Earning $50,000 per year and wondering what house you can afford? Here’s a detailed breakdown using standard lending guidelines, with costs by state and different down payment scenarios.

Have a specific home in mind? See Income Needed for a $250K House

Quick Answer: $165,000 – $215,000

Scenario Down Payment Max Home Price Monthly Payment
Conservative (25% DTI) 5% ($9,000) $175,000 $1,042
Standard (28% DTI) 5% ($10,000) $200,000 $1,167
Aggressive (33% DTI) 3.5% FHA $215,000 $1,375
VA loan (0% down) $0 $185,000 $1,167

Assumes 6.5% interest rate, 30-year fixed, property tax 1.1%, insurance $150/month.

The 28% Rule Breakdown

On a $50,000 gross salary:

Metric Amount
Gross monthly income $4,167
Max housing payment (28%) $1,167
Max total debt payments (36%) $1,500
Available for non-housing debt $333

If you have existing debt (car, student loans, credit cards), your max home price drops:

Monthly Debt Payments Max Housing Payment Max Home Price (5% down)
$0 $1,167 $200,000
$200 (car payment) $1,167 $200,000*
$400 (car + student loans) $1,100 $185,000
$600 (car + loans + cards) $900 $145,000

*Back-end DTI may still constrain you even if front-end is fine.

Home Price by Down Payment

Down Payment Amount on $180K Home Loan Amount Monthly P&I PMI Total Payment
0% (VA/USDA) $0 $180,000 $1,138 $0* $1,388
3% (conventional) $5,400 $174,600 $1,104 $95 $1,449
3.5% (FHA) $6,300 $173,700 $1,098 $145 $1,493
5% $9,000 $171,000 $1,081 $90 $1,421
10% $18,000 $162,000 $1,024 $65 $1,339
20% (no PMI) $36,000 $144,000 $910 $0 $1,160

*VA has a funding fee instead of PMI (2.15% first-time, rolled into loan).

Affordability by State

State Median Home Price Monthly Payment (est.) Affordable on $50K?
West Virginia $130,000 $820 ✅ Very comfortable
Mississippi $145,000 $915 ✅ Comfortable
Arkansas $155,000 $978 ✅ Comfortable
Oklahoma $165,000 $1,041 ✅ Yes
Iowa $175,000 $1,104 ✅ Yes
Kansas $180,000 $1,136 ⚠️ Tight
Indiana $200,000 $1,262 ❌ Over budget
Ohio $195,000 $1,231 ❌ Over budget
Texas $265,000 $1,672 ❌ No
Florida $350,000 $2,209 ❌ No
Colorado $490,000 $3,092 ❌ No
California $750,000 $4,733 ❌ No

Loan Programs for $50K Earners

Program Down Payment Min Credit Score Key Benefit
FHA loan 3.5% 580 Low credit OK, gift funds allowed
VA loan 0% 580-620 No PMI, no down payment
USDA loan 0% 640 Rural areas, no down payment
Conventional 97 3% 620 PMI drops at 20% equity
First-time buyer programs Varies Varies Down payment assistance, grants

Key Takeaways

  1. On $50K, you can afford roughly $165,000-$215,000 depending on debts, down payment, and location
  2. The 28% rule caps your payment at ~$1,167/month including taxes and insurance
  3. A median home is affordable in about 10-15 states — primarily in the South and Midwest
  4. Existing debts reduce your buying power significantly — $400/month in debts drops your max by $15,000-$20,000
  5. FHA, VA, and USDA loans make homeownership possible with minimal down payment
  6. Check state first-time buyer programs for down payment grants and below-market rates

WealthVieu
Written by WealthVieu

WealthVieu researches and writes data-driven personal finance guides using primary sources including the IRS, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Federal Reserve, and Census Bureau.

The content on Wealthvieu is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial, tax, or investment advice. Consult a qualified professional before making financial decisions. Full disclaimer · Editorial policy