Mortgage Affordability Calculator
Calculate your home buying power based on income and debt obligations. Determine maximum loan amounts, monthly payments, and ideal debt-to-income ratios.
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What is this calculator?
A lender-style affordability estimate that ties income, debts, and housing costs (PITI) into a safe monthly payment range. For related decisions, compare with BMI Calculator, BMR Calculator, Should I Refinance?, Dollar Cost Averaging (DCA).
How it works
Inputs map to common U.S. underwriting checkpoints: front-end and back-end DTI limits, plus housing-cost assumptions (taxes, insurance, PMI).
Example calculation
Example: $120,000/year income with $800/month other debts. A 28% front-end target implies about $2,800/month for housing (PITI). A 36% back-end target implies about $3,600/month total debt, keeping housing near $2,800/month. Takeaway: Use a conservative input set and treat that result as the real ceiling, not the best-case result.
When should you use this
- If your interest rate quote is above ~6.5%, stress-test a 0.5–1.0% increase and set your ceiling from the conservative case.
- If you plan to move within ~5 years, prioritize cash-flow safety and reserves over a higher headline purchase price.
- If DTI is near 36%+, compare “pay down debt” vs. “increase down payment” and see which unlocks more buying power.
When this may NOT be ideal
- If you do not have realistic property tax/insurance/HOA numbers for your area yet.
- If income is irregular and your lender will average multiple years or apply overlays.
Tips to get better results
- Run a conservative scenario (higher taxes/insurance and a slightly higher rate) and treat it as the ceiling.
- If DTI is tight, reduce revolving debt first; underwriting outcomes often improve quickly.
- Keep reserves in the plan—max approval can be fragile when escrow rises.
How We Calculate Results
Results combine DTI constraints with a housing-cost budget model. Mortgage payment estimates use amortization math for principal + interest; taxes and insurance are treated as budget inputs.
Financial Decision Guidance
Approval is not affordability. Choose a payment that protects emergency savings and retirement contributions, then treat refinancing as optional upside.
Limitations of This Calculator
- DTI caps vary by lender and loan program; this is an estimate, not underwriting.
- Local taxes/insurance/HOA can materially change outcomes.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Targeting the maximum limit instead of a sustainable payment with buffer.
- Forgetting PMI/HOA/insurance increases and being surprised by escrow adjustments.
- Assuming a refinance is guaranteed; qualify at today’s rate first.
Disclaimer: The tools and calculators on this page are provided for educational and informational purposes only and do not constitute professional financial or medical advice.
Affordability FAQ
How does a 1% interest rate hike affect my affordability?
A 1% rate increase often reduces buying power by around 10%. Re-run affordability at the higher rate before you set your maximum offer price.
What counts as "debt" in the DTI calculation?
Use affordability results as a planning range, not a permission slip to borrow the maximum. A slightly lower purchase price often buys you the flexibility to handle escrow increases and maintenance without financial stress.
Can I include my bonus or commissions in gross income?
Use affordability results as a planning range, not a permission slip to borrow the maximum. A slightly lower purchase price often buys you the flexibility to handle escrow increases and maintenance without financial stress.
How does a car loan impact my home buying power?
Use affordability results as a planning range, not a permission slip to borrow the maximum. A slightly lower purchase price often buys you the flexibility to handle escrow increases and maintenance without financial stress.
What is this calculator?
Mortgage affordability is a risk-management decision, not a guess. On a 30-year loan, even a 0.5% difference in interest rates can swing the lifetime cost by $50,000+. This mortgage affordability calculator approximates how U.S. lenders evaluate your application—income, existing debts, and a full housing budget—so you can choose a payment that stays workable after taxes, insurance, and normal life volatility.
The 28/36 Underwriting Rule
The 28/36 rule is still a useful starting point, but real underwriting often looks at the full cash-flow picture and credit profile. If taxes/insurance are high, the front-end ratio can be the limiting factor even when principal-and-interest seems affordable.
Calculating PITI for True Affordability
Use affordability results as a planning range, not a permission slip to borrow the maximum. A slightly lower purchase price often buys you the flexibility to handle escrow increases and maintenance without financial stress.
Monthly Budget = (Gross Monthly Income × DTI Limit) - Existing Debts
Interest Rate Impact on Borrowing Power (per $100k)
| Rate | Monthly P&I | Total Interest (30yr) | Buying Power |
|---|---|---|---|
| 6.0% | $599 | $115,838 | Maximum |
| 7.0% | $665 | $139,508 | -11% Power |
DTI Thresholds & Lending Impact
| DTI Ratio | Lender Classification | Borrowing Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Below 36% | Pristine | Qualify for best rates & multiple programs. |
| 36% - 43% | Standard | Standard conventional loan range. |
| 43% - 50% | Expansionary | May require FHA or non-QM loan products. |
Buying Power by Salary Level (2026 Estimates)
| Annual Salary | Max Monthly PITI | Est. Home Price* |
|---|---|---|
| $75,000 | $1,750 | $280,000 - $320,000 |
| $120,000 | $2,800 | $450,000 - $510,000 |
| $200,000 | $4,660 | $750,000 - $850,000 |
*Estimates assume 7% interest, 10% down, and $400/mo in other debts.
Mortgage Affordability Glossary
- DTI (Debt-to-Income)
- The percentage of your gross monthly income that goes toward paying debts.
- PITI
- Stands for Principal, Interest, Taxes, and Insurance—the four components of a monthly mortgage payment.
- LTV (Loan-to-Value)
- The ratio of the loan amount to the appraised value of the property.
- PMI (Private Mortgage Insurance)
- Insurance required if your down payment is less than 20% of the home's value.
5 Steps to Increase Your Buying Power
- Reduce High-Interest Debt: Paying down credit cards lowers your DTI instantly.
- Improve Your Credit Score: A higher score unlocks lower interest rates, reducing your monthly payment.
- Increase Your Down Payment: Every extra $10,000 down reduces your loan amount and potentially removes PMI.
- Factor in Closing Costs: Ensure you have 3-5% of the home price saved in cash for fees.
- Get Pre-Approved: A formal letter from a lender confirms your budget before you start shopping.
Best vs. Worst Case Scenarios
Realistic outcomes based on common decision paths.
Best Case Scenario
Outcome: You purchase a property safely 15-20% *below* your absolute maximum budget. This provides vital cash-flow buffer for unexpected home repairs, tax hikes, or life emergencies, allowing you to simultaneously fund your 401(k) and maintain high liquidity.
Worst Case Scenario
Outcome: You max out your debt-to-income (DTI) ratio. 45% of your gross income now goes to your mortgage. Your cash flow is suffocated ('house poor'), and a single missed paycheck or a sudden $5,000 roof repair forces you into high-interest credit card debt or even risks foreclosure.
Decision Matrix: Which path is right for you?
- Is your resulting Front-End DTI below 28%? → You are in the 'safe zone' for housing affordability according to major lenders.
- Are you projecting high maintenance/HOA costs? → Lower your target purchase price manually from the calculator's 'Max' output.
- Does buying drain your entire savings account? → It is highly inadvisable to close if you won't have a 3-month emergency fund left over after down payment and closing costs.
2026 Home Buying Strategy: Navigating High Rates
In the 2026 real estate market, "how much house can I afford" is a moving target. With rates stabilizing at higher levels than the previous decade, buyers must be more surgical with their budgets. A key strategy is to use our mortgage payoff optimizer to see how even small extra payments can offset the higher interest costs. If you are debating between buying now or waiting, consider how a future refinance might impact your long-term wealth.
The Invisible Constraints: DTI vs. Lifestyle
Lenders might approve you for a 43% DTI, but that doesn't mean you should spend it. "House poor" is a real risk when your mortgage consumes too much of your net pay. We recommend running your numbers through our Invest vs. Pay Off Debt tool to ensure you aren't sacrificing your retirement contributions for a larger zip code. For those looking at lower-priced entries, our $250k mortgage tracker provides a realistic baseline for starter homes.