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How Much House Can You Actually Afford? (Forget the Bank’s Number)

OwnerHacks Editorial Team drafted this article for homeowners. Caleb Hollis then reviewed it for judgment, defensibility, and real-world housing relevance. Reviewer profileEditorial teamEditorial policyDisclaimer
Quick take

The affordable house is the one you can still like after taxes, insurance, and repairs show up.

Lender max is not your target. The useful number is the payment that still works when ownership gets expensive in the boring ways nobody advertises.

  • Start withMonthly comfort, not approval ceiling.
  • IncludeTaxes, insurance, HOA, maintenance drag, and the cash you still need after closing.
  • AvoidBuilding the budget around best-case rates and zero surprise costs.
Decision test

How buyers get trapped

Most affordability mistakes happen after someone proves they can technically qualify. Qualification and comfort are different numbers.

  • Run conservative and aggressive versions side by side
  • Account for escrow, not just principal and interest
  • Protect cash reserves after closing
Quick take

The bank tells you the max. Your budget decides the real number.

You can afford the house only if the full monthly housing load, mortgage, taxes, insurance, HOA, maintenance, and breathing room, fits cleanly inside take-home pay without killing savings or emergency reserves.

Use take-home pay25% to 30% is a safer targetCount the hidden costs

The lender approval number is not financial wisdom. It is a maximum allowed by underwriting. Those are different things.

Use the article this way: pick the scenario that matches your pressure level, then build the real monthly number, then sanity-check it with the Home Affordability Calculator. If you want the full budget stack buyers usually underestimate after closing, read The Real Monthly Cost of Owning a Home.

Scenario picker

Conservative buyer

You want room for savings, repairs, kids, travel, and normal life. Keep full housing closer to 25% of take-home.

Standard buyer

You can tolerate less margin but still want breathing room. Around 28% to 30% of take-home is usually where stress begins to show up.

Red-flag buyer

If the deal only works by ignoring maintenance, assuming taxes stay low, or draining reserves, the house is too expensive.

If you want the full breakdown of the monthly costs buyers undercount after approval, read The Real Monthly Cost of Owning a Home. This is where the payment fantasy usually dies.

Reality-check comparison

Budget testHealthy answerWarning signWhy it matters
Housing as share of take-homeAbout 25% to 30%Pushing far beyond thatYour margin disappears fast
Cash after closingEmergency fund still intactSavings wiped outHomeownership without reserves is fragile
Taxes and insuranceFully countedEstimated loosely or ignoredThese are what blow up budgets
Maintenance planBudgeted monthlyHandled by hopeRoofs and HVAC do not care about optimism

Worked scenarios

Bank approves $475,000, budget feels tight

Best move: trust the budget, not the approval ceiling.

If the full payment crushes take-home, the approval is irrelevant.

10% down and PMI still leaves strong reserves

Best move: may be healthier than forcing 20% down.

Liquidity matters more than winning some imaginary purity test.

Florida taxes and insurance are the spoiler

Best move: price the full stack before touring homes.

In high-cost insurance markets, the hidden line items can kill affordability even when principal and interest look fine.

Risk and reward cards

What a sane budget buys you

  • Room for repairs and maintenance
  • Less stress if taxes or insurance jump
  • Ability to keep saving after closing

What an overbuy creates

  • House-poor monthly life
  • No margin for HVAC, roof, or plumbing hits
  • Pressure to carry card debt just to stay afloat

Bottom line

The right price is the one that leaves your life intact after the mortgage clears, not the one the bank says you can survive. Use take-home pay, count every real cost, and leave cash in reserve.

Best next move

Run the Home Affordability Calculator first, then check the full payment with the Mortgage Calculator. After that, read The Real Cost of Owning a Home before you trust a preapproval letter.

Sources reviewed

  • Consumer Financial Protection Bureau mortgage guidance
  • HUD home buying and mortgage servicing guidance
  • Fannie Mae consumer mortgage references
  • Freddie Mac My Home mortgage guidance
Do not forget moving-week cash

Affordability is not just the payment. Use the Moving Cost Calculator to keep closing week from wrecking your budget.

Calculate moving costs →
Decision path

Best next move if this decision changes your monthly payment

Use the math before you trust the pitch. Run the calculator, then open the guide that explains the tradeoff behind the number.

Official resources and reference points

This page is homeowner education, not a property-specific appraisal, legal opinion, tax advice, or lender/carrier instruction. Use these when you need the real consumer rules behind PMI, escrow, refinance timing, or mortgage math, not just rate-shop marketing.

Why this article is worth trusting

Caleb Hollis reviewed this page. He reviews homeowner education on home value logic, cost realism, Florida housing questions, and decision quality.

See the reviewer profile and editorial team profile for who does what. OwnerHacks publishes homeowner education, not property-specific appraisal work, legal advice, tax advice, lending advice, or insurance advice.

OwnerHacks updates articles when rules, costs, or homeowner decision factors materially change. If something looks outdated, use our contact page and we will review it.

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