home PriceDown PaymentLoan AmountMonthly P&ITotal Monthly*DTI Ratio
$350,000$90,000$260,000$1,643$2,11428%
$400,000$90,000$310,000$1,959$2,47633%
$450,000$90,000$360,000$2,275$2,83838% ⚠️
$500,000$90,000$410,000$2,591$3,37145%
$550,000$90,000$460,000$2,908$3,75350%

*Includes principal, interest, taxes, insurance, and HOA

What If? Calculator

Adjust to see how changes affect affordability:

$348,000
$90,000 (25.9%)
6.50%
Monthly Payment:$2,100
DTI Ratio:28%

✓ Yes - You can afford this!

How to Calculate Manually

  1. 1

    Enter your gross annual income (before taxes)

  2. 2

    Specify your down payment amount or percentage

  3. 3

    Input current mortgage interest rates

  4. 4

    Add all monthly debt obligations

  5. 5

    Review your affordable home price range

Examples

I earn $90,000/year with $800/month in debts and have $90,000 saved. What can I afford?

With 20% down and current rates, you can afford a home around $425,000-$475,000

FAQ

💡 Tips

  • The 28/36 rule: Housing costs should be ≤28% of gross income, total debts ≤36%
  • 20% down payment eliminates PMI and gets better rates
  • Lower DTI ratio means easier approval and better loan terms
  • Don't forget to budget for maintenance, utilities, and repairs
  • Get pre-approved before house hunting to know your real budget

🎉 Fun Facts

  • The Total Cost Shock: On a $400,000 mortgage at 7% for 30 years, you'll pay $558,914 in total interest. That $400,000 home actually costs nearly $959,000 by the time it's paid off (principal + interest only, not including taxes/insurance).
  • The Payment Components (PITI): Most borrowers focus on principal and interest, but PITI (Principal, Interest, Taxes, Insurance) is the true monthly cost. On a $400,000 home, P&I might be $2,661 but total PITI could be $3,500-4,000+ with taxes and insurance.
  • The 15 vs 30 Year Math: A 15-year mortgage roughly doubles your monthly payment but saves 50-60% in total interest. On a $400,000 loan at 6.5%, you'd pay $178,000 interest (15-year) vs. $518,000 (30-year).
  • The Escrow Reality: Lenders escrow your property taxes and insurance, but tax assessments increase 2-5% annually in most areas. Your "fixed" mortgage payment actually increases $50-150/year as escrow adjustments hit.
  • The PMI Cost: Put down less than 20% and you'll pay PMI (Private Mortgage Insurance) of 0.5-1.5% of loan value annually. On a $400,000 loan that's $2,000-6,000/year or $167-500/month extra until you hit 20% equity.
  • The Bi-Weekly Hack: Switching from monthly to bi-weekly payments (26 half-payments = 13 full payments/year) can cut a 30-year mortgage to 23-25 years and save $80,000-120,000 in interest by making one extra payment annually.