Skip to calculator
Mortgage Free · No login

Mortgage Affordability Calculator

Maximum borrowing capacity from income, expenses and interest rate. Includes stress-test buffer. Free real estate calculator for mortgage affordability. AU stamp ...

🏠
🎯

Couple sitting across the desk with their payslips and a dream suburb in mind. Before you pull up any listings you need to know what the bank will actually lend -- based on their income, not their wishlist.

Mortgage Affordability Calculator
Mortgage
Rent, loans, credit cards etc.
AU banks typically allow 35–40%
Lenders typically limit total debt repayments to 35–40% of gross income (debt-to-income ratio). They also assess living expenses, dependants, credit score and employment stability. This calculator uses a simplified DTI model — actual lending decisions vary by lender.
ℹ️ Results are estimates for planning purposes. Verify with current standards and a qualified professional.

1 What this calculator does

Calculates maximum borrowing power from gross annual income, monthly expenses, deposit and interest rate using the standard debt-to-income (DTI) ratio model. Shows maximum loan, maximum property price, required monthly repayment and whether LMI (Lenders Mortgage Insurance) applies.

2 Formula & professional reasoning

Max monthly repayment = (Monthly gross income x DTI%) - Monthly expenses Max loan = Max repayment x [(1 - (1 + r)^-n) / r] where r = monthly rate, n = total months Max purchase price = Max loan + Deposit LMI applies if Deposit < 20% of purchase price

The annuity formula converts a maximum monthly repayment into a maximum loan balance. DTI (Debt-to-Income) is the percentage of gross monthly income a lender will allow as total debt repayments -- typically 28-43% in Australia and the US depending on the lender. The calculator uses 38% as the default but allows adjustment. The max loan is derived from the repayment capacity, not the purchase price -- which is why increasing income or reducing expenses has a larger effect than increasing the deposit.

3 Worked examples

⚠️ Illustrative example only — not clinical or professional instruction.

Basic
Couple buying their first home
Given: Combined income: $140,000/yr | Monthly expenses: $1,500 | Deposit: $80,000 | Rate: 6.2% | Term: 30 yrs | DTI: 38%
Working: Monthly income: $11,667 | Max repayment: $11,667 x 0.38 - $1,500 = $2,933 | r = 0.062/12 = 0.005167 | n = 360 | Max loan: $2,933 x [(1-(1.005167)^-360)/0.005167]
Answer: Max loan: ~$497,000 | Max purchase price: ~$577,000 | Repayment: $2,933/mo | LMI applies (14% deposit)
💡 $80,000 deposit on $577,000 = 13.9% -- LMI adds approximately $5,970. To avoid LMI they need $115,400 deposit (20% of $577,000).
Standard
Existing homeowner upgrading
Given: Income: $210,000 | Expenses: $2,200/mo | Deposit: $350,000 | Rate: 6.5% | DTI: 38%
Working: Monthly income: $17,500 | Max repayment: $17,500 x 0.38 - $2,200 = $4,450 | Max loan calculation at 6.5% over 30 yrs
Answer: Max loan: ~$700,000 | Max purchase price: ~$1,050,000 | Repayment: $4,450/mo | No LMI (33% deposit)
💡 With 33% deposit no LMI required. Serviceability buffer: lenders often assess at rate + 3% (buffer rate 9.5%) -- actual approved amount may be 20-25% lower.
Advanced
Effect of reducing expenses on borrowing
Given: Income: $160,000 | Scenario A expenses: $3,000/mo | Scenario B expenses: $1,500/mo | Rate: 6.5% | Deposit: $100,000
Working: Scenario A max repayment: $160,000/12 x 0.38 - $3,000 = $2,067 | Scenario B: $2,067 + $1,500 = $3,567 | Each $500 in expenses reduces the loan by approximately $90,000
Answer: Scenario A max loan: ~$325,000 | Scenario B max loan: ~$561,000 -- $236,000 more
💡 Reducing monthly expenses by $1,500 increases borrowing power by $236,000. This is why lenders scrutinise credit card limits and personal loans -- not just current balances but limits.

4 Sanity check

Standard DTI limits
Australia: APRA buffer at rate +3% | US: front-end 28% PITI, back-end 43% DTI for conforming loans
This calculator uses the simpler debt-to-income model without the APRA buffer -- actual approved amount will be lower.
LMI threshold
Deposit below 20% of purchase price triggers LMI | Approx 0.9-3.8% of the loan amount
LMI protects the lender, not you -- it adds to your loan and increases total repayments.
Serviceability buffer
APRA requires Australian lenders to assess serviceability at interest rate + 3%
If the quoted rate is 6.5%, the bank tests repayments at 9.5% -- reducing the approved loan significantly.
DTI ratio context
Income x 4-6 is a common rule of thumb for borrowing capacity in Australia
A couple earning $140,000 combined can typically borrow $560,000-$840,000 depending on expenses, deposit and rate.

5 Common errors

ErrorCauseConsequenceFix
Treating the calculator result as the bank's actual offer Assuming DTI model matches the lender's full assessment Budget set on a figure the bank will not approve -- disappointment at pre-approval stage The calculator gives a directional estimate using DTI only. Actual pre-approval includes a 3% serviceability buffer, HEM (Household Expenditure Measure) assessment, credit history and employment verification.
Not including all regular expenses Only entering obvious bills and missing BNPL, subscriptions and credit card limits Borrowing estimate is overstated -- loan is declined or reduced at full application Include ALL regular financial commitments: credit card limits (not just balances), personal loans, HECS/HELP debt (for Australian borrowers), BNPL (Afterpay, Zip) and car loans.
Using current rate without stress-testing a higher rate Planning at current rates without considering rate increases Budget stretched at current rates -- financial stress if rates rise 1-2% Run the calculator at current rate AND at rate + 2-3%. Ensure repayments are manageable at the higher scenario.
Forgetting stamp duty and buying costs in the deposit calculation Treating the full saved amount as available deposit Insufficient funds at settlement -- deposit is actually buying costs, not just the property deposit Subtract stamp duty, conveyancing, building inspection and other upfront costs from total savings to determine the actual available deposit.