CanYouAffordIt?Calculate

House reality check

Can I Afford a $200,000 House?

A $200,000 house is realistic in much of the country β€” and harder than it looks once taxes, insurance, and the long list of small things are stacked on top of the mortgage.

Estimates only. Not mortgage approval, not lender precision, not legal or tax advice.

Default verdict (you can edit any of this)

Manageable

Workable in many U.S. markets if income clears ~$60k/yr and your existing debt is small.

At 7% on a 30-year mortgage with 10% down ($20k), the monthly P&I lands around $1,200. Add property tax, insurance, and PMI and you're looking at ~$1,600/mo of housing cost β€” comfortable for a $5,200/mo gross income, tight if income is below that. The biggest decisions here are the down payment (more down kills PMI) and the location's property-tax rate.

All-in monthly
$1,571
Income needed (28% rule)
$67,323
Housing % of gross
30.2%
Total DTI
35.0%

Run the numbers on a $200,000 house

Edit anything. Every field updates the results live.

Sticker price of the home.

Cash you bring to closing.

Annual interest rate.

Years (most loans are 30).

Annual property tax. We split into months.

Homeowner's insurance monthly.

0 if no HOA.

Private mortgage insurance. 0 with 20%+ down.

Pre-tax income across all earners.

Car loans, student loans, credit-card minimums.

Estimates only. Not mortgage approval, not financial advice. Numbers vary by lender, credit, state, ZIP, and the day.

Costs people forget

The line items that don’t show up on the loan estimate but absolutely show up in the bank account.

  • PMI when down payment is under 20%

    On a $180k loan, expect $70–$110/mo in private mortgage insurance until you cross 20% equity. Many first-time buyers underestimate this.

  • Property tax varies wildly by state

    $2,200/yr (~1.1%) is average; Texas, NJ, IL routinely hit 2%+ ($4,000+/yr). Pull the local rate before signing.

  • Insurance bills are real

    $100–$150/mo for a $200k home in most of the U.S. Wildfire / hurricane zones add more. Quote it for your ZIP before you commit.

  • Closing costs are 2-5% of the price

    $4–$10k cash at closing on top of the down payment. Inspections, title, lender fees, prepaid escrows.

  • Repairs and maintenance: 1% of value / yr

    $2,000/yr ballpark for a $200k home. Roof, HVAC, water heater eventually all come due.

  • Utilities, furnishings, lawn care

    Easily another $200–$400/mo over rent. The 'forgotten' line that turns 'we can afford it' into 'we forgot about gas'.

Reality check before you bid

  • Income of $60k–$80k is the realistic range for this price point with low other debt.

  • $20k down avoids PMI; $10k down means an extra ~$90/mo until you reach 20% equity.

  • Don't forget the closing-cost cash. $4–$10k is real, and lenders generally don't roll it into the mortgage.

  • Insurance + tax can change after year one β€” escrow adjustments hit the monthly bill silently.

  • Stretching to 35% housing ratio here means a $400 surprise can wreck the month.

A few salary reality checks that line up reasonably with this price point.

Curated picks. Open a car page to run the affordability calculator with your real income and APR.

Build this house into something bigger

FAQ: Affording a $200,000 house

Short, honest answers β€” not pre-approval.

  • What income do I need for a $200,000 house?
    Roughly $60,000–$80,000 a year keeps the all-in housing payment near the classic 28% rule. Lower if you have minimal other debt and a large down payment; higher in high-tax states.
  • What is the monthly payment on a $200,000 house?
    At 7% on a 30-year mortgage with 10% down, the all-in monthly payment (P&I + tax + insurance + PMI) is roughly $1,500–$1,700 depending on state and lender.
  • How much down payment do I need?
    3.5% with FHA ($7,000), 5% with most conventional loans ($10,000), 20% to avoid PMI ($40,000). More down = lower monthly + no PMI.
  • Does the payment estimate include property taxes and insurance?
    Yes β€” the calculator adds property tax (annual / 12), homeowner's insurance, HOA, and PMI to the principal + interest. Edit each field for your actual numbers.
  • Is this mortgage approval?
    No. This is an educational ballpark. Lender approval depends on credit score, employment history, asset reserves, automated underwriting models, and dozens of factors no website can predict.

This is not financial advice

CanYouAffordIt is for entertainment and ballpark planning only. Real insurance quotes, sales tax rules, dealer fees, loan approvals, and maintenance costs vary by location, vehicle, and credit profile. Before signing a contract, talk to a human you trust β€” and read the fine print.

See also other house reality checks: $250,000 house, $300,000 house, $350,000 house, $400,000 house, $450,000 house, $500,000 house, $600,000 house, $750,000 house, $1,000,000 house, $1,500,000 house. Canonical: https://trycanyouaffordit.com/can-i-afford-a-200000-house.