City Mortgage Guide · 2026

Buying a Home in
Seattle, WA
The Honest Breakdown

Median prices, monthly payments, salary requirements, and a licensed banker's take on the Seattle market. No fluff.

$750,000
Median Home Price
$4,729/mo
Est. Total Payment
$200,000
Min. Salary Needed
0.87%
Property Tax Rate

The Numbers at a Glance

The median home price in Seattle is approximately $750,000 as of early 2026. With a standard 20% down payment of $150,000 and current rates around 7.1%, here's what your monthly costs look like:

Cost ComponentMonthly AmountNotes
Principal & Interest$4,0107.1% rate, 30-year fixed
Property Tax$5440.87% annual rate
Homeowner's Insurance$175Estimate — get local quotes
Total PITI$4,729Before HOA, utilities

To keep housing costs at the recommended 28% of gross income, you'd need an annual salary of approximately $200,000. At 36% DTI (the conventional maximum), the requirement drops slightly but leaves less financial breathing room.

Banker's Note on Seattle
Licensed Banking Pro · 23 Years Experience
Seattle is really two markets: the city itself (extremely expensive, often requires $250k+ household income) and the Eastside suburbs where Amazon and Microsoft campuses are (Bellevue, Redmond, Kirkland — expensive but more accessible with tech salaries). If you're in tech, the no-state-income-tax benefit is significant — saves $15,000-25,000/year vs. California. For everyone else, the math is very difficult. Renton and Bothell offer the best value in the metro area.

The Seattle Market in 2026

The Seattle housing market is currently very expensive, tech-driven, with prices down from 2022 peak but still very high. Here's how it stacks up across the key metrics buyers care about:

MetricSeattleUS Average
Median Home Price$750,000~$420,000
Property Tax Rate0.87% (low)~1.1%
Monthly PITI (median home)$4,729~$2,800
Down Payment (20%)$150,000~$84,000
Salary Needed (28% DTI)$200,000~$120,000

Pros & Cons of Buying in Seattle

✅ Pros
  • No state income tax
  • Highest average tech salaries in the US
  • Strong long-term appreciation
⚠️ Watch Out For
  • Requires very high income
  • Traffic is severe
  • Rain 9 months/year

Best Neighborhoods & Suburbs

Where you buy matters as much as what you buy. These Seattle area neighborhoods offer the best combination of value, schools, and livability:

Bellevue · Redmond · Kirkland · Renton · Bothell
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What Salary Do You Need to Buy in Seattle?

Based on the median home price of $750,000 and a 20% down payment:

DTI TargetMax Monthly HousingRequired SalaryComfort Level
28% (conservative)$4,729/mo$200,000✓ Comfortable
36% (standard)$4,729/mo$157,633✓ Approved
43% (maximum)$4,729/mo$131,972⚠ Stretched

See the full affordability breakdown for your salary level in our mortgage affordability guide.

Should You Buy or Rent in Seattle?

The buy vs. rent decision depends on how long you plan to stay, local appreciation rates, and your personal financial situation. As a general rule: if you're staying less than 3-4 years, renting is usually smarter. Beyond that, the math typically favors buying in most Seattle neighborhoods.

Run the full 30-year comparison for Seattle in our Buy vs. Rent Calculator.