Mortgage Affordability Calculator
Estimate how much mortgage you can afford.
Estimated maximum home price
$403,884.88
Max monthly housing payment
$2,300.00
Max loan amount
$363,884.88
How to use Mortgage Affordability Calculator
What this calculator does
This calculator estimates how expensive a home you could finance based on your income rather than a specific property. You enter your gross annual income, your existing monthly debt payments, the cash you have for a down payment, an interest rate, a loan term and a target debt-to-income ratio. It works out the largest monthly housing payment that fits within that ratio, converts it into a maximum loan amount, and adds your down payment to estimate the highest home price you could reasonably aim for.
Why you might need it
When you start a home search it helps to know your ceiling before you fall in love with a listing. Lenders decide how much to lend largely from your debt-to-income ratio, so working backwards from income gives a realistic budget. This is useful for first-time buyers sizing up the market, for anyone deciding how much to save for a down payment, and for understanding how paying down an existing loan — and freeing up monthly cash flow — changes what you can afford.
It is just as helpful in a few specific situations. If you are weighing a job offer in a new city, you can plug in the new salary and quickly see how the local market lines up with your income. If you are deciding between clearing a car loan now or keeping the cash, you can compare the affordable price with and without that monthly payment. And if you are saving toward a target home price, you can rearrange the numbers to see how much extra down payment, or how much lower an interest rate, would close the gap. In every case the point is the same: a quick income-based estimate keeps your search anchored to what is realistic.
How to use it
- Enter your gross annual income before tax.
- Enter your total monthly debt payments — car loans, student loans, minimum credit-card payments and similar obligations.
- Enter the down payment cash you have available.
- Enter the interest rate and loan term you expect.
- Set the debt-to-income ratio; 36% is a common conservative starting point.
- Pick your currency and read the estimated maximum home price.
How it’s calculated
First the tool finds the largest monthly payment available for housing:
maxPayment = (annualIncome ÷ 12) × (DTI ÷ 100) − monthlyDebts
That is the DTI share of monthly income, reduced by the debts you already pay.
Then it back-solves the amortization formula to find the loan that payment can
support. With a monthly rate r and n monthly payments:
maxLoan = maxPayment × (1 − (1 + r)^−n) ÷ r
This is the standard present-value-of-an-annuity formula. When the rate is zero
it reduces to maxLoan = maxPayment × n. Finally, the estimated maximum home
price is the maximum loan plus your available down payment, because the loan
covers only the part of the price you do not pay in cash.
As a worked example, suppose you earn 90,000 a year, pay 400 a month in existing debts, and use a 36% DTI. The DTI share of monthly income is 7,500 × 0.36 = 2,700, and subtracting the 400 of debts leaves a maximum housing payment of 2,300. At a 6% annual rate over 30 years the monthly rate is 0.005 and there are 360 payments, so the supportable loan is roughly 2,300 × (1 − 1.005^−360) ÷ 0.005, about 383,000. Add a 60,000 down payment and the estimated maximum home price is around 443,000.
Common pitfalls
The biggest misreading is treating the result as a property budget that already includes taxes and insurance — it does not. Because property tax, home insurance and HOA dues also count toward the monthly housing cost, the price you can truly afford is lower than this loan-only estimate. Another pitfall is using net income instead of gross; DTI guidelines are based on gross income. Remember too that lenders look at credit history, employment and reserves, not DTI alone.
Tips
Try several DTI values to see how much the answer moves — affordability is very sensitive to that ratio. Pay particular attention to the effect of clearing a debt: removing a monthly payment can raise the affordable price noticeably. Once you have a target price, run it through a full mortgage calculator that adds tax and insurance to get a complete monthly figure. The output here is an informational estimate for planning, not a lending decision or financial advice.
Scope and limitations
This is a pre-qualification estimator, not a substitute for formal lender pre-approval. The single most important caveat: real lenders apply your DTI cap to the full PITI, while this tool applies it only to P&I.
- PITI vs P&I. Lenders sum P&I + property tax/12 + insurance/12
- monthly HOA + PMI (for sub-20 % down) and compare that sum against the DTI cap. This tool stops at P&I. So if you plug in a 36 % DTI and the tool says you can finance a $443K home, a real lender doing the same DTI math against full PITI will likely cap you somewhere closer to $355K–$400K — 10–25 % lower — for the same income and debts. The exact gap depends on local property-tax rates and insurance costs.
- Front-end vs back-end DTI. US lenders typically apply two DTI caps simultaneously — a “front-end” cap of around 28 % on housing alone, and a “back-end” cap of 36–43 % on total debt including housing. Whichever yields the lower allowed amount wins. This tool uses one combined DTI; pick whichever cap is stricter for your lender.
- Credit score, reserves, employment. Lenders look at far more than DTI — credit score determines both whether you qualify and what rate you get; cash reserves (months of payment held back) factor into underwriting; employment history matters for self-employed applicants. None of these can be modeled by an income-only calculator.
Use this number as a rough search ceiling when browsing listings, then run a full mortgage calculator with property tax and insurance on each candidate home. For the binding figure, get a free Loan Estimate from a lender after sharing your credit profile.
Frequently asked questions
What is a debt-to-income ratio?
Why does the result drop when I add monthly debts?
Does this include taxes, insurance and PMI? Will a real lender approve this number?
What DTI ratio should I use?
Is my income information sent anywhere?
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