Page 1
Page 1
Started By
Message
locked post

how much house can i afford?

Posted on 6/17/10 at 4:07 pm
Posted by common sense
Louisiana
Member since Oct 2007
339 posts
Posted on 6/17/10 at 4:07 pm
(no message)
This post was edited on 11/24/14 at 4:45 pm
Posted by LSU1018
Baton Rouge
Member since Feb 2007
7366 posts
Posted on 6/17/10 at 4:15 pm to
I would suggest doing a 15 year note so you don't pay an assload in interest. I would guess you should be looking in the 220 to 240k range
Posted by Newbomb Turk
perfectanschlagen
Member since May 2008
9961 posts
Posted on 6/17/10 at 4:29 pm to
There are a few places (calculators) on line which will tell you.


In the $1,800 amount, did you figure in the tax savings of deducting the interest? Are property taxes included in that figure?

With FHA, you only need to put down 3.5%. So, if you were going to buy a $250K house, you'd only need to put down about $8,800. Of course, the more you put down, the lower your PMI will be.

There's a cool little iPhone App called "calcsfree - Mortgage Calculator". If you just do a search for "calcsfree" you can find it. It allows you to enter all the different variables (including PMI) and then tells you what the total payment would be. It doesn't, however, figure in any tax savings.
This post was edited on 6/17/10 at 4:30 pm
Posted by MoreOrLes
Member since Nov 2008
19472 posts
Posted on 6/17/10 at 4:39 pm to
quote:

how much of a house I can afford?


Judging by what info you give I would say 160-220K.

How much income you make relative to debt is important.

quote:

What would the difference be if I put down 10000?


You would not have 20% down therefore you would be paying about 90 bucks a month in PMI
Posted by LSUtoOmaha
Nashville
Member since Apr 2004
26725 posts
Posted on 6/17/10 at 5:03 pm to
Definitely put down the 20k...and the answer is approximately 200k, give or take 20k depending on your preference.
Posted by seawolf06
NH
Member since Oct 2007
8159 posts
Posted on 6/18/10 at 2:24 pm to
quote:

In the $1,800 amount, did you figure in the tax savings of deducting the interest? Are property taxes included in that figure?


Not to start a political thread, but when I looked at buying a house, I didn't use any of these tax deductions in deciding what I could afford. I know that those tax breaks could be taken away at any time.

I would also recommend finding out when the reassessments are for your area. If you're coming up near the end of the cycle, your property taxes could increase soon. Some municipalities have been using these to increase revenue as well.
Posted by Paul Allen
Montauk, NY
Member since Nov 2007
78068 posts
Posted on 6/18/10 at 2:34 pm to
280,000-310,000

Posted by MikeBRLA
Baton Rouge
Member since Jun 2005
17159 posts
Posted on 6/18/10 at 2:45 pm to
quote:

You would not have 20% down therefore you would be paying about 90 bucks a month in PMI


From the numbers in his original post, he doesn't have 20% down either way so that is a moot point.

Unless he gets a $100K house of course.




Posted by WNCTiger
Member since Aug 2006
2883 posts
Posted on 6/18/10 at 3:26 pm to
Traditional guidelines say: 2.5x to 3.0x your gross annual income.



Posted by Raleigh Tiger
Raleigh, NC
Member since Oct 2003
622 posts
Posted on 6/18/10 at 3:45 pm to
Put down as much as you possibly can, and if you say you can afford $1800 per month, shave a few hundred off of that. There are always extra expenses coming up that you never plan for. I make a six figure salary, and I would not have an $1800 mortgage payment.
Posted by David Wooderson
in make believe
Member since May 2009
239 posts
Posted on 6/19/10 at 2:01 am to
You honestly do not give enough information to answer the question correctly but from what you have given I would say this. Conventional loan $275,000 would be max if you have great credit at 4.5% rate for today. 5% down would be $13,750 down and putting $20k down would not get you to 90% LTV. Conventioanl MI is determined by credit score and LTV. No matter how much you put down on FHA you pay the same monthly MI rate of 50bps and upfront MIP of 2.25% on 30yr fixed. This could go up soon as bill is in congress or passed congress that will make monthly MI risk based. At 95% LTV $261,250 your P&I would be $1323.73 and your taxes depending on parish would be approx $158.31, insurance would be approx $125 and MI would be approx $152 giving you a total pmt of $1759.04. Your total debt ratio will determine what you can borrow and just b/c you qualify for an $1800 pmt does not mean you should. 15yr terms are great but if something happens to your job you are stuck at the higher pmt which would be close to $1900 just P&I. Like I said not enough info to give you an honest answer but never buy max of what you can afford. Buy something more reasonable and save what you can and pay extra to pay off early and save on total interest paid. Rates at 4.5% on 30yr fixed are unheard of so it's not like what you would get is traditionally higher than what 15yr would normally be. Good Luck
Posted by Will Cover
Davidson, NC
Member since Mar 2007
40063 posts
Posted on 6/19/10 at 7:43 am to
Posted by urinetrouble
Member since Oct 2007
20633 posts
Posted on 6/19/10 at 9:35 am to
quote:

I would suggest doing a 15 year note so you don't pay an assload in interest. I would guess you should be looking in the 220 to 240k range


I like the idea of the getting a traditional 30 year mortgage, but paying at a 15 year rate. That way, if times ever got tough, we could go back to the 30 year rate.
Posted by Tiger Ryno
#WoF
Member since Feb 2007
107739 posts
Posted on 6/19/10 at 9:39 am to
quote:

: 2.5x to 3.0x your gross annual income.


Yikes that sounds high. by that logic I should be living in a $400-$500K house. I would be broke as a joke if I did that.

We have a house about 1X our annual gross income. YOu want to make sure you can still save money for retirement, afford repairs, take vacations and have kids, etc...
first pageprev pagePage 1 of 1Next pagelast page
refresh

Back to top
logoFollow TigerDroppings for LSU Football News
Follow us on X, Facebook and Instagram to get the latest updates on LSU Football and Recruiting.

FacebookXInstagram