Earning $80,000 per year is right around the median US household income. Here’s exactly how much home you can afford — and why it may feel insufficient.

Have a specific home in mind? See Income Needed for a $350K House

Quick Answer: $270,000 – $345,000

Scenario Down Payment Max Home Price Monthly Payment
Conservative (25% DTI) 5% ($14,000) $280,000 $1,667
Standard (28% DTI) 5% ($16,000) $320,000 $1,867
Aggressive (33% DTI) 3.5% FHA $350,000 $2,200
VA loan (0% down) $0 $300,000 $1,867

Assumes 6.5% interest rate, 30-year fixed, property tax 1.1%, insurance $165/month.

The 28% Rule Breakdown

On an $80,000 gross salary:

Metric Amount
Gross monthly income $6,667
Max housing payment (28%) $1,867
Max total debt payments (36%) $2,400
Available for non-housing debt $533

If you have existing debt:

Monthly Debt Payments Max Housing Payment Max Home Price (5% down)
$0 $1,867 $320,000
$350 (car payment) $1,867 $320,000*
$550 (car + student loans) $1,850 $315,000
$800 (car + loans + cards) $1,600 $270,000

*Back-end DTI (36%) limits total debt to $2,400/month.

Home Price by Down Payment

Down Payment Amount on $300K Home Loan Amount Monthly P&I PMI Total Payment
0% (VA/USDA) $0 $300,000 $1,896 $0* $2,171
3% (conventional) $9,000 $291,000 $1,839 $158 $2,273
3.5% (FHA) $10,500 $289,500 $1,830 $241 $2,346
5% $15,000 $285,000 $1,801 $150 $2,227
10% $30,000 $270,000 $1,706 $108 $2,089
20% (no PMI) $60,000 $240,000 $1,517 $0 $1,792

*VA has a funding fee instead of PMI.

Affordability by State

State Median Home Price Monthly Payment (est.) Affordable on $80K?
West Virginia $130,000 $820 ✅ Very comfortable
Mississippi $145,000 $915 ✅ Very comfortable
Oklahoma $165,000 $1,041 ✅ Very comfortable
Indiana $200,000 $1,262 ✅ Comfortable
Ohio $195,000 $1,231 ✅ Comfortable
Texas $265,000 $1,672 ✅ Yes
Florida $350,000 $2,209 ⚠️ Stretch
Arizona $376,000 $2,373 ❌ No
Colorado $490,000 $3,092 ❌ No
Washington $530,000 $3,344 ❌ No
California $750,000 $4,733 ❌ No

Metros Where $80K Buys a Home

Metro Area Median Home Price Affordable?
Atlanta, GA $288,000 ✅ Yes
Las Vegas, NV $336,000 ⚠️ Tight
San Antonio, TX $276,000 ✅ Yes
Charlotte, NC $354,000 ⚠️ Stretch
Columbus, OH $305,000 ✅ Yes
Cincinnati, OH $300,000 ✅ Yes
Indianapolis, IN $260,000 ✅ Comfortable
Kansas City, MO $288,000 ✅ Yes

The Affordability Gap

Here’s the uncomfortable truth: $80,000 is roughly the median US household income, yet the median US home price ($420,000) requires about $105,000 income.

This means the typical American household cannot comfortably afford the typical American home — at least not by conservative lending standards.

On $80K, you can afford 76% of the median home price.

Loan Programs for $80K Earners

Program Down Payment Min Credit Score Key Benefit
Conventional 5-20% 620 Best rates, PMI drops at 20%
FHA loan 3.5% 580 Low credit OK
VA loan 0% 580-620 No PMI, no down payment
First-time buyer programs Varies Varies Down payment assistance

Key Takeaways

  1. On $80K, you can afford roughly $270,000-$345,000 — below the national median
  2. A median home requires ~$105K income — $80K falls short by ~$25K
  3. The 28% rule caps your payment at ~$1,867/month
  4. Affordable metros include Atlanta, Columbus, Indianapolis, San Antonio
  5. 20% down saves PMI and keeps you in a comfortable range
  6. Dual-income households often combine salaries to reach higher price points

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