๐Ÿก Affordability Tool

House Affordability Calculator

Estimate a realistic home price range before shopping by combining income, debt, down payment, interest rate, and monthly housing-cost targets.

Your numbers

Editable estimate
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A common planning range is 25% to 30% of gross monthly income for housing.

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Affiliate / Template Placement

Turn this estimate into a plan.

Use this placement for a budgeting template, real estate checklist, investing tracker, or financial planning worksheet.

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House affordability calculator guide

This calculator estimates a reasonable home price from income, debt payments, down payment, mortgage rate, and a target housing debt-to-income ratio. It is designed for quick planning before you run lender-specific numbers.

How to use it

  • Enter gross annual household income and monthly debt payments.
  • Add your available down payment and expected mortgage rate.
  • Choose a target housing DTI that fits your risk tolerance.
  • Use the annual cost percentage to include broad ownership costs such as insurance, maintenance, and property-related costs.

Calculation method

Affordable payment = income รท 12 ร— target DTI โˆ’ comfort buffer

The calculator solves for the highest home price where the mortgage payment plus estimated non-mortgage ownership costs stays near the target payment.

Example scenario

With $90,000 of annual income, $70,000 down, a 6.5% mortgage rate, and a 28% housing target, the calculator estimates a purchase range that keeps monthly housing costs in a manageable zone.

What to watch

This is not a lender approval calculator. It does not include credit score, local underwriting rules, exact property taxes, mortgage insurance, or closing costs.

FAQ

What DTI should I use?

A lower DTI gives more cash-flow safety. Many people use 25% to 30% for housing as a planning range.

Why include a buffer?

A buffer accounts for repairs, income changes, and the difference between a theoretical payment and a payment that feels comfortable.

Is the aggressive range safe?

Not necessarily. It is a stress-test reference, not a recommendation.