Mortgage Affordability Calculator
Estimate how much you might borrow and the home price you could target.
A rough estimate of principal and interest only — it excludes taxes, insurance and fees, and is not a mortgage offer or financial advice. Lenders assess more than these figures.
How affordability is estimated
Lenders typically limit your total debt payments to a share of your gross monthly income — the debt-to-income ratio. Subtracting your existing debts from that allowance leaves a budget for the mortgage payment.
budget = income ÷ 12 × DTI − existing debts
That monthly budget is then worked backwards through the standard loan formula, at your rate and term, to find the loan it supports. Adding your deposit gives an estimated home price. Because it ignores taxes and insurance, the real figure a lender uses is usually a little lower.
On a $60,000 income with $300 of monthly debts, a 36% debt-to-income limit leaves about $1,500 a month for a mortgage. At 6% over 30 years that supports roughly a $250,000 loan, or about a $270,000 home with a $20,000 deposit.
Borrowing the max is rarely the goal
What you can borrow and what is comfortable to repay are different questions. The largest loan a lender allows can leave little room for emergencies, rate rises or life changes, so many people deliberately borrow below their ceiling.
Things that move the number
- Rate and term. A higher rate or shorter term lowers the loan a given budget supports.
- Existing debts. Clearing other commitments frees up monthly budget for a mortgage.
- Hidden costs. Taxes, insurance and maintenance are real monthly money this estimate leaves out.
This is general information, not financial advice.