๐Ÿ’ฐ Financial

How Much House Can I Afford in 2026?

You've been scrolling Zillow for months. You found a gorgeous place with a huge kitchen and a backyard. But before you fall in love, there's one question you need to answer: can you actually afford it?

Most people skip this step and end up "house poor" โ€” they can make the mortgage payment, but there's nothing left for life. Let's make sure that doesn't happen to you.

The 28/36 Rule: Your Starting Point

Lenders use the 28/36 rule as a guideline for how much you should spend on housing:

28% Rule: Your total monthly housing payment (mortgage + taxes + insurance) should be no more than 28% of your gross monthly income.

36% Rule: Your total monthly debt (housing + car + student loans + credit cards) should be no more than 36% of your gross monthly income.

Let's Do a Quick Example

Say you earn $75,000 per year ($6,250/month gross).

Using the 28% rule: $6,250 ร— 0.28 = $1,750/month maximum housing payment.

That $1,750 needs to cover your mortgage principal, interest, property taxes, and homeowners insurance (PITI). In most markets with current rates, that puts you in the $250,000 - $300,000 home price range with 10-20% down.

What Lenders Actually Look At

When you apply for a mortgage, lenders dig into three main things:

1. Your DTI (Debt-to-Income Ratio) โ€” This is the big one. Add up all your monthly debt payments and divide by your gross income. Most lenders want this under 43%, though getting below 36% gives you better rates.

2. Your Credit Score โ€” This determines your interest rate. A 740+ score gets you the best rates. Even a 0.5% rate difference can cost $30,000+ over a 30-year loan. Check your score for free at annualcreditreport.com before you start shopping.

3. Your Down Payment โ€” More down = lower payment and no PMI (private mortgage insurance). PMI typically costs 0.5-1% of your loan annually. On a $300,000 loan, that's $125-250/month you're paying for insurance that protects the lender, not you.

The Costs Everyone Forgets

Your mortgage payment is just the beginning. Budget for these too:

Property Taxes: Vary wildly by location. In Texas, expect 2-3% of home value. In Hawaii, under 0.5%. This can easily add $200-500/month.

Homeowners Insurance: Usually $100-250/month depending on location and coverage.

Maintenance: Budget 1% of your home's value per year. A $300,000 home = $3,000/year ($250/month) for repairs. This isn't optional โ€” things break.

HOA Fees: If applicable, $200-500/month for condos and planned communities.

Closing Costs: 2-5% of the home price, paid upfront. On a $300,000 home, that's $6,000-$15,000.

A More Realistic Budget Framework

Instead of using just the 28% rule, try this more conservative approach:

๐Ÿ’ก The CalcDrop Recommendation

Take your monthly take-home pay (not gross) and multiply by 25%. That's your true comfortable housing budget. It's more conservative than the 28% rule, but it leaves room for saving, investing, and actually enjoying your life.

Crunch Your Numbers

Ready to see exactly what you can afford? Use our free mortgage calculator โ€” it factors in taxes, insurance, and even gives you AI-powered insights on whether a home fits your budget.

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The Bottom Line

Don't let a lender tell you what you can afford โ€” figure it out yourself. Use the 25% of take-home pay rule, factor in all the hidden costs, and run the numbers with our calculator. A house should make your life better, not make you stressed every month.