Ohio · Affordability

How much house can you afford in Ohio?

Use the 28/36 rule with Ohio-specific property tax (1.53%) and insurance (0.45%) for a realistic max price.

Your budget

Income, debts, and down payment

Back-end DTI limit36% of income

Conservative = 36%. Aggressive = up to 50% (what many lenders will approve).

Loan term30 years
Your range

What you can afford

Target home price
$278,067
Max payment $2,100 / mo at 36% DTI
DTI Caution36.0%
Max monthly PITI
$2,100
Est. loan amount
$248,067
Front-end ratio
Housing / gross income
29.6%
Back-end ratio
All debts / gross income
36.0%
Principal & interest
$1,609
Property tax
$255
Insurance
$81
PMI
$155

Qualifying depends on credit, employment history, and reserves. Estimates only based on national averages. Always confirm with a licensed lender.

Your three affordability ranges

Based on $85,000/yr income, $450/mo in other debts, and $30,000 down.

Scenario
Comfortable
28% DTI
Stretch
36% DTI
Lender-approval
43% DTI
Max home price$209,953$278,067$337,668
Max monthly PITI$1,533$2,100$2,596
Loan amount$179,953$248,067$307,668

Comfortable leaves real room for retirement, savings, and repairs. Stretch is the balanced 28/36 rule most planners recommend as a ceiling. Lender-approval is the maximum a conventional lender will likely sign off on — a number, not a goal.

What this means for your budget

At your current settings, your maximum home price is $278,067 with a monthly payment ceiling of $2,100. That’s 36.0% of your gross monthly income — above comfort but inside what most lenders will approve.

If you paid off $500/mo of existing debt, your max price would jump to $332,158 — that’s about $54,091 more house for the same monthly budget. Paying down existing debt is one of the fastest ways to increase affordability.

Ready to pressure-test a specific home? See your full monthly payment.

Example house prices in your range

Based on 6.750%, 30-year loan, and $30,000 down.

Scenario
$160,000
Lower-end
$210,000
Target
$260,000
Reach
Total monthly payment$1,118$1,534$1,950
Principal & interest$843$1,167$1,492
Property tax + insurance$193$254$314
PMI
Applies if down payment < 20%
$81$113$144
% of gross income15.8%21.7%27.5%

Rule of thumb: total housing under 28% of gross income is comfortable. 28–36% is a stretch. Over 36% starts crowding out retirement, savings, and surprise costs.

Common mistakes buyers make

Using the bank’s maximum as a goal
Lenders can approve up to 43–50% DTI. That doesn’t mean you can live on what’s left. Start with 28% front-end and negotiate up only with a reason.
Forgetting future expenses
Daycare, a second car, home maintenance (1% of value per year), furniture — these arrive fast once you own. Model a budget for all of them before committing to a payment.
Not counting HOA and PMI
Condos and townhomes often add $200–$500/mo in HOA dues. PMI adds $50–$375/mo when your down payment is under 20%. Both count in your real PITI payment.
Using gross income for life, net for the bank
The bank uses gross income for DTI. Your checking account uses net. A payment that qualifies on paper may feel punishing on payday — sanity-check against net.
Next step

Now see the true monthly payment for a real price

Prefilled with $209,953 — the comfortable end of your range — so you can see a full PITI payment and tweak from there.

Ohio affordability

Why Ohio is unique

In Ohio, high property taxes and typical insurance premiums shape your real monthly payment. Our calculator bakes in 1.53% property tax and 0.45% insurance so your max-price number reflects Ohio reality.

Guidance

Should you offer your max?

No. Your max is a ceiling — what you'd qualify for using the 28/36 rule. Target offers below your max to keep cushion for maintenance, savings, and life. A home 10–15% under your max often buys a lot of peace of mind.

Frequently asked questions

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