HomeBuyCheck logohomebuycheck.com28/36 DTI Rule

How Much House Can I Afford
on a $60,000 Salary?

On a $60,000 salary, the 28/36 rule limits your housing payment to $1,400/month. With 10% down at a 7% rate, that buys a home up to $172,000. Adjust for your down payment and existing debts below.

28/36 rule — $60,000 income

Gross monthly income$5,000
Max housing (28%)$1,400
Max total debt (36%)$1,800
Max home price (10% down, 7%)$172,000

Maximum home price by rate and down payment

6.5% mortgage rate — 30-year fixed

Down paymentAmountMax home priceMonthly PITI
3.5% down (FHA minimum)$2,100$175,000$1,398/mo
5% down$3,000$176,000$1,400/mo
10% down$6,000$178,000$1,396/mo
20% down (no PMI)$12,000$183,000$1,396/mo

7% mortgage rate — 30-year fixed

Down paymentAmountMax home priceMonthly PITI
3.5% down (FHA minimum)$2,100$168,000$1,397/mo
5% down$3,000$169,000$1,399/mo
10% down$6,000$172,000$1,403/mo
20% down (no PMI)$12,000$177,000$1,402/mo

7.5% mortgage rate — 30-year fixed

Down paymentAmountMax home priceMonthly PITI
3.5% down (FHA minimum)$2,100$162,000$1,401/mo
5% down$3,000$163,000$1,403/mo
10% down$6,000$165,000$1,398/mo
20% down (no PMI)$12,000$170,000$1,397/mo

Assumes no existing monthly debts and 30-year fixed mortgage. Property tax estimated at 1.1% annually. Homeowner insurance at 0.5%. PMI at 0.5% of loan for down payments below 20%.

PMI math on a $60,000 salary

Putting down less than 20% on a $60,000 income triggers PMI at roughly 0.5% of the loan per year. On a $172,000 home, that is $830/year in extra cost until you reach 20% equity. Saving to the 20% threshold eliminates this entirely and reduces monthly payment by $69/month.

Run your exact numbers

Do not include rent — only recurring debt obligations.

Less than 20% of the home price triggers PMI (private mortgage insurance).

Buying and selling within 5 years rarely covers transaction costs.

Frequently asked questions

How much house can I afford on a $60,000 salary?

On a $60,000 salary with 10% down and a 7% mortgage rate, you can afford a home up to $172,000. Using the conservative 20% down at 6.5%, that rises to $183,000. These figures assume no existing monthly debts. The 28/36 DTI rule limits your housing payment to $1,400/month.

What is the 28/36 rule for a $60,000 income?

The 28/36 rule says your housing costs should not exceed 28% of gross monthly income and total debts should not exceed 36%. On a $60,000 salary, that means maximum housing costs of $1,400/month and maximum total debt payments of $1,800/month. Most conventional lenders use these thresholds.

How much should I put down on a $60k salary?

With a $60,000 income, a 10% down payment is $6,000 and a 20% down payment is $12,000. The 20% threshold eliminates PMI (typically 0.5% of the loan annually), which saves $830/year at this income level. FHA loans allow 3.5% down but require mortgage insurance for the life of the loan.

Can I afford a house on $60k with existing debt?

Existing debts reduce your maximum home price directly. The 36% back-end DTI limit means all monthly debts — car payment, student loans, credit cards, and your new mortgage — cannot exceed $1,800/month combined. Each $500/month in existing debts reduces your maximum home price by roughly $70,000-$90,000 at current rates. Use the calculator above to model your exact situation.

Other income levels