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Mortgage question for homo(wner)s

I know this has been asked before but I can't find it so please forgive me.  What percentage of your take home salary do you spend on mortgage + property taxes?  If you're so inclined, can you also share what multiple of your total gross annual income the mortgage amount is?  Just curious - H and I are in slight disagreement about this, so I thought I'd poll y'all.

image Mabel the Loser.

Re: Mortgage question for homo(wner)s

  • Mortgage (w/tax & insurance included) is 22% of our net income.

    Mortgage loan total is 1.89 times our annual gross income.

    image
    "As of page 2 this might be the most boring argument ever. It's making me long for Rape Day." - Mouse
  • I really don't know Brett's gross pay so I'm slightly guessing here.  I probably lowballed his pay a little.

    With taxes and insurance, we're right at 16% of our monthly gross on our mortgage.  Our total mortgage is about 1.8 times our annual salary.  Our house was a fixer upper, though, so we spend a bit more than that in the "house" category each month.


    image
    The nerve!
    House | Blog
  • About 20% monthly and 1.9 our annual. This is based on gross wages and also on my full time salary which ends in one month.
  • Ours is about 30% for mortgage/taxes/insurance. I think 30-35% is a more "normal" range for those of us in a HCOL area. It's about 2.5 times our gross income.

    DSC_0768
    Claire Elizabeth 12/31/2011
    Married Bio
  • With taxes, HOA dues, and insurance, we're paying just under 20% of our monthly gross on our mortgage.  Our mortgage loan is currently about 2.2 times our annual gross income.
    IMG_2788

    2/20/2011
  • Thanks guys.  We are bidding today and I think we've capped our bids at a place where mortgage+prop taxes would be 30-32% of net pay and the mortgage amt about 2.5x gross income.  Like CMC mentioned, we too are in a pretty HCOL area.
    image Mabel the Loser.
  • Mortgage, taxes, and insurance are about 25% monthly. Slightly less than 2x our gross income. 
    image Ready to rumble.
  • Good luck!! I think we would be in a 1 bedroom condo for our PITI to be at 20%! I don't even want to know what you'll be paying for taxes in Jersey.
    DSC_0768
    Claire Elizabeth 12/31/2011
    Married Bio
  • We're at about 20% monthly.

    1.3% of gross income.

    Claire Elisabeth born at 27w1d on 2/20/11
    Image and video hosting by TinyPic
  • 15% and 1.2x.

    But like SB ours is a fixer upper, so we put a bit more into it. 


    image
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  • imagecmc714:
    Good luck!! I think we would be in a 1 bedroom condo for our PITI to be at 20%! I don't even want to know what you'll be paying for taxes in Jersey.

    Thanks!  Taxes in NJ are totally insane.  This place is relatively cheap for taxes (under $12k annually) but lots of places we see are in the $18-20k range.  Easily makes something that otherwise could have been affordable out of reach.

    image Mabel the Loser.
  • Yeah, our taxes are insane and we fight them every year. SUch a pain.

    Since mine was based on gross, not net, I am sure it is pretty close to what you are looking at november.

  • With taxes, insurance, etc. mine is at almost 30% of my after-tax (and after 401k) takehome.  The mortgage total is 2.2x my annual salary.

    I should probably be an outlier on this, since I'm a single-income family and all that.  It was more like 16% of takehome and 1.2x annual salary before J and I split.

    image
  • imageNovemberrocks:
    Thanks guys.  We are bidding today and I think we've capped our bids at a place where mortgage+prop taxes would be 30-32% of net pay and the mortgage amt about 2.5x gross income.  Like CMC mentioned, we too are in a pretty HCOL area.

    I don't think that's too high for net income, especially in a HCOL area.  Plus, I think the standard percentages can sometimes be a little low for higher income earners.


    image
    The nerve!
    House | Blog
  • Mine's about the same as Fenton.

  • I think our monthly payment (mortgage, taxes, insurance, and stupid PMI) is about 25% of our gross income.  Will you guys be paying PMI too?  Factor in a big ol' chunk of money for that if you are. 
    I'll keep my fingers crossed that your offer is the one that gets accepted!
    image
    "That chick wins at Penises, for sure." -- Fenton
  • Our mortgage is 16.8% of our net monthly income. Our annual income is 7% more than our mortgage balance.
    image
    For less then ten cents a day, you can feed a hungry child.
  • No PMI Cali.  Thanks so much!!  I don't think we're gonna get it, but we've got to at least throw in an offer because I love it so.  They said that they got an offer that is "close to asking," but who knows what that means.  We probably can't do more than 96-97% of ask, but we've also got no contingencies and over 20% down.  We'll see.
    image Mabel the Loser.
  • Seems like a solid offer.  Good luck!
    IMG_2788

    2/20/2011
  • After having offers fall through on contingencies before, I would take a no-contingency offer over a higher $ amount (provided they were reasonable).  If someone offered cash monies without contingencies on my mom's house, we'd take far less rather than spend a few more months only to find out it's not going to happen again.
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  • Our mortage with taxes and insurance is about 20% of our net.

    Multiple is 1.9

    We live in a LCOL and I work part time.

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  • Currently we spend about 16% of our take home income on the house. We are about to pay off our 20 (we were cash poor when we bought the house right before our wedding, so we did an 80% mortgage and a 20% 2nd mortgage), so we will be at 10% soon. Once we pay off the 20 our house will be worth about 90% of our combined gross income.
    image
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