House Affordability Calculator:
28/36 DTI Rule, Max Home Price Formula, Debt Penalty, and Lender Max vs True Max
At $100,000 annual income, 20% down, and no other monthly debts, the 28% front-end DTI formula produces a maximum home price of $347,000 at current 6.80% rates. Add a $400/month car payment and that drops to $271,000 — a $76,000 reduction from a single debt. Every $100/month of monthly obligations reduces your maximum home price by approximately $19,000 at current rates, a relationship that makes pre-purchase debt paydown one of the most leveraged affordability improvements available to buyers who are below their target price range.
How much house you can afford depends on three inputs that interact non-linearly: gross income (which sets the DTI cap), monthly debt obligations (which compete with the mortgage for DTI budget), and down payment (which determines the loan amount required for a given home price). The 28/36 rule — housing at or below 28% of gross income, all debts at or below 36% — is the conventional standard that has governed mortgage underwriting for decades. Understanding how to apply it precisely, and why the lender-approved maximum often exceeds what is financially wise, is the foundation of sound home-buying budget-setting.
Two separate calculations run simultaneously: the front-end DTI (housing expense only) and the back-end DTI (all monthly debts combined). The lower of the two results is the binding constraint on the maximum home price. Buyers with significant other debt — car loans, student loans, credit card minimums — often find the back-end constraint more binding than the front-end, producing maximum home prices well below what their income alone would suggest. The reverse is also true: buyers with zero monthly debt find the front-end constraint the only operative limit, maximizing their purchasing power from a given income.
Three Affordability Formulas: Front-End DTI, Back-End DTI, and Max Home Price
The three formulas below work sequentially: front-end DTI produces the maximum PITI from income, back-end DTI cross-checks that amount against total debt load, the lower of the two becomes the max P&I budget, and the annuity formula converts max P&I into the maximum loan and then the maximum home price.
1. FRONT-END DTI (HOUSING BUDGET)
2. BACK-END DTI (TOTAL DEBT CHECK)
3. MAX LOAN AND HOME PRICE (ANNUITY PV FORMULA)
The “$19,000 debt penalty” embedded in the third legend note is worth examining in more detail because it represents one of the most actionable affordability insights for buyers who are below their target price range. At 6.80% for 30 years with 20% down, a buyer who pays off $300/month in monthly debt obligations (a car payment, for example) before applying for a mortgage increases their maximum home price by approximately $57,000 — with zero change in income and zero change in down payment. The same $300/month car payment, if redirected to additional down payment savings for 12 months, produces only $3,600 in additional down payment — adding a fraction of the $57,000 in affordability that simply eliminating the payment provides.
Four Affordability Scenarios: Income, Debt, and Down Payment Combinations
The four cards below show how affordability shifts across different combinations of income, debt load, and down payment for a buyer earning $100,000 annually. The fourth card shows the “lender-approved maximum” versus the “28/36 prudent maximum” gap that every buyer should understand before starting the home search.
The fourth card’s gap — $347,000 at 28% DTI versus $497,000 at 45% DTI on the same $100,000 income — represents the most important affordability insight in the article: the lender-approved maximum and the financially wise maximum are not the same number, and are often separated by $100,000 to $200,000 in home price. At 45% back-end DTI with no other monthly debts, the buyer is allocating $3,750/month to housing from $8,333/month in gross income. After federal and state income taxes (approximately 27-32% effective rate at $100K income), the buyer’s take-home pay is roughly $5,900/month. After paying $3,750 in housing, only $2,150 remains for all other expenses, savings, retirement, and emergencies — a genuinely tight financial position that conventional underwriting permits but financial planning would not recommend.
Calculate Your Maximum Home Price Using the 28/36 Rule
Enter your gross income, monthly debt payments, down payment, interest rate, property tax rate, and insurance estimate to calculate your front-end and back-end DTI limits, maximum loan, and maximum home price at the 28% prudent guideline and the lender 43-45% maximum.
Open the Affordability CalculatorFull Affordability Calculation: $100,000 Income, 20% Down, No Debt
The data block below traces every step of the affordability calculation for the baseline scenario: $100,000 annual income, 20% down payment, no other monthly debts, 6.80% interest rate, 30-year term, and estimated property taxes and insurance for a home in the $300,000-$400,000 range.
The data block’s final line — $347,000 maximum home price on $100,000 income with 20% down and no debt — is the anchor number for the entire affordability analysis. Departures from these baseline conditions shift the result systematically: more debt reduces it (by $19,000 per $100/month), less down payment also reduces it (because PMI eats into the available P&I budget), and higher income increases it proportionally. The monthly tax estimate ($400) used in the calculation assumes 1.20% property tax rate on the eventual home value — if the target market has higher property taxes (Texas at 1.8-2.5%, New Jersey at 2.0-2.5%), the max PITI budget must support a larger tax component, further reducing the P&I available and compressing the maximum loan and home price.
The Debt Penalty Table: How Monthly Obligations Reduce Home Price
The debt penalty table below quantifies the reduction in maximum home price for each level of monthly non-housing debt, assuming $100,000 annual income, 20% down payment, 6.80% rate, and 36% back-end DTI. The table makes the leverage of pre-purchase debt paydown visible in concrete dollar terms.
| Monthly Debt Load | Example Debts | Back-End Max PITI | Max P&I Available | Max Loan | Max Home Price | Reduction from No-Debt |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $0 / month | No other debts | $3,000 | $1,808 (front-end limits) | $277,400 | $347,000 | Baseline |
| $200 / month | Small car payment | $2,800 | $1,808 (front-end still limits) | $277,400 | $347,000 | $0 (front-end binding) |
| $333 / month | Back-end becomes binding | $2,667 | $1,808 → $2,667-$525=$2,142 — wait, back-end now binding | $247,700 | $309,600 | -$37,400 |
| $500 / month | Car $350 + student $150 | $2,500 | $1,975 | $302,700 | $290,300 | -$56,700 |
| $700 / month | Car $450 + student $250 | $2,300 | $1,775 | $272,100 | $340,100 | Modest reduction |
| $1,000 / month | Large car + student loans | $2,000 | $1,475 | $226,200 | $282,750 | -$64,250 |
| $1,500 / month | Two cars + high student debt | $1,500 | $975 | $149,500 | $186,875 | -$160,125 |
| $100,000 annual income ($8,333/month gross), 20% down payment, 6.80% 30-year rate, 36% back-end DTI limit. Estimated property tax and insurance: $525/month. Max home price = max loan / 0.80. Binding constraint is the LOWER of front-end (28%) and back-end (36%) result. Front-end becomes non-binding when monthly debts exceed approximately $333/month, after which back-end DTI is always the limiting factor. At $1,500/month in other debts, maximum affordable home price falls to $187,000 — potentially below the median home price in many US markets. | ||||||
The debt penalty table contains one counterintuitive result: at very low monthly debt levels ($200/month), the front-end DTI (28%) remains more restrictive than the back-end DTI (36%), so the additional debt has no impact on maximum home price. The front-end DTI only stops being the binding constraint when monthly non-housing debts exceed approximately $333/month (the point where the back-end calculation produces a lower PITI allowance than the front-end). Above that threshold, every additional $100/month in debt reduces maximum home price by approximately $19,000. The practical implication: buyers with $200/month in monthly debts are already limited by income (front-end DTI), not by their debt load, and paying off that debt provides no increase in home buying power. Only when debt exceeds approximately $333/month does paydown materially increase purchasing power.
Maximum Home Price by Income Level (20% Down, No Debt, 28% DTI)
The growth bars below show the maximum home price at five income levels using the 28% front-end DTI limit, 20% down payment, 6.80% interest rate, and standard property tax and insurance estimates. This provides a quick reference for buyers to assess their price range before running the full calculation.
The growth bars show the linear relationship between income and maximum home price when all other variables are held constant: each additional $10,000 in annual income adds approximately $34,700 in maximum home price at current rates (6.80% 30-year, 20% down, 28% DTI). This linear relationship breaks down when debt comes into play — a $150,000 income buyer with $1,500/month in monthly debts has a maximum home price of approximately $360,000, not the $521,000 suggested by income alone. The bars represent the no-debt, ideal-case maximum, which should be adjusted downward by $19,000 per $100/month of monthly obligations for each buyer’s specific debt load.
Income Required by Home Price: Working the Formula Backwards
| Target Home Price | Loan (20% dn) | Monthly P&I | Est. PITI Total | Income Req’d at 28% DTI | Income Req’d at 36% DTI (no other debts) | Income with $500 Other Debts (36%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $250,000 | $200,000 | $1,304 | $1,829 | $78,390/yr | $60,970/yr | $81,000/yr |
| $350,000 | $280,000 | $1,826 | $2,451 | $105,043/yr | $81,700/yr | $97,700/yr |
| $400,000 | $320,000 | $2,087 | $2,712 | $116,229/yr | $90,400/yr | $106,400/yr |
| $500,000 | $400,000 | $2,609 | $3,334 | $142,886/yr | $111,133/yr | $127,133/yr |
| $650,000 | $520,000 | $3,391 | $4,216 | $180,686/yr | $140,533/yr | $156,533/yr |
| $800,000 | $640,000 | $4,174 | $5,099 | $218,514/yr | $169,967/yr | $185,967/yr |
| 20% down, 6.80% 30-year rate. Estimated PITI = P&I + property tax (1.20% of home value / 12) + insurance ($125-$225/mo). Income required at 28% DTI = Annual PITI / (0.28/12). Income required at 36% DTI (no other debts) = Annual PITI / (0.36/12). Income with $500/month other debts at 36% back-end: adds ($500/0.36) x 12 = $16,667/yr to required income. Lower income requirements shown at 36% DTI reflect lender approval standards, not financial planning guidance. The 28% DTI column represents the income needed to comfortably afford each home price without financial stress. | ||||||
The income table answers the most common affordability question from a different direction: instead of asking “how much house can I afford on $X income?”, it asks “how much income do I need to comfortably afford a $Y home?” The $400,000 home column is particularly instructive: comfortable affordability (28% DTI) requires $116,229 per year, while lender approval (36% DTI, no other debts) is possible at $90,400 per year. The $25,829 income gap between “comfortable” and “lender-approved” translates to approximately $2,150/month in after-tax income — which at 36% DTI is fully consumed by the mortgage payment, leaving nothing for retirement savings, vacations, or unplanned expenses at the income level that technically qualifies.
Lender Maximum vs Truly Affordable Maximum
The 45% DTI Trap: Why Lender Approval Does Not Equal Comfortable Ownership
Automated underwriting systems (Fannie Mae’s DU, Freddie Mac’s LP) can approve mortgages up to 45-50% back-end DTI with compensating factors. At 45% DTI on $100,000 income: total monthly debts including housing = $8,333 x 45% = $3,750/month. If no other debts: PITI = $3,750. At 6.80% with $525 in tax/insurance, this supports a max loan of $492,000 and a max home of $615,000. The problem: after federal income taxes, state income taxes, and FICA at $100,000 income (approximately $27% effective rate), take-home pay is approximately $6,083/month. Paying $3,750/month in housing leaves $2,333/month for groceries, health insurance, car payments, clothing, utilities, phone, internet, retirement savings, entertainment, and all other life expenses. Financial planners widely agree that 45% DTI is housing insolvency waiting to happen when combined with any income reduction, large unexpected expense, or the natural maintenance costs of homeownership. The lender’s 45% maximum represents their default risk calculation, not your quality-of-life calculation.
Income Multiplier Rules of Thumb: 3x, 4x, and 5x
Before running the full DTI calculation, income multiplier rules of thumb provide a rapid first-pass estimate of affordable home price. The three common multipliers reflect different risk tolerance and rate environments.
3x, 4x, and 5x Income Rules: When Each Applies
3x annual income (conservative): Appropriate when income is variable or commission-based, when carrying significant other monthly debts, when interest rates are above 7%, or when the buyer is near retirement age and income may decline. At $100,000 income: $300,000 max. This rule was standard when 30-year mortgage rates were 5-6% and produces conservative results at current 6.80% rates. 4x annual income (moderate): Appropriate for stable W-2 employment, minimal other debts, and current interest rate levels (6-7%). At $100,000 income: $400,000 max. The formula-based 28% DTI calculation at 6.80% produces $347,000 for $100,000 income with 20% down and no debt — between the 3x and 4x multipliers. 5x annual income (aggressive): Only appropriate when interest rates are well below 5%, income is exceptionally stable and growing, other debts are minimal, and the buyer has substantial cash reserves. At $100,000 income: $500,000 max. At 6.80% rates, 5x income requires 44-45% DTI — approaching lender maximums and well above prudent guidelines. The multiplier rules are useful for cocktail-party estimation but should always be verified against the actual DTI formulas for any real purchase decision.
Home Affordability Planning Checklist
Frequently Asked Questions: House Affordability Calculator
How much house can I afford on $100,000 salary?+
At $100,000 income ($8,333/month gross), 20% down, 6.80% rate, no other debts: front-end max PITI = $8,333 x 28% = $2,333. Subtract tax ($400) + insurance ($125): max P&I = $1,808. Max loan at 6.80% 30yr = $277,400. Max home price = $347,000. With $500/month in other debts: back-end becomes binding. Max PITI = $8,333 x 36% – $500 = $2,500. Max P&I = $1,975. Max loan = $302,700. Max home = $279,600 — a $67,400 reduction from the no-debt scenario. Lenders may approve up to $497,000 at 45% DTI, but the prudent 28% maximum is $347,000. Use the 28% result as your shopping budget, not the 45% lender maximum.
What is the 28/36 rule for mortgage affordability?+
The 28/36 rule: spend no more than 28% of gross monthly income on housing (front-end DTI) and no more than 36% on all monthly debts combined (back-end DTI). Example: $8,333/month gross income. Front-end: $8,333 x 28% = $2,333 max PITI. Back-end: $8,333 x 36% = $3,000 max total debts. If you have $700/month in other debts: max PITI from back-end = $3,000 – $700 = $2,300. The lower of $2,333 (front-end) and $2,300 (back-end) = $2,300 maximum PITI. Lenders allow higher DTIs (43-45% back-end) through automated underwriting, but the 28/36 rule represents the financially prudent standard for long-term comfort.
How does debt affect how much house I can afford?+
The debt penalty: each $100/month in monthly non-housing debt payments reduces max home price by approximately $19,000 at 6.80%, 30yr, 20% down, 36% back-end DTI. This applies when monthly debts exceed approximately $333/month (at $100K income), the threshold where back-end becomes more restrictive than front-end. Examples: $200/month car payment: -$38,000 max home price. $400/month student loan minimum: -$76,000. $600/month total other debts: -$114,000. $1,000/month in debts: -$191,000. Pre-purchase debt paydown is 12.7x more effective at increasing max home price than saving equivalent amounts for additional down payment, when back-end DTI is the binding constraint.
What is the maximum mortgage I qualify for?+
Maximum loan = Max P&I x ((1+r)^n – 1) / (r x (1+r)^n). Max P&I = Lower of [Income x 28% – Tax – Insurance] and [Income x 36% – All monthly debts – Tax – Insurance]. At $100,000 income, 6.80%, 30yr, no debts: Max P&I = $1,808. Max loan = $1,808 x 6.653 / 0.04336 = $277,400. Lenders may approve higher DTIs (43-50%) through automated underwriting (Fannie DU, Freddie LP) with strong credit scores, significant cash reserves, or stable income. The approved maximum at 45% DTI on $100K income could reach approximately $492,000 — but this should not be confused with what is financially advisable to borrow.
How much income is needed for a $400,000 house?+
$400,000 home, 20% down ($80K), 6.80% rate: Loan = $320,000. Monthly P&I = $2,087. Property tax (1.2%) = $400. Insurance = $125. Total PITI = $2,612. At 28% DTI: required income = $2,612 / 0.28 = $9,329/month = $111,948/year. At 36% DTI (no other debts): $2,612 / 0.36 = $7,256/month = $87,067/year. With $500/month other debts at 36% DTI: required income rises to ($2,612 + $500) / 0.36 = $8,644/month = $103,733/year. The gap between comfortable 28% DTI requirement ($112K) and lender 36% minimum ($87K) represents the income buffer that determines whether homeownership is financially stress-free or stretched.
Is the 3x income rule for buying a house accurate?+
The 3x income rule is conservative at current rates. The formula-based 28% DTI calculation at 6.80% (20% down, no debt) produces 3.47x income for a $100K earner ($347K max on $100K income). At 3.5-4.0% mortgage rates (pre-2022), the same 28% DTI produced 4.0-4.5x income in max home price, making 4x income a more accurate rule for that rate environment. At 6.80% rates, approximate rules: Conservative (3x, no debt) for buyers with some debt or variable income. Moderate (3.5x, 28% DTI, no debt) for stable income with minimal debt. Aggressive (4.5x, 36% DTI, no debt) for buyers comfortable at lender approval thresholds. The formula-based calculation is always more accurate than any multiplier, especially as income, debt, rate, and down payment vary.
Should I spend what the lender approves?+
No. Lenders approve to 43-50% back-end DTI. At 45% DTI on $100,000 income: $3,750/month in combined housing plus debt payments. After taxes, take-home is approximately $6,000/month. After $3,750 housing: $2,250 left for all other expenses including food, transportation, healthcare, utilities, retirement savings, and emergencies. This is the financial equivalent of “house poor” — technically owning but unable to save, invest, or handle disruption without financial stress. The 28% DTI guideline leaves approximately $4,500/month in after-tax income after housing on the same $100K income — a meaningfully more comfortable financial position. The lender-approved maximum should be viewed as a borrowing ceiling, not a spending recommendation.
How does down payment affect how much house I can afford?+
Down payment affects affordability through loan size and PMI. At $100K income, 6.80%, no other debts, 28% DTI: 5% down: PMI ~$155/month. Max P&I = $2,333 – $525 (tax/ins) – $155 (PMI) = $1,653. Max loan = $253,500. Max home = $267,000. 10% down: PMI ~$120/month. Max P&I = $1,688. Max loan = $258,900. Max home = $287,700. 20% down: no PMI. Max P&I = $1,808. Max loan = $277,400. Max home = $347,000. Each 5% increase in down payment adds approximately $15,000-$30,000 to the affordable home price, primarily through PMI reduction rather than loan size change (since the P&I budget is set by the DTI limit, not the down payment itself).
What income do I need for a $500,000 house?+
$500,000 home, 20% down, 6.80% 30-year: Loan = $400,000. P&I = $2,609. Tax (1.2%) = $500. Insurance = $150. PITI = $3,259. At 28% DTI: $3,259 / 0.28 = $11,639/month = $139,668/year. At 36% DTI (no other debts): $3,259 / 0.36 = $9,053/month = $108,636/year. With $500/month other debts at 36%: ($3,259 + $500) / 0.36 = $10,442/month = $125,300/year. For households with two incomes, both incomes are combined for DTI calculation. A dual-income household earning $70,000 + $70,000 = $140,000 combined income can comfortably afford a $500,000 home at 28% DTI, whereas the same household income from one earner faces the same calculation result.
Key Takeaways
The maximum home price formula follows four sequential steps: front-end DTI limit (income x 28%) and back-end DTI cross-check (income x 36% minus monthly debts) to determine the maximum PITI budget; subtract property taxes, insurance, and PMI to get the max P&I; apply the annuity present value formula to convert max P&I to max loan; and divide by the down payment ratio to get the maximum home price. At $100,000 income with 20% down and no debt, this produces $347,000 at current 6.80% rates.
The three most actionable affordability insights from this analysis: every $100/month of monthly debt obligations reduces maximum home price by approximately $19,000 (making pre-purchase debt paydown a high-leverage affordability strategy), the lender-approved maximum at 45% DTI is approximately $150,000 higher than the prudent 28% maximum on $100,000 income (meaning the lender’s ceiling should not be confused with the buyer’s spending recommendation), and local property tax rates can reduce maximum home price by $50,000-$80,000 in high-tax jurisdictions relative to the same calculation in low-tax markets (making tax rate verification an essential step before finalizing any budget).
Calculate Your Personalized Maximum Home Price with DTI Analysis
Enter your gross income, monthly debts, down payment, interest rate, property tax rate, and HOA fees to calculate your front-end and back-end DTI limits, max loan, max home price at 28% and 43% DTI, and the debt paydown impact analysis. For related analysis, see our net worth calculator.
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