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How Much House Can I Afford If I Make $75,000?

See your maximum home price on a $75,000 income under the 28/36 DTI rule lenders use — then adjust debts and down payment below to match your own numbers.

Quick Answer

On a $75,000 income with typical debts and a $60,000 down payment, you could afford a home up to about $336,869, with a monthly payment near $1,750.

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Affordability Estimate

Maximum Home Price

$336,869

28% front-end DTI · 6.5% APR · 30yr

Max Monthly Payment$1,750/mo
Down Payment$60,000
Max Loan Amount$276,869
Total DTI with Mortgage32.8%

Estimates P&I only. Your actual payment will include property taxes, homeowner's insurance, and possibly PMI. Approval and final rate depend on credit score, lender policies, and market conditions.

$75,000 Income: Home Price by Down Payment

Estimated at a 6.5% APR over 30 years with $300/month in existing debts. A bigger down payment raises your ceiling dollar-for-dollar.

Down PaymentMax Home PriceMax Monthly Payment
$0$276,869$1,750/mo
$20,000$296,869$1,750/mo
$40,000$316,869$1,750/mo
$60,000$336,869$1,750/mo
$100,000$376,869$1,750/mo

$75,000 Income: Home Price by Monthly Debt

Existing debts — car loans, student loans, credit cards — eat directly into your borrowing power. Here's how a $75,000 income's max home price changes with a $60,000 down payment at different debt levels.

Monthly DebtsMax Home PriceMax Monthly Payment
$0/mo$336,869$1,750/mo
$300/mo$336,869$1,750/mo
$600/mo$321,048$1,650/mo
$1,000/mo$257,764$1,250/mo

Frequently Asked Questions

How much house can I afford if I make $75,000?
With a $75,000 income, average debts ($300/month), and a $60,000 down payment, you could likely afford a home up to about $336,869 — a maximum monthly payment near $1,750 under the lender 28/36 rule.
What is the 28/36 rule?
Lenders cap your housing payment at 28% of gross monthly income (front-end ratio) and your total debt payments — including the new mortgage — at 36% (back-end ratio, or DTI). Your borrowing power is the lower of the two limits.
How much does my down payment change what I can afford?
Every extra dollar of down payment adds directly to your home price ceiling, on top of the maximum loan your income supports. A larger down payment can also eliminate PMI once you reach 20%.
How do existing debts affect affordability at this income?
Monthly debt payments — car loans, student loans, credit cards — reduce the back-end (36%) limit dollar-for-dollar, which can lower your maximum home price even if your income stays the same.

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