--> House Affordability Calculator 2025 — How Much House Can I Afford? | YourCalculatorHub

🏡 House Affordability Calculator: How Much House Can I Afford?

Based on your income, debts, down payment & current rates — accurate affordability analysis using the 28/36 rule and real lender standards.

📋 Your Financial Profile

🏠 Maximum Home Price You Can Afford
$265,000
Front-End DTI: 24% | Back-End DTI: 28%
Max Monthly Payment (PITI)
$1,875
Principal + Interest
$1,350
Down Payment %
11%
Loan Amount
$235,000
Monthly PMI (if <20%)
$98
Taxes + Ins + HOA
$300

* 28/36 rule applied. PMI estimated at 0.85% annually when down payment < 20%.

📌 What Is a House Affordability Calculator?

Unlike basic mortgage calculators that only show principal and interest, a house affordability calculator factors your complete financial picture: gross income, existing debt obligations (car loans, student loans, credit cards), down payment, local property tax rates, homeowners insurance, PMI, and HOA fees. By applying the banking industry's 28/36 rule, we compute a responsible home price ceiling — giving you a stress-tested budget before you start house hunting. This is the same methodology used by mortgage underwriters to pre-approve buyers.

⚙️ How Our Calculator Works (Lender-Grade Logic)

First, your gross monthly income is calculated. The maximum housing expense (principal, interest, taxes, insurance, PMI, HOA) is capped at 28% of that income — this is the front-end DTI. Your total monthly debt (including the new housing payment) cannot exceed 36% of income — the back-end DTI. Using your interest rate and loan term, we reverse-solve for the largest loan you qualify for, then add your down payment to get the final affordable home price. If down payment is under 20%, a PMI premium (0.85% annual industry average) is automatically included.

📐 Mathematical Formula Used
Max Loan = P where P satisfies:
P × [r(1+r)^n] / [(1+r)^n - 1] ≤ (Monthly Income × 0.28) - (Tax/12 + Insurance/12 + HOA + PMI)
Then Affordable Price = Max Loan + Down Payment

💡 Complete Worked Example (Step-by-Step)

Scenario: $90,000 annual income = $7,500/month gross. Max housing (28%) = $2,100. Existing debts: $500/month car loan → total debt max (36%) = $2,700 → Remaining for housing = $2,200 (capped at $2,100). Property tax + insurance + HOA = $400/month → Available for principal & interest = $1,700. Using 7% interest rate over 30 years → Max loan ≈ $255,000. With 10% down ($28,333) → Final affordable home price = $283,333. That's your safe budget according to conventional underwriting.

✅ Benefits of Using This Tool

❓ Frequently Asked Questions (Featured Snippet Optimized)

How much house can I afford with a $60k salary?
With $60k income ($5,000/month), max housing is $1,400 (28%). After $300 for taxes/insurance, P&I = $1,100 → approximately $170,000–$190,000 home price with 10% down at 7% interest rate.
What is the 28/36 rule for mortgage approval?
The 28/36 rule is a lender guideline: housing costs (PITI) should not exceed 28% of gross monthly income, and total debt payments (including housing) should not exceed 36%. This calculator strictly enforces these caps.
Does PMI affect how much home I can afford?
Yes. PMI adds $100–$250 per month, reducing your maximum affordable home price by roughly 5-8%. Putting 20% down eliminates PMI and increases buying power.
30-year vs 15-year: which gives higher affordability?
The 30-year mortgage provides lower monthly payments, so you qualify for a significantly higher purchase price (typically 20-25% more). The 15-year builds equity faster but reduces max price.
What credit score do I need for the best affordability?
A score of 740+ typically qualifies for the lowest rates, which can increase affordability by $30,000–$50,000 compared to a 660 score at the same income level.

🏆 About This Tool — Accuracy & Trust

🔒 Data Privacy: All calculations run entirely within your browser using JavaScript. No loan data, personal information, or calculation inputs are ever transmitted to our servers, stored, sold, or shared. Your privacy is 100% protected.

📐 Accuracy Note: Our calculator uses the standard fixed-rate loan amortization formula identical to CFPB-regulated lenders and certified financial planners. The 28/36 rule follows Fannie Mae underwriting guidelines. PMI calculation uses industry average rates (0.85% annually). Results are estimates; consult a licensed mortgage professional for official pre-approval.

📅 Last Updated: May 2025 — Rates and guidelines reflect current market conditions.