By James Walker — CFP® candidate, Boston MA · Updated January 2026

The single most expensive mistake young Americans make is buying too much house. The bank’s approval letter is not financial advice — it’s a maximum they think you can afford to repay, not a maximum you can afford to live with. Let’s walk through actual safe math for 2026.
What is the 28/36 rule?
The CFPB-friendly classic guideline:
- 28% — Maximum percent of gross monthly income that should go to housing (mortgage principal + interest + property taxes + insurance + HOA)
- 36% — Maximum percent of gross income that should go to all debt combined (housing + car loans + student loans + credit cards + personal loans)
These are upper limits, not targets. Personally, I’d aim for 25/30 to leave breathing room for savings, retirement, and life.
Run the math on a $90,000 salary
- Gross monthly income: $90,000 ÷ 12 = $7,500
- Max housing (28%): $7,500 × 0.28 = $2,100/month total PITI
- Max total debt (36%): $7,500 × 0.36 = $2,700/month
If you already have a $400/month car payment and $200/month in student loans, you have $2,700 – $600 = $2,100 left for housing — same as the 28% cap. But if you had $1,200/month of other debt, you’d only have $1,500 left for housing, well below the 28%.

What does $2,100/month actually buy you in 2026?
This is where the rate environment hits hard. As of January 2026, 30-year fixed mortgage rates are running around 6.0–7.0% per Freddie Mac’s Primary Mortgage Market Survey (see Federal Reserve economic data for current rates).
Let’s break down a $2,100 monthly target with 10% down and 6.5% rate:
- Principal & Interest (P&I): ~$1,400/month — supports about $222K loan
- Property tax: ~$300/month (1.2% annual on $300K home)
- Homeowner’s insurance: ~$120/month
- PMI (private mortgage insurance, since <20% down): ~$130/month
- HOA (if applicable): $0–$300/month
Total: ~$1,950–$2,250/month for a roughly $290,000–$330,000 home with 10% down. With 20% down (no PMI), the same $2,100 budget might support a $340,000–$370,000 home.

What is PITI and why does it matter?
PITI = Principal + Interest + Taxes + Insurance. This is the true monthly housing cost, not just the mortgage principal+interest you see advertised. Lenders calculate the 28/36 rule against PITI, not just P&I. If a mortgage broker quotes you “$1,400/month for a $250K loan,” they’re showing you P&I only — your actual monthly cost is more like $1,950 once taxes, insurance, and PMI are added.
How much down payment do you need?
- 0% — VA loans (military), USDA rural loans (eligible areas only)
- 3% — Conventional first-time buyer loans (Fannie Mae HomeReady, Freddie Mac Home Possible)
- 3.5% — FHA loans (most flexible credit requirements)
- 5–10% — Standard conventional loans
- 20% — Avoids PMI entirely, often gets best rate
The “you need 20% down” myth is outdated — most first-time buyers in the US put down 6–10%. But less down means higher monthly payment, PMI, and bigger loan balance to refinance later if rates drop.
What are the closing costs?
Closing costs run roughly 2–5% of the loan amount per the CFPB’s homebuying guide. On a $300K home with $270K loan, expect $5,000–$13,000 in closing costs. Components:
- Lender origination fees
- Title insurance
- Appraisal (~$500–$750)
- Home inspection ($400–$700)
- Recording fees
- Prepaid property tax + insurance escrow (usually 2–6 months upfront)
Plan for down payment plus closing costs plus a moving cushion. On a $300K home with 10% down, your total cash to close is roughly $30K + $9K = $39,000.

The hidden cost lenders won’t tell you about
Beyond PITI, homeowners face ongoing maintenance and repair costs. The widely-cited industry rule of thumb is 1–3% of the home value per year in maintenance.
- $300K home: $3,000–$9,000/year ($250–$750/month) in maintenance
- $500K home: $5,000–$15,000/year
- $750K home: $7,500–$22,500/year
This averages over time — some years you spend $500, some years you spend $15,000 (HVAC, roof, water heater). The point is: budget for it. A new homeowner who buys at the top of their pre-approval and has zero savings left is one furnace failure from a credit card crisis. This is exactly why your emergency fund matters even more after buying.
What credit score do you need to buy a house?
- FHA loan minimum: 580 (with 3.5% down) or 500 (with 10% down)
- Conventional loan minimum: 620–640
- Best rates: 740+
- Jumbo loans: usually 700+ minimum
The difference between a 620 score and 740 score on a $300K mortgage can be 0.75–1.25 percentage points — $135–$240/month in extra payment over 30 years. Improve your score first if you can. See our credit score guide.
Should you wait to buy in 2026?
This is the question I get most often, and the honest answer is: I have no idea where rates or prices will move. Neither does anyone. Don’t buy based on a market prediction — buy when you:
- Plan to stay 5+ years (transaction costs ruin shorter holds)
- Have 3–6 months emergency fund after closing
- Have stable employment
- Can comfortably afford PITI at <28% of gross income
- Aren’t carrying high-interest credit card debt
The “marry the house, date the rate” cliche is annoying but real: you can refinance a rate, you can’t refinance a bad purchase decision.

What about renting instead?
Renting is not “throwing money away.” It buys you flexibility, zero maintenance liability, and capital you can invest at 7%+ elsewhere. The actual rent-vs-buy math depends on local prices, rates, and how long you’ll stay. The New York Times has a good public calculator, and Bogleheads.org has a great breakdown of the math.
Roughly: if a comparable rent is less than 0.5–0.6% of the home’s purchase price per month (e.g., $1,500 rent on a $300K home), renting often wins financially. Above that, buying tends to win over long horizons.
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I buy a house with a 6.5% mortgage rate?
The rate matters less than whether the PITI fits 28% of your gross income comfortably. Historically, US mortgage rates have averaged around 7–8% over the past 50 years — the sub-3% rates of 2020–2021 were unusual. Don’t wait indefinitely for rates to fall. Buy when the monthly payment fits your budget at today’s rate and you have a long planned stay.
What’s the difference between pre-qualification and pre-approval?
Pre-qualification is a quick estimate based on stated income — almost meaningless to sellers. Pre-approval is a formal underwriting with verified income, credit pull, and a loan-amount commitment letter (subject to property approval). Most competitive markets require a real pre-approval before sellers will consider your offer. Get pre-approval before house-hunting, not after.
How much should I have in savings before buying a house?
At minimum: down payment + closing costs + 3–6 months of new PITI as an emergency fund + ~$5,000 immediate repair cushion. For a $300K home with 10% down, that’s roughly $30K + $9K + $13K + $5K = $57,000 in liquid savings before you sign. Hitting “max approval” with $20K to your name is how new owners end up house-poor or back on credit cards within a year.
Is PMI worth it or should I wait until I have 20% down?
Depends on time horizon. PMI of ~$130/month for 5 years = $7,800 total. If you spend those 5 years saving an additional 10% down while home prices keep climbing, you may end up paying more for the same house. There’s no universal answer — run the math both ways for your specific market and savings rate.
Should I pay off my mortgage early?
It depends on your interest rate, tax situation, and other priorities. At 6.5% mortgage rate, paying down extra principal is mathematically equivalent to a guaranteed ~6.5% after-tax return (sometimes higher after mortgage interest deduction limits) — competitive with stock returns and risk-free. But you lose liquidity. Most CFP-curriculum frameworks suggest fully funding retirement and emergency savings first, then prepaying mortgage with surplus.