Rent Calculator

Calculate how much rent you can afford based on your income. Follow the 30% rule guideline.

Your Financials

%

Recommended Max Rent

$1,500.00 / mo

Based on the common recommendation to spend no more than 30% of your gross monthly income on rent.

Income Breakdown

Free Rent Affordability Calculator: Determine Maximum Affordable Rent

Everything you need to know

Share:

Comprehensive Guide to Rent Affordability

How much rent can you afford? is a fundamental financial question for renters. Spending too much on housing can prevent you from saving, building emergency funds, or pursuing other financial goals. The widely-used 30% rule suggests spending no more than 30% of your gross monthly income on housing costs. This guideline provides a safety guardrail—if rent exceeds this threshold, other financial goals become significantly harder to achieve.

However, the 30% rule is just a guideline, not a strict law. Geographic location, other debts, and personal goals all affect what's truly affordable. Someone in a high-cost city like San Francisco might realistically spend 35-40% on rent, while someone in an affordable market might target 20-25% to accelerate other savings. The key is understanding the tradeoff: every percentage point of income spent on rent is a percentage point NOT spent on savings, investments, debt payoff, or other goals.

How to Use the Rent Affordability Calculator

Using our rent affordability calculator is straightforward:

  1. Enter Your Gross Monthly Income

    • Input total income before taxes/deductions
    • Include salary, bonuses, side income
    • Use stable, guaranteed income (not variable)
  2. Select Affordability Percentage (if not 30%)

    • Default is 30% (standard guideline)
    • Adjust to 25% if saving aggressively
    • Adjust to 35-40% if in high-cost area or prefer housing
    • Consider your other financial obligations
  3. View Affordable Rent Range

    • Maximum recommended rent
    • See percentage of income allocation
    • Understand remaining budget for other needs
  4. Account for Additional Housing Costs

    • Utilities (not always in rent): $100-200/month
    • Renter's insurance: $10-20/month
    • Internet/phone: $50-100/month
    • Parking (if applicable): $50-200/month
    • Total "housing burden" might exceed just rent
  5. Budget for Other Necessities

    • Remaining income after rent/housing
    • Must cover: food, transportation, insurance, debt, savings
    • Recommended: 50% needs, 30% wants, 20% savings

Rent Affordability Formulas

30% Rule Calculation

Affordable Rent = (Gross Monthly Income × 30%) - Utilities Not in Rent

Where you subtract utilities only if your calculation is before typical rental inclusions.

Example: $4,000/month gross income

  • 30% = $1,200/month for housing
  • If utilities average $150/month: Affordable rent = $1,050/month

Total Housing Burden

Total Housing Cost = Rent + Utilities + Insurance + Internet + Parking
Housing Burden % = (Total Housing Cost / Gross Income) × 100%

Example:

  • Rent: $1,200
  • Utilities: $150
  • Insurance: $15
  • Internet: $60
  • Total: $1,425
  • $4,000 income = 35.6% housing burden

Remaining Budget

Remaining Income = Gross Income - (Rent + Taxes + Deductions)

This is what's available for food, transportation, insurance, debt, savings.

Practical Rent Affordability Examples

Example 1: Recent Graduate, Starting Salary

Scenario: First job after college, $35,000/year salary

Gross monthly income: $2,917

Using 30% rule:

  • Affordable rent: $2,917 × 30% = $875/month
  • Plus utilities (~$150): Total housing ~$1,025

Reality check:

  • Entry-level salaries are modest
  • 30% guideline is strict but necessary with other debt (student loans)
  • Many recent grads struggle with $875 rent in expensive cities
  • May need roommate to afford this

Alternative approach (32-35% rule):

  • If allowing 33%: $963/month rent
  • Gives slightly more flexibility without sacrificing too much

Example 2: Established Professional, Single Income

Scenario: Mid-career professional, $70,000/year salary, some debt

Gross monthly income: $5,833

Using 30% rule:

  • Affordable rent: $5,833 × 30% = $1,750/month
  • Plus utilities ($150): Total housing ~$1,900

Monthly budget breakdown:

  • Housing: $1,900 (32.6% with utilities)
  • Student loan: $250/month
  • Car payment: $300/month
  • Debt total: $550 (9.4%)
  • Food/groceries: $400
  • Transportation (gas, insurance): $300
  • Insurance (health, other): $200
  • Entertainment: $300
  • Savings: $433
  • Total: $5,833

Analysis: 30% guideline still works with modest debt and allows $433/month savings (7.4% of income). This is healthy.

Example 3: Dual Income Couple, San Francisco Market

Scenario: Two earners, combined $150,000/year, expensive market

Gross monthly income: $12,500

Using 30% rule:

  • Affordable rent: $12,500 × 30% = $3,750/month

Reality check (SF market):

  • 1-bed apartment: $3,000-$4,000 typical
  • 2-bed: $4,000-$5,500+
  • At 30% rule, couple can afford 1-bed or modest 2-bed

Alternative (high-cost area exception: 35% rule):

  • Affordable at 35%: $4,375/month
  • Slightly more realistic for market

Monthly budget at 35%:

  • Housing: $4,375 (35%)
  • Taxes (high CA rate): ~$1,500
  • Food/groceries: $600
  • Transportation: $300
  • Childcare (if applicable): varies
  • Remaining for insurance, debt, savings: ~$3,000

Analysis: San Francisco couple needs to allocate higher percentage to housing than standard 30%. Still leaves reasonable amount for other expenses and savings.

Example 4: Single Parent, Supporting Family

Scenario: Single parent, $40,000/year, supporting one child

Gross monthly income: $3,333

Using strict 30% rule:

  • Affordable rent: $1,000/month

Reality:

  • With childcare costs ($800-1,200/month), 30% becomes unrealistic
  • If rent is only $1,000, add childcare $1,000 = 60% of income!
  • Needs different approach

Alternative framework:

  • Rent: $900 (27%)
  • Childcare: $800-900 (24-27%)
  • Total housing + childcare: ~54%
  • Very tight budget

Recommended action:

  • Seek subsidized childcare programs
  • Look for lower-rent apartments
  • Consider roommate situation
  • Target income increases

Analysis: Single parents often need to prioritize differently—housing affordability is secondary to childcare affordability. Both combined create real burden.

Example 5: Aggressive Saver, Below-Market Rent

Scenario: High earner wanting to build wealth, $120,000/year salary

Gross monthly income: $10,000

Using 30% rule:

  • Could afford: $3,000/month rent

But pursuing aggressive saving (25% target):

  • Target housing: 25% = $2,500/month
  • Allows: $2,500 remaining for other expenses
  • Plus: $2,500/month toward savings/investments (25%)

Monthly budget:

  • Rent: $2,500 (25%)
  • Taxes/deductions: ~$2,000 (estimated)
  • Food/transportation/utilities: $1,500 (15%)
  • Savings/investments: $2,500 (25%)
  • Discretionary: $1,500 (15%)
  • Total: $10,000

Analysis: By choosing 25% housing (below 30% guideline), earner can save aggressively. At 7% investment returns, $2,500/month grows to $2.2M over 30 years! This shows power of choosing below-affordability housing.

Key Rent Affordability Concepts

The 30% Rule Guideline

Originated from mortgage lending standards (lenders limit mortgage to 28-30% of income). Applies to rent as well. The logic: spending beyond 30% on housing leaves insufficient income for other necessities and savings. Strict rule, but protective.

High-Cost Area Exceptions

San Francisco, New York, Boston, DC, Seattle, and similar high-cost cities regularly exceed 30% guideline. 35-40% might be realistic. However, this creates real budget strain—account for it by controlling other expenses.

Other Debt Impact

Existing debt (student loans, car payment, credit cards) competes with housing for income. If you have $500/month in debt payments, your true "housing + debt" rule should not exceed 40-45% combined. This means rent might need to be 20-25% if you have significant debt.

Utilities and "Hidden" Housing Costs

Rent is often just the base. Add utilities, insurance, internet, parking, and true housing cost increases 20-30%. A "$1,000 rent" apartment might cost "$1,250 total" with utilities and insurance included.

Location Arbitrage

Some people choose to live where rent is affordable, even if income potential is lower. Trading high rent for lower cost of living (moving from SF to Austin) can significantly improve financial position.

30% is a solid guideline for most people, but not universal. Use 25-30% if: (1) You have significant debt; (2) You want to save aggressively; (3) You're in an affordable market; (4) You're building an emergency fund. Use 35-40% if: (1) You're in a high-cost area with no alternative; (2) You have stable income and minimal other debt; (3) You prioritize housing/neighborhood over savings. The key: be intentional. Don't accidentally spend 45%+ on rent "just because it was available." You have limited options: (1) Find roommates to split cost; (2) Move to more affordable neighborhood/area; (3) Increase income (job change, side gig); (4) Accept higher percentage knowing you'll save less (temporary, plan to improve); (5) Seek assistance programs (housing vouchers, subsidies). Many people in expensive cities live at 35-40% housing costs—do so intentionally with a plan to improve, not passively. Yes, utilities are part of housing cost and should be included in your calculation. If rent is "$1,000" but utilities average "$150", your real housing cost is "$1,150" = 34.5% of a $4,000 income (not 30%). Some landlords include utilities in rent (bonus), others don't. Always calculate total housing cost, not just rent alone. Use the 50/30/20 rule: Of remaining 70%, allocate: (1) 50% to needs (food, transportation, insurance, minimum debt payments); (2) 30% to wants (entertainment, dining, hobbies); (3) 20% to savings/extra debt payment. This builds on top of your 30% housing allocation. Total: 30% housing + 35% needs + 21% wants + 14% savings. Adjust based on your debt and savings goals. Depends on: (1) New rent % of income; (2) Moving costs ($2,000-5,000); (3) Market alternatives; (4) Your attachment to location. If rent increases push you over 35% of income, seriously consider moving. If still under 30%, can absorb increase. Calculate: yearly rent increase vs. moving costs. Example: $100/month increase ($1,200/year) might not justify $3,000 moving cost, but $300/month increase ($3,600/year) probably does.

Disclaimer: This rent affordability calculator provides guidance based on income and standard affordability guidelines. Your actual affordable rent depends on additional factors: debts, family size, emergency fund status, savings goals, local market conditions, and personal priorities. This calculator is for planning purposes only. Consult a financial advisor for personalized budgeting advice.