WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 2026
A Reader's Guide to American Lending · Vol. I
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Suburban house with for-sale sign
Photograph by Phil Hearing / Unsplash

The most consequential financial decision most Americans make is also the one they are least prepared to think about clearly. "How much mortgage can I afford" feels like a math question, and there is math in it, but most of the answer is judgment — about your life, your job stability, your plans, and how much margin you want for the unexpected. The lender will give you a number. The 28/36 rule will give you a number. Neither is the answer.

The three numbers, explained

The 28/36 rule (the conservative number): Housing costs (mortgage, taxes, insurance, HOA) should not exceed 28% of gross monthly income. Total debt obligations (housing plus all other debts) should not exceed 36% of gross monthly income. This rule has been the standard underwriting guideline for nearly a century.

The lender's maximum (the aggressive number): Most lenders will approve mortgages with debt-to-income ratios up to 43%, and FHA loans up to 50% in some cases. This is the number they will quote you when you ask "how much can I borrow." It assumes you have no other major financial goals.

The number you can actually afford (the real number): Somewhere between the two, depending on your specific situation. Generally closer to the 28/36 number than the lender's maximum.

The arithmetic, with real numbers

Take a household earning $120,000 in gross annual income ($10,000/month). Current 30-year mortgage rates are 6.49–7.49% for excellent credit. Property tax averages 1.1% of home value annually; insurance averages $1,500/year; assume no HOA.

The 28% rule says: Housing costs no more than $2,800/month. Working backwards from this with current rates and a 20% down payment, the maximum home price is roughly $415,000.

The 36% rule (assuming $500/month in other debts) says: Total debts under $3,600/month. Housing limited to $3,100/month after subtracting the $500. Maximum home price: roughly $470,000.

The lender (43% DTI) might approve: Up to $3,800/month in housing payments after subtracting other debts. Maximum home price: roughly $590,000.

The gap between $415,000 and $590,000 is $175,000 in home-buying power. Whether to use it or not is the question.

What pushes you toward the conservative number

What allows you to lean toward the aggressive number

The hidden costs people forget

The mortgage payment is not the only cost of homeownership, and ignoring the rest is how budgets break. Annual costs to budget for, beyond the mortgage:

The decision framework

Step 1: Calculate the 28/36 number. This is your conservative ceiling.
Step 2: Calculate the lender's maximum. This is your aggressive ceiling.
Step 3: Identify which factors above push you toward conservative or aggressive.
Step 4: Pick a number between the two that matches your risk tolerance and life plans.
Step 5: Stress-test the number. Could you make the payment if your income dropped 20%? If your spouse stopped working for a year? If a roof replacement comes up in year three?

One number that's worth paying attention to The "after-tax monthly housing cost" minus "after-tax monthly rent for a comparable place" tells you your true cost of ownership. In many markets right now, this number is positive — meaning ownership is more expensive month-to-month than renting equivalent housing. That is not necessarily a reason not to buy; equity buildup, tax benefits, and stability matter. But it is a reason to make the decision deliberately.

Use our affordability calculator to plug in your specific numbers.


If you found a factual error in this article, please write to team@iloans.ai and we will correct it.

Frequently asked questions

What's the 28/36 rule?

It's the traditional underwriting guideline that housing costs (mortgage, taxes, insurance, HOA) should not exceed 28% of gross monthly income, and total debt obligations should not exceed 36%. It is conservative compared to modern lender maximums of 43–50% DTI.

How much house can I afford on $100,000 a year?

Using the 28% rule and current 6.5% mortgage rates, roughly $345,000 home price assuming 20% down. Using the lender's 43% DTI maximum, up to $490,000. The right number depends on your other debts, savings goals, and risk tolerance.

Is the lender's maximum the right number to use?

Generally no. Lenders are willing to approve loans at higher DTI ratios than most financial planners would recommend. Borrowing the maximum the lender will offer leaves no margin for emergencies, retirement saving, or income disruption.

How much should I budget for home maintenance annually?

Plan for 1–2% of the home's value per year for maintenance and unexpected repairs. On a $400,000 home, that is $4,000–$8,000 annually. Older homes and homes in extreme weather climates trend toward the higher end.

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