Rent Affordability Calculator
Calculate how much rent you can afford based on income, debts, and savings goals.
Budget Breakdown
Income vs Expenses
| Category | Amount |
|---|---|
| Income | 5 000,00 $US |
| Rent | -1 300,00 $US |
| Debts | -500,00 $US |
| Savings | -500,00 $US |
| Utilities | -200,00 $US |
| Other | 2 500,00 $US |
Rent Affordability: Complete Guide
The 30% Rule
Financial experts recommend spending no more than 30% of gross income on rent. For $5,000/month income, maximum rent is $1,500. This ensures adequate room for other expenses, savings, and debt payments.
Other Rules to Consider
The 50/30/20 rule allocates 50% to needs (rent + bills), 30% to wants, 20% to savings. The DTI approach limits total debt + housing to 36% of income. Use the most conservative result.
Hidden Costs of Renting
Beyond rent, budget for utilities ($150-400), renters insurance ($15-30), parking, storage, and a security deposit (1-2 months rent). Moving costs add $500-3,000.
Practical Example
$5,000 Income, $500 Debts, $300 Utilities
30% rule: $1,500 max rent. 50/30/20: $1,700 max rent. DTI (36%): $1,300 max rent.
Conservative max: $1,300/month. After rent + debts + utilities: $2,900 for everything else.
Questions Fréquentes
What is the 30% rule?
Spend no more than 30% of gross monthly income on rent. This is the most widely cited guideline for housing affordability.
Can I spend more than 30% on rent?
It depends. In high-cost cities, many people spend 40-50%. But this typically means sacrificing savings or other financial goals.
Should rent be based on gross or net income?
The 30% rule uses gross income. For a more realistic picture, calculate based on net (take-home) pay and aim for 25-30%.
How much should I save for a security deposit?
Typically 1-2 months rent. Budget for first month, last month, and security deposit. On $1,500 rent, have $3,000-4,500 ready.
What if rent takes up too much of my income?
Consider getting a roommate, moving to a cheaper neighborhood, negotiating rent, or increasing income through a side hustle.
Estimates only. Consider all living costs. This is not financial advice.
📚 References
- SEC - Investment Fees (sec.gov)
- CFPB - Financial Guides (consumerfinance.gov)