Phase 2 · Wealth & Leverage

Home Affordability Calculator

Not what the bank will approve — what you can actually live with. Work backward from your income through the 28/36 rule, taxes and insurance included, to an honest maximum price.

Your inputs

Six levers. The max price re-solves on every tick.

$90000

Household income before tax.

$500/mo

Car, student loans, credit cards.

$40000

Cash you'll put down.

7%

Interest rate on the loan.

30 yr

Length of the mortgage.

1.5%/yr

Annual % of home value.

Max home price
What the 28/36 rule supports.
Max monthly payment (PITI)
Loan amount
Binding limit
Down payment

Under the hood

The math, fully exposed

We take the tighter of the two 28/36 limits, then solve the price that fits — taxes and all:

Max payment = min(28% × income⁄12, 36% × income⁄12 − other debts)
Payment factor k = r(1+r)n ⁄ ((1+r)n−1)  (r = rate⁄12, n = months)
Max price = (max payment + down × k) ⁄ (k + tax&ins ⁄ 12)
Loan = max price − down payment
  • Two ceilings, take the lower: the 28% housing cap or the 36% total-debt cap — whichever binds first sets your budget.
  • Taxes ride inside the 28%: property tax and insurance share the payment with principal and interest, so a high-tax area buys less house.
  • Comfort, not approval: lenders allow far more; this targets a payment that still leaves room to live and save.

Your directives

What to do next, based on your numbers

Adjust the sliders to generate tailored recommendations.

Answers

Frequently asked questions

How much house can I afford on my income?
The classic guide is the 28/36 rule: keep your total housing payment (principal, interest, taxes and insurance) under 28% of gross monthly income, and all debt payments combined under 36%. This calculator applies both limits, takes the lower one, then works backward through the mortgage math — including property tax and insurance — to the maximum home price those limits support.
Why is this lower than what my lender approved?
Lenders often approve up to 43–50% debt-to-income, which is what you can borrow, not what you should. Borrowing the maximum leaves you "house poor" — little room for savings, emergencies or life. The 28/36 rule targets a payment you can live with comfortably, which is why the number here is usually well below the bank's ceiling. The approval is the cap; this is the comfort zone.
How do taxes, insurance and PMI change the answer?
A lot. Your real housing payment is PITI — principal, interest, taxes and insurance — not just the loan payment. Property tax and insurance can add hundreds a month, and that money is part of the 28% limit, so it directly lowers the price you can afford. If your down payment is under 20%, private mortgage insurance (PMI) is added on top, reducing affordability further — favor 20% down to avoid it.
Is a bigger down payment always better?
It raises the price you can afford and, at 20%, removes PMI — but do not drain your emergency fund to get there. A home you cannot maintain or that leaves you with no cash buffer is riskier than a slightly smaller one. Balance the down payment against keeping three to six months of expenses liquid. This is an educational model, not financial advice — confirm with a lender.