The Difference Between Qualifying and Affording

The amount a lender approves you for and the amount you should spend are often two different numbers. Lenders use debt-to-income ratios and credit profiles to calculate your maximum loan amount, but they do not account for your personal savings goals, lifestyle preferences, or comfort level with monthly payments.

The smartest approach is to understand both numbers — your maximum qualification and your comfortable budget — then shop within the range that lets you sleep well at night.

How Lenders Calculate Your Maximum

Mortgage lenders use two key ratios to determine how much you can borrow:

  • Front-end ratio (housing DTI): Your total housing payment (principal, interest, taxes, insurance, HOA) should not exceed 28-31% of your gross monthly income.
  • Back-end ratio (total DTI): All monthly debt payments (housing + car loans, student loans, credit cards, etc.) should not exceed 43-50% of gross monthly income, depending on the loan program.

For example, if your household earns $10,000/month gross, a lender would target a maximum housing payment of $2,800-$3,100 and maximum total debt payments of $4,300-$5,000.

Austin-Specific Costs to Factor In

Austin has some unique cost factors that affect your real affordability:

  • Property taxes: Texas has no state income tax, but property tax rates are higher than the national average. In Travis County, effective rates range from 1.6-2.2% depending on the taxing district. On a $450,000 home, that is $7,200-$9,900 per year ($600-$825/month).
  • Homeowners insurance: Texas insurance premiums have increased significantly in recent years. Budget $2,000-$4,000/year depending on the home's value, age, and location.
  • HOA fees: Many Austin neighborhoods have HOA fees ranging from $50-$300+ per month. Check this before falling in love with a home.
  • Homestead exemption: Texas offers a homestead exemption that reduces your taxable value by $100,000 for school district taxes. This saves roughly $1,000-$1,500/year on property taxes for your primary residence.

How Much House Can You Afford? Calculator

Enter your income and debts below to get a personalized estimate. This calculator uses Austin-specific property tax rates and insurance costs.

Your Affordability Estimate

Max Home Price $0
Max Loan Amount $0
Down Payment $0

Estimated Monthly Payment

Principal & Interest $0
Property Tax $0
Insurance $0
Total Housing Payment $0
Housing Payment + Debts $0
Back-end DTI Used 0%

Estimates only. Actual pre-approval amounts may differ based on credit, reserves, and loan program. Contact Adam for exact numbers.

Want a deeper look? Try our full mortgage payment calculator or contact Adam for a personalized affordability analysis.

Know Your Real Budget

Get a personalized pre-approval that accounts for Austin's tax rates, insurance costs, and your financial goals.

Get Pre-Approved

Tips to Maximize Your Buying Power

  • Improve your credit score. A score of 740+ versus 680 can save you 0.5% or more on your rate, which adds thousands in buying power. Read our guide on improving your credit score.
  • Pay down existing debt. Reducing your car payment or credit card balances directly increases your qualifying amount by improving your DTI ratio.
  • Explore down payment assistance. Texas and Austin both offer DPA programs that can cover part or all of your down payment, freeing up cash for closing costs or reserves.
  • Consider all loan programs. FHA loans allow higher DTI ratios (up to 56.9% in some cases). VA loans have no maximum DTI guideline. USDA loans require zero down. The right program can significantly change your budget.
  • Look at the full metro. Communities like Round Rock, Pflugerville, Hutto, Kyle, and Bastrop offer lower price points with access to Austin's job market.

The Comfortable Payment Rule

Many financial advisors recommend keeping your total housing payment at 25-28% of your gross income — below the lender's maximum. This leaves room for savings, retirement contributions, and unexpected expenses. In a city like Austin where property taxes and insurance are significant, this buffer is especially important.

The best budget is one you will not stress about in five years, not just one that works on paper today.