Affordability Analysis · 2026

Can I Afford a House on a $100K Salary?

Short answer: yes — but probably not the house you're imagining. Here's what a 23-year banking veteran says you can realistically buy.

Max Home Price
$295K
Conservative (28% rule)
Bank Will Approve
$455K
Maximum (43% DTI)

How Much House Can You Afford on $100K?

Your $100K salary translates to $7,500/month gross income. Here's exactly how lenders calculate your home buying power in 2026.

Financial data table
ScenarioMax Home PriceMonthly Payment
Banker's Recommendation (22%)$230K$1,638
Conservative Rule (28%)$295K$2,101
Bank Maximum (43% DTI)$455K$3,241
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Licensed Banking Professional
23 Years · Mortgage Specialist
On a $100K salary, the bank will approve you up to $455K. I recommend staying at $230K-$295K. The difference is $852/month — and that money is the difference between building wealth and just surviving.

Down Payment & Cash Requirements

Financial data table
ItemAmount (Based on $295K Home)
Down Payment (20%)$59,000
Closing Costs (3%)$8,850
Moving + Repairs Buffer$5,000
6-Month Emergency Fund$12,607
Total Cash Needed$85,457

What Hurts Your Buying Power on $100K?

→ Get Your Personalized Number

Your actual buying power depends on your specific debts, credit score, and down payment. Use our mortgage calculator for a precise estimate.

What Salary Do You Need for a $700K House in 2026?

With 20% down ($140K) at 7.1%: you need approximately $176,000/year.

With 10% down ($70K): approximately $198,000/year.

These use the 28% gross income housing rule. Your real comfortable number may be lower.

Cities where $700K is near median:

Boston MA · Seattle WA · San Diego CA · Washington DC suburbs

Monthly payment breakdown:

Principal & Interest (20% down): $3,766/mo

Property tax (avg 1.1%): $642/mo

Insurance + maintenance: $583/mo

Real all-in total: ~$4,991/mo