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Question PageReal Estate

How Much House Can I Afford?

Calculate how much home you can realistically afford based on your income, debts, down payment, and current mortgage rates.

Updated May 7, 2026

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Try It Yourself

Home Affordability Calculator

$
$
$
6.50%

Estimated Affordability

$335,327

Max monthly payment

$1,867

Max loan amount

$295,327

Based on 28% front-end / 43% back-end DTI · 30-yr fixed · Excludes taxes & insurance

A common rule of thumb says to spend no more than 3× your annual income on a home. But the real answer depends on your down payment, interest rate, existing debts, and what monthly payment actually fits your budget comfortably.

The 28/36 rule

Most lenders use two limits: your total housing costs (mortgage principal + interest + property tax + insurance) should not exceed 28% of your gross monthly income, and your total debt payments should not exceed 36%. If your gross income is $8,000/month, that means a maximum housing payment of $2,240 and total debts of $2,880.

How interest rates change what you can afford

At a 4% mortgage rate, a $400,000 loan has a monthly payment (P+I) of about $1,910. At 7%, the same loan costs $2,660/month. That's an $18,600 difference per year. Rising rates directly reduce how much home your income can support — even if nothing else changes.

What to include in your monthly payment estimate

  • Principal and interest (P+I) — varies with loan amount and rate
  • Property taxes — typically 0.5–2% of home value per year
  • Homeowners insurance — roughly 0.5% of home value per year
  • PMI (if down payment is under 20%) — around 0.5–1% of loan value per year
  • HOA fees — where applicable

The down payment effect

A 20% down payment on a $400,000 home means an $80,000 down payment and a $320,000 mortgage. A 5% down payment means a $380,000 mortgage plus PMI. The larger down payment reduces monthly payments by around $280 and eliminates PMI — saving another $150–200/month.

Frequently Asked Questions

What annual income is needed to buy a $400,000 home?

Using the 28% front-end rule: a $400,000 home with 20% down ($320,000 loan at 7%) has a monthly P+I payment of roughly $2,130. Add taxes and insurance and the total housing cost is around $2,600/month. To keep housing at or below 28% of gross income, you'd need approximately $9,300/month ($111,000/year) in gross income.

Does a mortgage pre-approval mean I can afford the payment?

Pre-approval tells you what a lender is willing to lend — not what you can comfortably afford. Lenders calculate the maximum based on DTI ratios; they don't account for your lifestyle spending, savings goals, or retirement contributions. Always build your own budget first and compare it to the pre-approval number before committing.

Should I buy at the top of my approved range?

Generally no. Buying at the absolute limit leaves no buffer for property tax increases, maintenance costs (budget 1–2% of home value per year), unexpected repairs, or income disruption. A home that represents 25% of gross income rather than 28–30% gives significantly more financial flexibility and reduces stress when unexpected costs arise.

Check your affordability numbers

Use our Debt-to-Income Calculator to see how a new mortgage would affect your DTI, and our Closing Cost Calculator to estimate upfront costs.

Related tools

  • Refinance Calculator
  • Stamp Duty Calculator
  • Property Investment Calculator

Before you rely on the numbers

Countfield calculators and guides are planning aids, not personal financial advice. Review the assumptions, compare scenarios, and verify major decisions with the relevant lender, tax professional, or advisor.

MethodologyFinancial disclaimerEditorial standards

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