A $1 million home requires a significant income — but in many coastal markets, it is simply the going price for a standard family home. In San Francisco, Los Angeles, San Jose, Honolulu, and parts of New York, Seattle, and Boston, $1 million buys a modest 3-bedroom house, not a mansion. In the rest of the country, it is a luxury purchase.
With 20% down, you need approximately $276,000 in household income. This is a top-3% income nationally and typically requires either two high-earning professionals or a single earner with substantial compensation (senior tech, medicine, law partners, finance). The total cash needed at closing — $200,000 down payment plus $30,000-$50,000 in costs — means most buyers at this level are either selling a previous home or have been saving aggressively for years.
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Income Needed to Afford a $1 Million Home
Based on the 28% front-end DTI rule:
| Down Payment | Loan Amount | Monthly PITI | Income Required |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10% ($100,000) | $900,000 | $7,267 | $311,400/yr |
| 15% ($150,000) | $850,000 | $6,862 | $294,100/yr |
| 20% ($200,000) | $800,000 | $6,457 | $276,700/yr |
| 25% ($250,000) | $750,000 | $6,053 | $259,400/yr |
| 30% ($300,000) | $700,000 | $5,648 | $242,100/yr |
Assumes 6.75% rate, 30-year term, $1,000/mo taxes, $400/mo insurance. PMI included for <20% down.
At $1 million, jumbo loan considerations are front and center. With 20% down, you are financing $800,000 — above the standard conforming limit of $766,550 in most counties, which means a jumbo loan in lower-cost areas. In high-cost counties (most of California, Honolulu, parts of the Northeast), the limit rises to $1,149,825, keeping your loan conforming. This distinction matters: conforming loans typically offer rates 0.25-0.5% lower than jumbo, easier qualification, and less stringent reserve requirements.
If you are buying in a standard-cost county, consider putting 25% or more down to bring the loan below the conforming limit. A $750,000 loan at a conforming rate of 6.5% costs roughly $200/month less than the same loan at a jumbo rate of 7.0% — that is $72,000 saved over 30 years.
Monthly Payment Breakdown at 20% Down
| Component | Monthly Cost |
|---|---|
| Principal & Interest | $5,190 |
| Property Tax (est.) | $833 |
| Homeowners Insurance | $417 |
| Total PITI | $6,440 |
How Rate Affects Required Income (20% down, $800K loan)
| Interest Rate | Monthly P&I | Total PITI | Income Needed |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5.5% | $4,542 | $5,792 | $248,200/yr |
| 6.0% | $4,796 | $6,046 | $259,100/yr |
| 6.75% | $5,190 | $6,440 | $276,000/yr |
| 7.5% | $5,593 | $6,843 | $293,300/yr |
| 8.0% | $5,870 | $7,120 | $305,100/yr |
Impact of Existing Debt (36% Back-End DTI)
| Monthly Debt Payments | Income Needed to Qualify |
|---|---|
| $0 | $214,700/yr |
| $200 | $221,400/yr |
| $400 | $229,700/yr |
| $600 | $239,800/yr |
| $800 | $252,200/yr |
Total Cash Needed at Closing
| Scenario | Down Payment | Closing Costs | Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10% | $100,000 | $30,000-$50,000 | ~$140,000 |
| 20% | $200,000 | $30,000-$50,000 | ~$240,000 |
| 25% | $250,000 | $30,000-$50,000 | ~$288,000 |
What $1 Million Buys in 2026
| Market | What You Get |
|---|---|
| San Francisco | 1-2 bed condo |
| Los Angeles | Small 2-3 bed home in mid-tier neighborhood |
| Seattle | 3 bed home, good suburb |
| Boston suburbs | 3-4 bed colonial |
| New York City | Studio/1-bed condo (Manhattan) |
| Denver | Luxury home, top-tier suburb |
| Austin | Large luxury home |
| Nashville | Luxury estate |
| Chicago suburbs | Large luxury home |
| Midwest cities | Multiple properties |
How $1M Homes Are Typically Financed
Most buyers of $1 million homes use one of these approaches:
| Approach | Description |
|---|---|
| High dual income | Two earners at $150K+ each |
| Equity from sale | Prior home equity rolled in, reducing loan size |
| Large stock/bonus down payment | Tech or finance employees |
| Jumbo mortgage | Loans over $766,550 (conforming limit) — typically require 20%+ down, 720+ credit |
Note: Loans above $766,550 (2026 conforming limit) are considered jumbo loans and typically require 20% down, 720+ credit score, and 6-12 months cash reserves.
Related: Income Needed for a $900,000 House | Salary to Buy a House in California | Mortgage Affordability Calculator
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