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Affordability Calculator

Find out how much house you can afford

Dernière vérification : Précision vérifiée

How much house can you actually afford? Enter your income, debts, and down payment to get a realistic home price based on the 28/36 rule used by lenders. See the maximum mortgage payment, loan amount, and home price you qualify for.

Quick example: With a $90,000 annual income, $500/month in debts, and a 20% down payment, you can afford a home up to approximately $385,000. Your maximum monthly mortgage payment would be $2,100 (28% of gross monthly income).

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Car loans, student loans, credit cards, etc.

You Can Afford a Home Up To

$308,467
Down Payment
$61,693
Loan Amount
$246,774
Monthly Payment
$1,983.33
DTI Ratio
33.6%

Monthly Payment Breakdown

Principal & Interest
$1,600.57
Property Tax
$282.76
Homeowner Insurance
$100.00
Total Monthly$1,983.33

Payment Components

Debt-to-Income Ratios (28/36 Rule)

Front-End (Housing)28.0% / 28%
Back-End (Total Debt)33.6% / 36%

Cette calculatrice fournit des estimations à titre informatif uniquement. Les résultats réels peuvent varier. Consultez un conseiller financier pour des conseils personnalisés.

Home Affordability Calculator

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter your gross annual income — Your total household income before taxes. Include all earners on the mortgage application.
  2. Enter monthly debts — Include car payments, student loans, minimum credit card payments, and any other recurring obligations. Do not include rent (it will be replaced by the mortgage).
  3. Enter your down payment — Either a dollar amount or percentage. A larger down payment increases the home price you can afford.
  4. Review interest rate and loan term — Adjust to match current market rates. In early 2026, 30-year fixed rates are approximately 6.5–7%.

The 28/36 Rule Explained

Lenders use the 28/36 rule to determine how much mortgage you can handle:

Front-end ratio (28%): Your total housing payment (principal, interest, taxes, insurance — PITI) should not exceed 28% of your gross monthly income.

Back-end ratio (36%): Your total debt payments (housing + all other debts) should not exceed 36% of your gross monthly income.

Maximum housing payment = MIN(Gross Monthly Income × 0.28, Gross Monthly Income × 0.36 − Monthly Debts)

Example: $90,000 income = $7,500/month gross. Front-end: $7,500 × 0.28 = $2,100. Back-end: $7,500 × 0.36 − $500 = $2,200. The binding constraint is $2,100 (the front-end ratio).

Common Scenarios

Annual IncomeMonthly DebtsDown PaymentMax Home Price*Max Monthly Payment
$60,000$20010%$225,000$1,400
$75,000$40015%$305,000$1,750
$90,000$50020%$385,000$2,100
$120,000$70020%$515,000$2,800
$150,000$1,00020%$635,000$3,500

*Estimated at 6.75% interest, 30-year fixed, including taxes and insurance at ~1.5% of home value annually.

Pro Tips

  • The 28/36 rule is a ceiling, not a target. Just because you qualify for a $500,000 mortgage does not mean you should take one. Many financial advisors recommend keeping housing costs under 25% of take-home pay for a comfortable budget.
  • Pay off debts before house hunting. Reducing your monthly debts directly increases the home price you can afford. Paying off a $300/month car loan could add $50,000 to your buying power.
  • Property taxes vary dramatically. A $400,000 home in New Jersey costs ~$8,800/year in property tax (2.2%), while the same home in Hawaii costs ~$1,120 (0.28%). This significantly affects affordability.
  • Pre-approval is not the same as affordability. Lenders may approve you for more than you can comfortably pay. Run your own budget numbers and stress-test them: what if rates rise, you lose income, or a major repair comes up?
  • Factor in maintenance costs. Budget 1–2% of the home value per year for repairs and maintenance ($4,000–$8,000/year on a $400,000 home).

Sources

  • 28/36 qualifying ratios: Fannie Mae Selling Guide, Section B3-6-02
  • Mortgage rates: Freddie Mac Primary Mortgage Market Survey, 2026
  • Property tax rates: Tax Foundation state-by-state data, 2026

Related Calculators

Questions fréquemment posées

Using the 28/36 rule with no other debts, 20% down, and a 6.75% interest rate, a $75,000 salary supports approximately a $300,000 home with a monthly payment around $1,750 (including taxes and insurance). With $500/month in existing debt payments, the maximum drops to roughly $225,000. These are guidelines; actual approval depends on credit score, assets, and lender criteria.

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