How to use this calculator
- Enter monthly rent and recurring housing fees.
- Add utilities, parking, and maintenance costs.
- Enter household monthly income and number of contributors.
- Review the housing ratio before signing or renewing a lease.
Calculate family rent affordability using total housing cost, household income, cost per contributor, and a housing burden health score.
Housing cost ratio shows how much of household income goes to rent and utilities. Lower ratios leave more room for savings, groceries, debt repayment, and emergencies.
Many budgets use 30% of income as a rough affordability reference, but local cost of living and debt obligations also matter.
With $1,600 rent, $280 utilities, $6,000 income, and 2 contributors, total housing cost is $1,880 and the housing ratio is 31.33%.
A common reference is around 30% of income for rent and basic housing costs, but the safe level depends on savings, debt, and local living costs.
Multiply household income by a target housing ratio, then subtract expected utilities and fees to estimate an affordable rent ceiling.
Yes. Utilities, parking, maintenance fees, and recurring housing charges should be included because they affect monthly cash flow.
It can be risky for many households because it leaves less room for savings, groceries, transportation, and emergencies.
Divide the total housing cost evenly or use income-based percentages if contributors have different financial capacity.
| Metric | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Monthly housing cost | Rent plus recurring utilities and fees. |
| Housing ratio | Total housing cost as a share of income. |
| Per contributor | Estimated monthly share per paying person. |
| Recommended max | Base rent target after utilities at a 30% ratio. |