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Started By
Message
How much house can I afford?
Posted on 1/24/23 at 9:25 am
Posted on 1/24/23 at 9:25 am
I am a medical professional about to finish training. Currently beginning the home buying process. I am not very business savvy at baseline so I was wondering if there are any apps/websites out there that I can plug some basic info in to determine how much monthly mortgage I can afford?
Thanks
Thanks
Posted on 1/24/23 at 9:29 am to tigerfootball123
Just look up mortgage calculators and input expected interest rates, taxes, insurance, etc. Try to keep your PITI below 25-30 percent of your full household take home pay if possible. My recommendation is to buy well below your means so you don’t fall into the house broke trap. Good luck.
Posted on 1/24/23 at 9:30 am to tigerfootball123
this site usually works great just input your data
Posted on 1/24/23 at 9:52 am to MrJimBeam
quote:
My recommendation is to buy well below your means
who would advise otherwise?
Posted on 1/24/23 at 9:53 am to tigerfootball123
quote:
How much house can I afford?
Maybe change the question to “how much house won’t overextend me”
You don’t want to be too house poor your first few years in your medical career.
Posted on 1/24/23 at 9:57 am to tigerfootball123
quote:
I am a medical professional about to finish training
What medical professional training exactly?
ETA: We should close on our home in the next 45 days. We'll be at 25.!% of monthly take home pay
This post was edited on 1/24/23 at 11:45 am
Posted on 1/24/23 at 9:59 am to tigerfootball123
quote:
I am a medical professional about to finish training. Currently beginning the home buying process. I am not very business savvy at baseline so I was wondering if there are any apps/websites out there that I can plug some basic info in to determine how much monthly mortgage I can afford?
I wouldn't buy a house right now unless I could pay cash. Mortgage rates for a 30yr mortgage average 6%-7% and while existing home sale prices have begun to come down, we're just at the beginning of that cycle. We're not likely to ever see 2%-3% again, but I don't think it's outside the realm of possibility to think we could be back in 4%-5% within the next 2-3 years.
If you can hang tight for a year or two (use the time to stockpile cash for your down payment), I think you'll come out better off in the long run both on the price of the property and on the interest rate.
Posted on 1/24/23 at 10:14 am to GeauxTigersGo
quote:Banks. They approve you for way to much fricking money
who would advise otherwise?
Posted on 1/24/23 at 10:20 am to tigerfootball123
As others have said, buy below your means. Use caution in looking at online calculators or what websites will tell you b/c they will leave cash poor and house rich. I would shoot for 25% or less of monthly take home.
Posted on 1/24/23 at 10:35 am to tigerfootball123
you are doing it backwards. You need to add up how much you need to spend on clothes, food, cars, travel, savings, retirement saving, etc. After that, you see how much of your paycheck is left over to spend on house, utilities, property taxes, home insurance, maintenance, etc.
Posted on 1/24/23 at 10:36 am to tigerfootball123
Buy that house of your dreams!! YOLO
Posted on 1/24/23 at 10:36 am to jfw3535
quote:
would shoot for 25% or less of monthly take home.
With other debt involved, 25% or less is ideal.
If no other debt is involved I would say 28-30% maybe even 35% would be ok. Especially if you get a great deal on a house in a great location.
Posted on 1/24/23 at 10:41 am to jfw3535
Better.com is a pretty painless way to get a fairly accurate picture. You can expect an initial phone call to get an understanding of where you are in the process, but after that, their follow up is pretty easy to avoid or disregard.
Posted on 1/24/23 at 10:49 am to Bard
quote:
wouldn't buy a house right now unless I could pay cash. Mortgage rates for a 30yr mortgage average 6%-7% and while existing home sale prices have begun to come down, we're just at the beginning of that cycle. We're not likely to ever see 2%-3% again, but I don't think it's outside the realm of possibility to think we could be back in 4%-5% within the next 2-3 years.
If you can hang tight for a year or two (use the time to stockpile cash for your down payment), I think you'll come out better off in the long run both on the price of the property and on the interest rate.
Interest rate shouldn't deter purchasing right now.
If rates go down, refinance.
If you expect rates to go down, take an ARM.
I agree that "expectations of pricing" should be a big factor in the timing of the purchase. Rushing out to buy a home that dips 15% in value is a kick in the gut (unless you were able to sell a home at the high to offset the loss).
Every market is unique. Location, location, location.
Don't assume values are going down because of what someone says on the internet. Do research and identify unique characteristics for the area that you are shopping.
Posted on 1/24/23 at 11:02 am to tigerfootball123
quote:
I am a medical professional about to finish training
Some banks will have doctors loans.
quote:
I am a medical professional
Are you married? If not. Get a prenup. Seriously. That world is so full of divorces and doctors working like a dog to pay multiple ex wives.
Posted on 1/24/23 at 11:07 am to Billy Blanks
its easy. Take your take home pay and multiply by 18%. that's so your mortgage and all the fees stays below 25% of your take home per month. If you make 150K a year combined household income you should buy a house less than 300k
Posted on 1/24/23 at 11:18 am to tigerfootball123
quote:
How much house can I afford?
Take whatever the bank will lend you and divide by 2
Posted on 1/24/23 at 11:19 am to tigerbacon
quote:
If you make 150K a year combined household income you should buy a house less than 300k
This one’s gonna trigger some folks.
Posted on 1/24/23 at 11:31 am to tigerfootball123
Our mortgage is 23% of our take-home pay. There is a $250 student loan my wife has but outside of that no other debt. We live a pretty care free lifestyle.
Posted on 1/24/23 at 11:38 am to PhiTiger1764
If you are going to have kids in daycare and or private school he is not wrong at all.
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