How Much House Can I Afford? (DTI Explained in Simple Terms)

One of the first questions every homebuyer wants answered is: “How much house can I afford?” It’s a smart question—and the right place to start your homebuying journey.

Your home affordability isn’t based on guesswork or online calculators. Mortgage lenders use something called Debt-to-Income Ratio (DTI), along with your credit score, down payment, and loan program, to determine your maximum qualifying amount.

This guide explains affordability in simple terms, breaks down DTI, and gives you a clear framework to estimate your price range before you apply.


What Determines How Much Home You Can Afford?

Lenders look at several key factors when determining your approved purchase price:

  • Your Gross Monthly Income
  • Your Monthly Debts (auto loans, credit cards, student loans, etc.)
  • Your Down Payment
  • Your Credit Score
  • Loan Program Guidelines (FHA, VA, USDA, Conventional)
  • Estimated Taxes, Insurance, and HOA

These factors combine to create your affordability range—and each loan program calculates this a bit differently.


Understanding Debt-to-Income Ratio (DTI)

Your Debt-to-Income Ratio (DTI) is the most important piece in affordability. It measures how much of your monthly income is already committed to existing debts.

DTI Formula:

(Total Monthly Debt Payments + New Mortgage Payment) ÷ Gross Monthly Income

Typical DTI Limits by Loan Program

Loan Type Max DTI Allowed Notes
FHA Up to 56.9% Very flexible; great for maximizing affordability
Conventional Up to ~45% Higher credit scores may allow higher ratios
VA No strict max Uses Residual Income instead of DTI caps
USDA ~41% Can go higher with strong compensating factors

How to Estimate How Much House You Can Afford

While your exact number depends on taxes, insurance, and loan program, you can estimate your maximum price using your income and debt.

Step 1: Add Up Your Monthly Debts

  • Car payments
  • Credit card minimums
  • Student loans
  • Personal loans
  • Child support or alimony

Step 2: Estimate Your Maximum Allowed Housing Payment

Example using FHA (56.9% max DTI):

If you earn $7,000/month:
56.9% × $7,000 = $3,983 available for total debt

If your existing debts are $900/month:

$3,983 – $900 = $3,083 max housing payment

This amount includes:

  • Principal & interest
  • Property taxes
  • Homeowner’s insurance
  • Mortgage insurance (if applicable)
  • HOA dues

This gives you a very close estimate of your maximum price range.


How Loan Program Affects How Much You Can Afford

Each loan program uses different rules that impact your final approval amount.

FHA Loan Affordability

  • Allows the highest DTI limits
  • Often results in the highest maximum purchase price
  • More flexible for buyers with student loans or auto loans

Conventional Loan Affordability

  • Stricter on DTI
  • Best pricing with strong credit
  • PMI drops off as equity increases

VA Loan Affordability

  • No strict DTI maximum
  • Uses Residual Income instead of hard caps
  • Often allows the highest purchasing power for eligible veterans

USDA Loan Affordability

  • Lower DTI limit (~41%)
  • Income limits apply
  • Zero down payment helps affordability

Common Mistakes When Estimating Affordability

  • Ignoring taxes and insurance — these vary greatly by area
  • Using take-home pay instead of gross income
  • Underestimating monthly debts
  • Not factoring in HOA dues
  • Assuming online calculators are accurate

Your affordability is unique—and a full pre-approval always gives the clearest picture.


Want a Personalized Affordability Review?

I can calculate your exact maximum price range based on your income, debts, credit, and loan program eligibility. No guesswork—just clear numbers.

Apply Online:
https://wayne-wallace.com/apply

Schedule a Call:
Schedule a 30-Minute Consultation

I’ll walk you through every option and help you determine a comfortable payment that fits your financial goals.


This content is for educational purposes only and does not constitute a commitment to lend. All loans are subject to underwriting approval. Homewood Mortgage, LLC — NMLS #294974. Wayne Wallace — NMLS #745186.

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