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What $350,000/year actually buys in housing
Bank approves $1.75M, you should probably spend $1.05M – $1.23M on a $350,000 salary. Here's why.
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Bank Approves
$1.75M+
~$10,475/mo P&I
Comfortable Range
$1.05M – $1.23M
~$6,800/mo at midpoint
Take-Home Pay
~$20,400/mo
after federal + state + FICA
A $350,000 household income is high-earner territory: DTI is essentially irrelevant to your approval, and the bank's stated max ($1.75M+) is structurally meaningless because you could afford the payment on income alone. The constraint at this band is opportunity cost. Every dollar of equity locked in a primary residence is a dollar not earning a long-term return in the market. At a $350k/year income, a $1.05M – $1.23M house keeps your housing under 28% of gross while leaving room for retirement, taxable investments, and educational expenses. A larger house buys lifestyle and tax-deduction efficiency; it doesn't buy net-worth growth.
What banks typically approve at a $350,000 income
- Bank max ($1.75M): ~$10,475/month principal-and-interest at 7% / 10% down / 30-year. Pushes back-end DTI toward 43% — the regulatory ceiling for most conventional loans.
- Comfortable ($1.05M – $1.23M): keeps housing costs under 28% of gross. Most financial advisors call this the "house-poor threshold" — stay below it and you have room for savings, life, and emergencies.
- Conservative ($770,000): ~20% DTI on housing. Maximum optionality: you can absorb an income disruption, save aggressively for retirement, or weather a 1-in-10-year recession without scrambling.
Three scenarios at the comfortable midpoint ($1.14M)
| Down payment | Loan amount | Monthly P&I* | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5% down | $1.08M | $7,200/mo | Possible for conventional loans but PMI applies until 20% equity (typically 3-7 years of payments). |
| 10% down | $1.02M | $6,800/mo | A common middle ground. PMI required but eliminable with appreciation or extra payments. |
| 20% down | $910,000 | $6,050/mo | No PMI. Most conservative DTI. Maximum mortgage flexibility. |
*At 7% APR, 30-year fixed. Doesn't include property taxes, insurance, HOA, or PMI. The interactive calculator below covers all of those.
What this page doesn't account for
The headline ranges above use national-average assumptions for property taxes (1.1%) and insurance ($1,500/year). Real numbers vary significantly by state — Texas property tax averages 1.6% of home value, California is around 0.75%, and New Jersey is over 2.2%. Hurricane-exposed states (FL, LA) carry insurance premiums 3-4x the national average. The interactive calculator below lets you override these for your specific market. State-specific affordability tables (with property tax and insurance baked in) are on the roadmap.
Your Finances
Comfort Level
Most financial advisors recommend staying under 28%. Banks will approve up to 43%.
You can afford
$275,549
at 28% DTI (Conservative)
Debt-to-Income Gauge
Your actual DTI: 28% (housing: 21.8%)
Conservative (25%)
$242,387
Comfortable buffer
Recommended (28%)
$275,549
Standard guideline
Bank Maximum (43%)
$441,355
Highest approval
Monthly Payment Breakdown
Adjusting income up or down
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