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The Home Affordability Calculator determines how much house you can afford based on your gross income, existing debts, down payment, and current mortgage rates using the industry-standard 28/36 rule. Under this rule, your monthly housing costs (mortgage principal, interest, taxes, and insurance, known as PITI) should not exceed 28% of your gross monthly income (the front-end ratio), and your total monthly debt payments including housing should not exceed 36% of gross income (the back-end ratio). Lenders use these ratios as primary qualification benchmarks, though some loan programs like FHA allow higher ratios up to 31/43. The calculator reverse-engineers the maximum home price you can support given your financial profile. It factors in mortgage interest rates, loan term, property tax rates, homeowners insurance, PMI (if your down payment is below 20%), and HOA fees. For 2025, with average 30-year fixed rates around 6.8% and median home prices near $420,000, affordability has become one of the most critical calculations for prospective buyers. This tool is essential for first-time homebuyers setting realistic price ranges, real estate agents qualifying clients, and financial planners advising on housing decisions. It prevents the common and costly mistake of house-hunting above your means, which can lead to being 'house poor' with insufficient funds for savings, emergencies, and quality of life.
Max Monthly Housing Payment = Gross Monthly Income x 0.28 (front-end ratio). Max Total Debt Payment = Gross Monthly Income x 0.36 (back-end ratio). Max Housing from Back-End = Max Total Debt - Existing Monthly Debts. Binding Constraint = min(Front-End Max, Back-End Max Housing). Max Mortgage = Binding Payment x [(1 - (1 + r)^(-n)) / r], where r = monthly rate, n = months. Max Home Price = Max Mortgage / (1 - Down Payment %). Worked example: $100,000 income -> $8,333/mo gross. Front-end: $8,333 x 0.28 = $2,333. Back-end: $8,333 x 0.36 = $3,000. Minus $500 debts = $2,500. Binding = $2,333. At 6.8% / 360 months -> max mortgage ~$358,000. With 20% down -> max price ~$447,500.
- 1Enter your gross annual household income (before taxes). This is the primary driver of affordability. Include all stable, documentable income sources: salary, bonuses (if consistent), rental income, and any other recurring income that a lender would accept. For self-employed borrowers, lenders typically use the average of the last two years of tax returns.
- 2Input your existing monthly debt obligations: car payments, student loans, credit card minimum payments, personal loans, child support, and any other recurring debts. These reduce your borrowing capacity under the 36% back-end ratio. A $500/month car payment effectively reduces your maximum home price by approximately $75,000 at current rates.
- 3Specify your available down payment amount or percentage. A larger down payment increases your maximum purchase price and eliminates PMI if you reach 20%. The calculator shows how different down payment levels affect your purchasing power. For example, increasing your down payment from 10% to 20% on a $400,000 home saves approximately $150/month in PMI.
- 4Set the mortgage interest rate and loan term. The calculator defaults to current average rates (approximately 6.8% for a 30-year fixed in 2025), but you can adjust for your specific situation. A 15-year term reduces total interest by 50-60% but increases monthly payments by approximately 40%, significantly reducing the affordable price.
- 5Enter local property tax rate (national average is approximately 1.1% of assessed value), annual homeowners insurance estimate ($1,500-$3,000 typical range), and any HOA fees. These non-mortgage costs can account for 25-40% of your total monthly housing payment and are often underestimated by first-time buyers.
- 6The calculator applies both the 28% front-end and 36% back-end ratios simultaneously. The more restrictive of the two determines your maximum affordable payment. If you have significant existing debts, the back-end ratio will be the binding constraint. If you have little debt, the front-end ratio controls.
- 7Review the results showing your maximum affordable home price, estimated monthly payment breakdown (principal, interest, taxes, insurance, PMI), and a stress test showing how a 1-2% rate increase would affect your payment. The calculator also shows the total cost of the loan over its full term including all interest paid.
With $6,250 gross monthly income, the front-end limit is $1,750/month for housing. The back-end limit is $2,250 total debt minus $400 existing = $1,850 for housing. The front-end ratio ($1,750) is more restrictive and controls. The $30,000 down payment is approximately 10.7%, so PMI applies at roughly $93/month. Eliminating the student loans would increase buying power by approximately $60,000.
With no existing debts, both ratios yield the same maximum housing payment of $3,500. The $250 HOA fee reduces mortgage borrowing capacity by approximately $40,000. At 15.1% down, PMI would normally apply, but increasing the down payment to $106,000 (20%) would eliminate PMI and allow a slightly higher purchase price of ~$545,000.
Despite earning $200,000, the $2,200/month in existing debts severely limits housing affordability. The front-end ratio would allow $4,667/month for housing, but the back-end ratio caps total debt at $6,000, leaving only $3,800 for housing. Paying off the debts would increase the affordable price from $480,000 to approximately $625,000, a $145,000 improvement.
The 15-year mortgage has a higher monthly payment but dramatically reduces total interest. Compared to a 30-year at the same price, you would save approximately $180,000 in interest. However, the 15-year term reduces the maximum affordable home price from approximately $425,000 (30-year) to $325,000, a 24% reduction in purchasing power. The trade-off is lower price range but much faster equity building and total cost savings.
First-time homebuyers use the calculator to set a realistic price range before house-hunting, avoiding the emotional trap of falling in love with homes they cannot afford. A couple earning $95,000 combined might discover their comfortable range is $320,000-$370,000, allowing them to focus their search efficiently.
Real estate agents run affordability calculations during buyer consultations to pre-qualify clients and set appropriate search criteria. An agent can quickly show how paying off a $400/month car loan before applying would increase a client's buying power by $60,000.
Mortgage loan officers use affordability ratios to pre-screen applicants before running formal underwriting. The 28/36 rule provides a rapid assessment of whether a borrower is likely to qualify, saving time for both the lender and the applicant.
Financial planners help clients evaluate whether to stretch for a more expensive home or stay conservative. The calculator enables scenario analysis: what if rates drop 1%? What if you save another $20,000 for the down payment? What if you pay off student loans first?
Renters considering homeownership use the calculator to compare their current rent against what they could afford to buy, often discovering that their monthly housing cost as an owner would be comparable to or even lower than rent in high-cost markets.
Self-employed borrowers face stricter income documentation requirements
Lenders typically require two years of tax returns and calculate income as the average of the two years. Business deductions that reduce taxable income also reduce qualifying income. A self-employed person earning $150,000 gross but reporting $90,000 after deductions qualifies based on $90,000. This creates a tension between minimizing taxes and maximizing borrowing power.
High-cost areas may justify exceeding standard ratios
In markets like San Francisco, New York, and Boston where median home prices exceed 8-10 times median income, strict adherence to the 28/36 rule makes homeownership mathematically impossible for most residents. Some lenders in these markets allow front-end ratios up to 35-40% with compensating factors. Fannie Mae's HomeReady program and Freddie Mac's Home Possible program offer flexible DTI limits for low-to-moderate income borrowers in high-cost areas.
Student loan payment calculations vary by loan type
For income-driven repayment (IDR) plans, lenders may use the actual IDR payment (which could be $0 for low earners) or 0.5-1.0% of the total loan balance, whichever is higher. FHA requires 1% of the balance if the payment is $0. A borrower with $100,000 in student loans on IDR paying $200/month might be counted as having $500-$1,000/month in debt obligations, dramatically reducing affordability.
| Gross Annual Income | Max Monthly PITI (28%) | Max Home Price | Mortgage Amount |
|---|---|---|---|
| $50,000 | $1,167 | $195,000 | $156,000 |
| $75,000 | $1,750 | $295,000 | $236,000 |
| $100,000 | $2,333 | $395,000 | $316,000 |
| $125,000 | $2,917 | $495,000 | $396,000 |
| $150,000 | $3,500 | $590,000 | $472,000 |
| $200,000 | $4,667 | $790,000 | $632,000 |
| $250,000 | $5,833 | $985,000 | $788,000 |
What is the 28/36 rule and why does it matter?
The 28/36 rule is a lending guideline stating that housing costs should not exceed 28% of gross monthly income (front-end ratio) and total debt payments should not exceed 36% (back-end ratio). It matters because most conventional lenders use these thresholds to determine loan approval. Exceeding these ratios typically requires compensating factors like excellent credit, large reserves, or a very high down payment.
Can I still get a mortgage if I exceed the 28/36 ratios?
Yes. FHA loans allow ratios up to 31/43, and some lenders approve conventional loans with back-end ratios up to 45-50% for borrowers with strong compensating factors (credit score above 740, six months of reserves, low loan-to-value ratio). However, stretching beyond 36% total debt significantly increases the risk of financial stress. During the 2008 housing crisis, borrowers with high DTI ratios defaulted at 3-5 times the rate of borrowers within guidelines.
Should I include my partner's income if we're not married?
If you are applying for a joint mortgage, both incomes and both debt loads are included. If only one person is on the mortgage, only that person's income qualifies but also only their debts count. Sometimes it is advantageous for the higher-earning, lower-debt partner to apply alone. The trade-off is that you lose the other person's income for qualification purposes.
How much does a 1% change in interest rate affect affordability?
A 1% rate increase reduces purchasing power by approximately 10-12%. On a $400,000 mortgage at 6%, the monthly P&I payment is $2,398. At 7%, it jumps to $2,661, a $263/month increase. To maintain the same payment, you would need to reduce the loan amount by approximately $40,000. This is why even small rate changes significantly impact affordability.
Does the calculator account for future income growth?
No, and it should not. Lenders qualify you based on current documented income, not projected future earnings. Planning to 'grow into' a mortgage is risky. However, if you are confident about a near-term raise or promotion, you might choose to wait a few months and apply with the higher documented income.
What is PMI and how do I avoid it?
Private Mortgage Insurance (PMI) is required on conventional loans when the down payment is below 20%. It typically costs 0.5-1.5% of the loan amount annually ($100-$250/month on a $300,000 loan). You can avoid PMI by putting 20% down, choosing a VA loan (no PMI), or using a piggyback loan structure (80/10/10). PMI is automatically removed once you reach 20% equity.
Совет профессионала
Before house-hunting, get a full pre-approval (not just pre-qualification) from a lender. Pre-approval involves a credit check and income verification, giving you a concrete maximum purchase price. Then set your search ceiling 10-15% below that maximum to leave room for bidding wars, unexpected costs, and comfortable monthly payments that do not stretch your budget to the breaking point.
Знаете ли вы?
The 28/36 rule originated in the 1970s when the average home price was about 3 times the median household income. Today, the national median home price is approximately 5.5 times the median household income, and in cities like San Francisco it exceeds 12 times, making the original rule nearly impossible to follow in many markets.