“How much home can I afford” calculator:  http://www.realtor.com/home-finance/financial-calculators/home-affordability-calculator.aspx

To buy a home you need both up-front money as well as the ability to make monthly mortgage payments. 

Here's the super-quick rule of thumb:  Most people can afford a home that costs up to three times their annual household income, if they can make a 20% down payment and have only a moderate amount of other debt. If you have little to no debt and can put 20% down you can probably buy a house worth up to four times your annual income.1

Examples: If you make $57,200 a year (which was the median household income for first-time homebuyers in 2006) and have money for a down payment saved, you can probably buy a $171,600 home if you have moderate debt (debt payments of <12% of your income), and a $229,000 home if you have little or no debt. But of course, this is just a quick rule of thumb and you'll want to get a more accurate figure. The rest of this page will help you with that. Also, if you're income is small but you're sure you can make the mortgage payments and you have excellent credits there may be other options for you, which we'll get to later.

The first concept for figuring how much home you can afford is pretty simple. Since you pay for your house with a combination of a down payment and a bank loan, the total of both is the cost of the home:

Down Payment  +  Biggest Loan You Can Get  =  How Much Home You Can Afford

The down payment part of the equation is easy to figure -- this is the total of your savings that you're willing to put into your house. (We'll cover down payments in more detail on the next page.) We assume you have money for a down payment because if you don't then you probably can't afford any home, since it's hard to get a loan with 0% down. You usually need a bare minimum of 3% of the purchase price down, more typically 10% or more.

The amount you can get from a lender is a little trickier since it's based on many factors. Here's a calculator that will help you with that.  (http://michaelbluejay.com/house/howmuchhome.html )

“How much home can I afford” calculator:  http://www.realtor.com/home-finance/financial-calculators/home-affordability-calculator.aspx

You therefore might be tempted to ask, "How much will I need in order to make the monthly payments?" But actually we'll approach this question from the other direction: We'll find  out the most expensive house you can buy given your income and savings. This is called how much home you can afford. You won't necessarily buy the most expensive home you can afford, but you still want to know what your upper limit is. You don't want to waste your time looking at homes you can't afford, and you also don't want to pass up homes you thought you couldn't afford but which might actually be within your reach.

Top of Form

Fill in Your Details

$

Monthly Income (before taxes)

$

Monthly Debt Payments
(Min. pmts. on credit cards, auto loans, student loans)

$

Money available for Down Payment

Fill in the Financing Details

 %

Mortgage Interest Rate
Avg. rate was 5.4% in July 2004. Getcurrent rates from Yahoo.

Annual property taxes & insurance (% of home price)
Check with your county tax office and an inurance company to get your local figure

See how much home you can afford -- rough estimate

15-yr.

30-yr.

 

$ 

$ 

Most expensive home you can afford

$ 

$ 

Maximum Loan

$ 
(%)

$ 
(%)

Down Payment

$ 

$ 

Total Monthly Payment

$ 

$ 

Monthly Principal & Interest Payment

$ 

$ 

Monthly Taxes & Insurance

 

Formulas from Wizard of Odds, DollarBank and the Motley Fool, with clarification from Financial Planning Toolkit.

Bottom of Form

 

Here's what's important about the values in the table above

  • Putting 20% or more down opens lots of doors. When you can make a down payment this big you're almost certain to qualify for some kind of loan. The bank will be willing to loan more money than otherwise, and you won't have to pay for private mortgage insurance (PMI), which in turn helps you afford even more home.
  • Debt holds you back. The more debt you already have the less home you can buy. Decreasing your debt allows you to afford a more expensive home, everything else being equal. There's more on this on our pages about the Debt Ratio and How much loan can you get?
  • 30-year loans vs. 15-year loans. The advantages of a 30-year loan are that the monthly payments are lower, and with a 30-year mortgage you can qualify for a much larger loan and buy a much larger (or nicer) house. The downside is that you have to make payments for an extra 15 years vs. a 15-year loan, and you'll pay a lot more total interest over the life of the loan.Still, in most cases you'll go with a 30-year loan. We'll cover the differences between these later, but if you can't wait then read about 15 vs. 30-year loans.
  • We've left out one important thing -- closing costs. You'll need to either pay the closing costs from your savings (lowering the amount you have available for a down payment), or qualify for a loan that's a little larger than the house you want to buy, and have the closing costs added to the loan (which is called "rolling the closing costs" into the mortgage).

How much do homes cost?

Now that you have an idea of how much home you can afford, how do you find out whether that's enough? That is, are there homes to be had for the amount you can afford? YES THERE IS!  Today’s modular home solutions provide you with the square footage you need AND a payment that you can afford!

Figuring your monthly payment

Figuring the max you can afford is all fine and good, but once you have a specific home in mind you'll want to know what your payments will be on that home. We have a separate page on figuring your monthly payment in more detail, but here's a quick table to give you a rough idea. A general rule of thumb is that your monthly payment will be between 0.75% to 1.15% of the purchase price.

Estimated Monthly Payment based on Home Price

for 5/10/20% down on a 30-year loan • includes est. taxes & insurance
see
 the calculator to figure your situation

 

$100,000

$150,000

$200,000

$250,000

$275,000

$300,000

6.00%

800 / 745 / 646

1199 / 1118 / 969

1600 / 1490 / 1292

1999 / 1863 / 1616

2199 / 2050 / 1777

2400 / 2236 / 1938

6.33%

820 / 765 / 663

1230 / 1147 / 995

1640 / 1530 / 1326

2050 / 1912 / 1659

2255 / 2103 / 1824

2460 / 2294 / 1990

6.67%

841 / 785 / 681

1262 / 1177 / 1022

1682 / 1570 / 1362

2103 / 1962 / 1703

2313 / 2158 / 1874

2524 / 2354 / 2044

7.00%

862 / 805 / 699

1293 / 1207 / 1048

1724 / 1610 / 1398

2155 / 2011 / 1747

2371 / 2213 / 1922

2586 / 2414 / 2096

7.33%

883 / 825 / 717

1325 / 1237 / 1075

1766 / 1650 / 1434

2208 / 2062 / 1792

2429 / 2268 / 1971

2650 / 2474 / 2150

7.67%

905 / 845 / 735

1358 / 1268 / 1103

1810 / 1690 / 1470

2263 / 2114 / 1838

2490 / 2325 / 2022

2716 / 2536 / 2206

 

 

 

New York Times:

 

Interest Rates Have Nowhere to Go but Up

By NELSON D. SCHWARTZ
Published: April 10, 2010

 

Even as prospects for the American economy brighten, consumers are about to face a new financial burden: a sustained period of rising interest rates.

 
Household Debt vs. Interest Rates

That, economists say, is the inevitable outcome of the nation’s ballooning debt and the renewed prospect of inflation as the economy recovers from the depths of the recent recession.

The shift is sure to come as a shock to consumers whose spending habits were shaped by a historic 30-year decline in the cost of borrowing.

“Americans have assumed the roller coaster goes one way,” said Bill Gross, whose investment firm, Pimco, has taken part in a broad sell-off of government debt, which has pushed up interest rates. “It’s been a great thrill as rates descended, but now we face an extended climb.”

The impact of higher rates is likely to be felt first in the housing market, which has only recently begun to rebound from a deep slump. The rate for a 30-year fixed rate mortgage has risen half a point since December, hitting 5.31 last week, the highest level since last summer.

Along with the sell-off in bonds, the Federal Reserve has halted its emergency $1.25 trillion program to buy mortgage debt, placing even more upward pressure on rates.

“Mortgage rates are unlikely to go lower than they are now, and if they go higher, we’re likely to see a reversal of the gains in the housing market,” said Christopher J. Mayer, a professor of finance and economics at Columbia Business School. “It’s a really big risk.”

Each increase of 1 percentage point in rates adds as much as 19 percent to the total cost of a home, according to Mr. Mayer.

The Mortgage Bankers Association expects the rise to continue, with the 30-year mortgage rate going to 5.5 percent by late summer and as high as 6 percent by the end of the year.

Another area in which higher rates are likely to affect consumers is credit card use. And last week, the Federal Reserve reported that the average interest rate on credit cards reached 14.26 percent in February, the highest since 2001. That is up from 12.03 percent when rates bottomed in the fourth quarter of 2008 — a jump that amounts to about $200 a year in additional interest payments for the typical American household.

With losses from credit card defaults rising and with capital to back credit cards harder to come by, issuers are likely to increase rates to 16 or 17 percent by the fall, according to Dennis Moroney, a research director at the TowerGroup, a financial research company.

“The banks don’t have a lot of pricing options,” Mr. Moroney said. “They’re targeting people who carry a balance from month to month.”

Similarly, many car loans have already become significantly more expensive, with rates at auto finance companies rising to 4.72 percent in February from 3.26 percent in December, according to the Federal Reserve.

Washington, too, is expecting to have to pay more to borrow the money it needs for programs. The Office of Management and Budget expects the rate on the benchmark 10-year United States Treasury note to remain close to 3.9 percent for the rest of the year, but then rise to 4.5 percent in 2011 and 5 percent in 2012.

The run-up in rates is quickening as investors steer more of their money away from bonds and as Washington unplugs the economic life support programs that kept rates low through the financial crisis. Mortgage rates and car loans are linked to the yield on long-term bonds.

Besides the inflation fears set off by the strengthening economy, Mr. Gross said he was also wary of Treasury bonds because he feared the burgeoning supply of new debt issued to finance the government’s huge budget deficits would overwhelm demand, driving interest rates higher.

Nine months ago, United States government debt accounted for half of the assets in Mr. Gross’s flagship fund, Pimco Total Return. That has shrunk to 30 percent now — the lowest ever in the fund’s 23-year history — as Mr. Gross has sold American bonds in favor of debt from Europe, particularly Germany, as well as from developing countries like Brazil.

Last week, the yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note briefly crossed the psychologically important threshold of 4 percent, as the Treasury auctioned off $82 billion in new debt. That is nearly twice as much as the government paid in the fall of 2008, when investors sought out ultrasafe assets like Treasury securities after the collapse ofLehman Brothers and the beginning of the credit crisis.

Though still very low by historical standards, the rise of bond yields since then is reversing a decline that began in 1981, when 10-year note yields reached nearly 16 percent.

From that peak, steadily dropping interest rates have fed a three-decade lending boom, during which American consumers borrowed more and more but managed to hold down the portion of their income devoted to paying off loans.

Indeed, total household debt is now nine times what it was in 1981 — rising twice as fast as disposable income over the same period — yet the portion of disposable income that goes toward covering that debt has budged only slightly, increasing to 12.6 percent from 10.7 percent.

Household debt has been dropping for the last two years as recession-battered consumers cut back on borrowing, but at $13.5 trillion, it still exceeds disposable income by $2.5 trillion.

The long decline in rates also helped prop up the stock market; lower rates for investments like bonds make stocks more attractive.

That tailwind, which prevented even worse economic pain during the recession, has ceased, according to interviews with economists, analysts and money managers.

“We’ve had almost a 30-year rally,” said David Wyss, chief economist for Standard & Poor’s. “That’s come to an end.”

Just as significant as the bottom-line impact will be the psychological fallout from not being able to buy more while paying less — an unusual state of affairs that made consumer spending the most important measure of economic health.

“We’ve gotten spoiled by the idea that interest rates will stay in the low single-digits forever,” said Jim Caron, an interest rate strategist with Morgan Stanley. “We’ve also had a generation of consumers and investors get used to low rates.”

For young home buyers today considering 30-year mortgages with a rate of just over 5 percent, it might be hard to conceive of a time like October 1981, when mortgage rates peaked at 18.2 percent. That meant monthly payments of $1,523 then compared with $556 now for a $100,000 loan.

No one expects rates to return to anything resembling 1981 levels. Still, for much of Wall Street, the question is not whether rates will go up, but rather by how much.

Some firms, like Morgan Stanley, are predicting that rates could rise by a percentage point and a half by the end of the year. Others, like JPMorgan Chase are forecasting a more modest half-point jump.

But the consensus is clear, according to Terrence M. Belton, global head of fixed-income strategy for J. P. Morgan Securities. “Everyone knows that rates will eventually go higher,” he said.