Home Affordability Calculator
Find out how much home you can afford based on your income, debts, and down payment.
Your Financial Information
Most lenders prefer 36% or less. Max is typically 43%.
You Can Afford
Monthly Payment Breakdown
DTI Ratios
Affordability Scenarios
Home Affordability Calculator Guide
A home affordability calculator estimates the home price you may be able to manage based on income, debt, down payment, interest rate, taxes, and insurance. It is a planning tool, not a loan approval. The goal is to find a price range that works in real life, not only on a lender's worksheet.
The calculator works backward from your monthly budget. It estimates how much room you have for housing, then converts that monthly payment into an approximate home price. This helps you compare homes before you spend time on listings that may stretch your budget too far.
| Input | Why it matters | Practical note |
|---|---|---|
| Annual income | Sets the base for monthly affordability | Use stable gross income, not hopeful future income |
| Monthly debts | Reduces room for housing | Include car loans, student loans, credit cards, and personal loans |
| Down payment | Changes loan size and PMI risk | Keep cash left after closing |
| Interest rate | Strongly affects buying power | Use a real lender quote when possible |
| Taxes and insurance | Part of the monthly housing cost | Local values can change the result a lot |
How to Use This Calculator
Start with your current numbers, then test safer and more aggressive versions. A helpful affordability check is not a single answer. It is a range that shows what happens when rates, down payment, taxes, or debts change.
- Enter annual income before tax. If your income varies, use a conservative average.
- Add monthly debts. Use required monthly payments, not total balances.
- Enter your down payment. Do not forget closing costs and moving cash.
- Use a realistic mortgage rate. A pre-approval or Loan Estimate is better than a generic rate.
- Adjust tax and insurance assumptions. Use local property tax data when you have a target area.
- Compare scenarios. Look at conservative, moderate, and maximum affordability before choosing a search range.
Debt-to-Income Ratio
Debt-to-income ratio, often called DTI, compares monthly debt payments with gross monthly income. Mortgage lenders use it to judge whether a borrower has enough income to handle a new housing payment along with existing obligations.
| Ratio | Formula | What it includes |
|---|---|---|
| Front-end DTI | Monthly housing cost / gross monthly income | Mortgage payment, taxes, insurance, PMI, HOA |
| Back-end DTI | Total monthly debt / gross monthly income | Housing cost plus credit cards, loans, and other debts |
A lower DTI usually gives you more room for savings and unexpected expenses. A higher DTI may still qualify in some loan programs, but it can make the monthly budget feel tight.
Back-End DTI
Where:
- Total Monthly Debt Payments= Housing payment plus required monthly debt payments
- Gross Monthly Income= Monthly income before taxes and payroll deductions
The 28/36 Rule
The 28/36 rule is a common rule of thumb. It suggests keeping housing costs around 28% of gross monthly income and total debt payments around 36%. It is not a law, and loan programs can use different limits, but it is useful for a first budget check.
| Gross monthly income | 28% housing guide | 36% total debt guide |
|---|---|---|
| $5,000 | $1,400 | $1,800 |
| $7,500 | $2,100 | $2,700 |
| $10,000 | $2,800 | $3,600 |
| $12,500 | $3,500 | $4,500 |
Use the rule as a guardrail. If you have irregular income, high childcare costs, medical expenses, business expenses, or aggressive savings goals, a lower housing target may be wiser.
Comfortable Budget vs Lender Maximum
The price you can get approved for may be higher than the price you should buy. Lender rules focus on repayment risk. Your personal comfort also depends on emergency savings, job stability, lifestyle, family plans, and repair costs.
| Approach | Housing share | What it feels like |
|---|---|---|
| Conservative | 20% to 25% of gross income | More room for savings and repairs |
| Balanced | 25% to 28% | Often workable for stable income |
| Maximum | 28% to 31% or higher | May qualify, but can feel tight |
| Stretched | Above comfort range | Higher risk of becoming house poor |
A simple test is to practice the new payment before buying. If your future housing payment would be $900 more than your current rent, set aside that $900 for a few months. If it feels painful, the target price may need to come down.
Ways to Improve Affordability
If the number is lower than expected, there are several levers to improve affordability. Some are quick, while others take months.
| Action | Why it helps | Tradeoff |
|---|---|---|
| Pay down monthly debt | Improves back-end DTI | Uses cash that could go to down payment |
| Increase down payment | Reduces loan size and possible PMI | May reduce emergency savings |
| Improve credit score | Can help qualify for better rates | Takes time and discipline |
| Shop lenders | Rates and fees vary | Requires comparing Loan Estimates |
| Choose a lower-tax area | Lowers monthly housing cost | May change commute or school options |
| Buy a less expensive home | Protects monthly cash flow | May require compromise on size or location |
Loan Program Considerations
Different mortgage programs may allow different down payments, debt ratios, credit profiles, and insurance rules. The right program depends on your eligibility and long-term cost, not only the highest purchase price.
| Program | Common use | Important note |
|---|---|---|
| Conventional | Buyers with steady credit and income | PMI often applies below 20% down |
| FHA | Buyers with smaller down payments or flexible credit needs | Mortgage insurance rules differ from conventional loans |
| VA | Eligible service members, veterans, and surviving spouses | Often allows no down payment, subject to VA and lender rules |
| USDA | Eligible rural and suburban properties | Income and property location rules apply |
Worked Examples
Estimate an Affordable Price Range
Problem:
A buyer earns $90,000 per year, has $500 in monthly debts, has $60,000 saved for down payment, and wants to keep total DTI near 36%.
Solution Steps:
- 1Gross monthly income: $90,000 / 12 = $7,500
- 2Maximum total debt at 36%: $7,500 x 0.36 = $2,700
- 3Subtract existing monthly debt: $2,700 - $500 = $2,200 available for housing
- 4Estimate taxes and insurance at $500 per month
- 5Estimated room for principal and interest: $2,200 - $500 = $1,700
- 6At a 7% rate for 30 years, $1,700 supports roughly a $255,000 loan
- 7Add the $60,000 down payment for an estimated home price near $315,000
Result:
This buyer may start around a $315,000 planning range, then adjust based on local taxes, insurance, PMI, and lender quotes.
See How Monthly Debt Changes Buying Power
Problem:
A buyer earns $8,000 per month before tax. Compare affordability with $300 and $900 in existing monthly debts using a 36% total DTI guide.
Solution Steps:
- 1Maximum total monthly debt: $8,000 x 0.36 = $2,880
- 2With $300 debt: $2,880 - $300 = $2,580 available for housing
- 3With $900 debt: $2,880 - $900 = $1,980 available for housing
- 4Difference available for housing: $600 per month
- 5At mortgage rates around 7%, that $600 can represent a large difference in possible loan size
Result:
Paying down monthly debt can improve affordability because lenders look at required monthly payments, not just income.
Compare Comfortable and Maximum Budgets
Problem:
A household earns $120,000 per year and wants to compare a conservative 25% housing target with a 31% housing target.
Solution Steps:
- 1Gross monthly income: $120,000 / 12 = $10,000
- 2Conservative housing target at 25%: $10,000 x 0.25 = $2,500
- 3Higher housing target at 31%: $10,000 x 0.31 = $3,100
- 4Monthly difference: $3,100 - $2,500 = $600
- 5The higher target may buy more home but leaves $600 less each month for savings, repairs, and lifestyle
Result:
The maximum number is not automatically the best number. The comfortable payment may be the better long-term choice.
Tips & Best Practices
- ✓Use a conservative income number if your pay varies.
- ✓Include all required monthly debts before trusting the result.
- ✓Keep a cash cushion after down payment and closing costs.
- ✓Use local tax rates because property taxes can change affordability quickly.
- ✓Compare lender quotes using both the interest rate and fees.
- ✓Practice the future payment for a few months before buying if possible.
- ✓Do not rely on the maximum approval amount as your personal budget.
Frequently Asked Questions
Sources & References
Last updated: 2026-05-20
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Editorial Note
MyCalcBuddy Editorial Team
This page is maintained as an educational calculator reference.
Formula Source: Standard Mathematical References
by Various