How Much House Can I Afford on a $175K Salary?
With a $175K annual salary ($14,583/month gross), here is what you can afford using the 28/36 rule. Adjust your debts, down payment, and rate below to personalize.
Affordable States on a $175K Salary
These states have median home prices within your $595K budget, making homeownership realistic on a $175K salary.
Affording a Home on $175K
Earning $175K a year means your gross monthly income is $14,583. Under the 28/36 rule, your total housing payment — including principal, interest, property taxes, and insurance — should stay below $4,083 per month. With your current monthly debts of $300, the 36% back-end ratio further caps your total debt payments at $5,250 per month. This gives you a maximum home purchase price of approximately $595K with 10% down at 6.5%.
At $175K, your purchasing power of $595K opens up premium markets nationwide. At this level, the question isn't what you can buy — it's what you should. Many financial advisors recommend high earners target 2-3x annual income rather than the full 28/36 maximum. That would mean $350K-$525K, leaving substantial monthly cash flow for investments, travel, and financial independence. If you do buy at the $595K level, a 20% down payment of $119,097 eliminates PMI and gets you the most competitive rates.
With $595K to work with, you can buy at or above median in 45+ states. In high-cost markets like California, Washington, and Massachusetts, focus on suburbs and smaller cities where your budget stretches further. In moderate-cost states, your budget puts you in premium neighborhoods. The biggest leverage at this level is being a strong, pre-approved buyer who can close quickly — in competitive markets, that's worth more than an extra $20K in purchase price.
Your next step: get pre-approved. A pre-approval letter based on your $175K income tells sellers you're serious and confirms your $595K budget with a real lender. It also locks in a rate for 60-90 days, protecting you from rate increases while you shop. Before applying, check your credit report (free at annualcreditreport.com), save at least $59,548 for your 10% down payment plus $11,910–$23,819 for closing costs, and gather your last 2 years of tax returns and W-2s.