A $75,000 salary opens up homeownership in the majority of US markets. Here’s exactly what you can afford.

Have a specific home in mind? See Income Needed for a $300K House

Quick Answer: $250,000 – $320,000

Scenario Down Payment Max Home Price Monthly Payment
Conservative (25% DTI) 5% $255,000 $1,563
Standard (28% DTI) 5% $290,000 $1,750
Standard (28% DTI) 10% $310,000 $1,750
Standard (28% DTI) 20% $350,000 $1,750
Aggressive (33% DTI) 5% $320,000 $2,063

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

Monthly Payment Breakdown at $290K

Component 5% Down 10% Down 20% Down
Principal & interest $1,741 $1,650 $1,466
Property taxes $266 $266 $266
Homeowner’s insurance $150 $150 $150
PMI $120 $85 $0
Total monthly $2,277 $2,151 $1,882

Note: $2,277 at 5% down exceeds the $1,750 max — this means with only 5% down, you’d need a lower-priced home (~$260K) or a lower interest rate.

Impact of Existing Debt

Monthly Debt Max Housing (36% back-end) Max Home Price Reduction
$0 $1,750 $290,000
$300 (car) $1,750 $290,000 $0*
$500 (car + loans) $1,750 $260,000 -$30,000
$800 (car + loans + cards) $1,450 $225,000 -$65,000

*As long as total DTI stays under 36%, front-end DTI dominates.

State-by-State Affordability

State Median Home Price Monthly Payment Affordable?
West Virginia $130,000 $820 ✅ Very easy
Mississippi $145,000 $915 ✅ Very easy
Ohio $195,000 $1,231 ✅ Comfortable
Indiana $200,000 $1,262 ✅ Comfortable
Michigan $215,000 $1,357 ✅ Yes
Texas $265,000 $1,672 ✅ Yes
North Carolina $290,000 $1,830 ⚠️ Borderline
Minnesota $310,000 $1,956 ❌ Stretch
Florida $350,000 $2,209 ❌ Over budget
Virginia $370,000 $2,335 ❌ No
Colorado $490,000 $3,092 ❌ No
New Jersey $460,000 $2,903 ❌ No
California $750,000 $4,733 ❌ No

Key Takeaways

  1. $75K supports a home in the $250K-$320K range depending on debts and down payment
  2. You can afford the median home in ~25-30 states — most of the South, Midwest, and parts of the Mountain West
  3. A 20% down payment boosts your buying power by ~$60K vs. 5% down and eliminates PMI
  4. Existing debts matter — $800/month in car and student loan payments cuts $65K off your max home price
  5. Consider first-time buyer programs for down payment assistance in your state

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.

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