Skip to main content

The 30% Rule is Dead. Here’s the New Way to Budget for a Home.

The 30% housing rule is outdated. Learn how to budget for a home in 2025 with smarter strategies that reflect today’s real estate market.


For decades, buyers have been told to follow one simple rule:

Don’t spend more than 30% of your income on housing.

That is the gold standard. The budget benchmark. The line in the sand between “affordable” and “overextended.”

But in 2025, that line no longer seems attainable.

According to a Realtor.com® Affordability Report, the typical U.S. household would need to spend 44.6% of their income to buy a median-priced home today. And in cities like Los Angeles, that number jumps to over 100%.

So if you’re staring down home prices, crunching the numbers, and wondering why the math doesn’t add up anymore, you’re not alone. The old rulebook doesn’t work in this market.

But that doesn’t mean you’re stuck. It just means it’s time to budget differently.

What the 30% Rule Got Right (and What It Missed)

The 30% rule was never meant to be a law. It came from a 1969 housing policy called the Brooke Amendment, with capped public housing rent at 25% of a tenant’s income. In the early 1980s, that cap increased to 30%, and eventually became a go-to formula for financial advisors, mortgage lenders, and online calculators.

And for a while, it worked.

It helped buyers avoid overspending and left room for things like savings, emergencies, and daily life.

But here’s what it missed:

  • It doesn’t account for regional cost differences (a $1,200 mortgage hits differently in Tulsa vs. San Francisco).

  • It ignores existing debt, child care, or medical costs.

  • It assumes stable interest rates and steady home prices.

In today’s market, sticking to 30% can feel impossible. So instead of trying to squeeze your dream into an outdated formula, here’s a better approach.

How to Budget for a Home in 2025

1. Start With Your Monthly Lifestyle Number

Forget percentages for a moment. Ask yourself:

How much are you comfortable spending each month on housing, while still living the life you want?

Look at your:

  • Current rent or mortgage

  • Other fixed expenses (car, insurance, groceries)

  • Debt and loan payments

  • Savings goals and emergency fund

  • Travel, hobbies, or childcare

The right number doesn’t have to be 30% of your income, but it does need to keep you financially stable, secure, and sane.

2. Understand the True Cost of Buying

When you see a home listed at $450,000, that’s not your monthly payment.

Here’s what you need to factor in:

  • Mortgage principal and interest

  • Property taxes

  • Homeowners insurance

  • PMI (if putting down less than 20%)

  • HOA fees (if applicable)

  • Maintenance and utilities

Online estimates can get you in the ballpark, but a lender can break it down line by line, even before you fall in love with a house.

3. Use the 30% Rule as a Red Flag

If your housing costs are hovering above 30%, it doesn’t automatically mean you’re in trouble, especially if you don't have a lot of debt outside of your monthly housing payments.

But if you’re creeping up toward 50% and also juggling credit card debt, student loans, or a variable income, that’s a red flag, and means you should pause and re-evaluate.

4. Get Strategic (and Local)

Affordability isn’t just about price. It’s about opportunity.

Here are a few levers that can shift the numbers in your favor:

  • Broaden your search area. A 15-minute drive can mean a 15% price drop.

  • Look at new construction. Builders may offer incentives that reduce monthly costs.

  • Ask about rate buydowns or creative financing. Sellers are becoming more motivated than in the past couple of years.

  • Focus on what you can comfortably afford now. Your first (or next) home doesn’t have to be your forever home.

The Bottom Line

The 30% rule might be outdated, but the goal behind it isn’t.

You still want a home you can comfortably afford. One that fits your lifestyle, not just your loan approval. And the good news? That’s still possible in 2025.

You just need a more personal approach.

If you’re trying to figure out how to make the numbers work, I’m here to help. Let’s take a real look at your budget, your goals, and the smartest next steps for you.


Let's get ΓEA⅃
Christine Ertz
215-987-2961 


Sources: Realtor.com, HUD

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

What a 5.99% Mortgage Rate Means for Buyers in Philadelphia

Buying power is up $30K, and rates dipped to 5.99%, giving homebuyers in Philadelphia more options this spring. A year ago, a lot of homebuyers in Philadelphia ran the numbers and didn’t like what they saw. Today, those numbers look different. According to Zillow , a median-income household can now afford $30,302 more home than they could a year ago.  The reason? Mortgage rates have eased from nearly 7% last winter to around 6%, and recently dipped to 5.99%.  That alone lowers the monthly payment enough to change what many buyers qualify for. Here in Philadelphia, the real question isn’t what’s happening nationally. It’s what this means for you, your budget, and the neighborhoods you’ve been watching.  Let’s walk through what’s changed and how it affects your next move. You May Qualify for More Than You Think If you looked at homes in Philadelphia last year and felt boxed in by your budget, it may be worth revisiting those numbers. Mortgage rates averaged 6...

What Home Buyers Are Paying More For in 2026

Homes with certain features are selling for up to 5.4% more, according to Zillow data. Learn what buyers value most and how to position your home to maximize price. Let’s talk about what buyers are paying more for right now. Zillow’s latest data shows certain features can push a home’s sale price up by as much as 5.4%, or about $19,500 on a typical home.  And it’s not just size or location driving that.  Buyers are putting more money behind homes that feel finished, personal, and ready to live in from day one. You can see it in which listings get attention and which ones sit.  Here’s what’s driving those price bumps, and how it could play out for your home. The Lifestyle Features Buyers Are Paying a Premium For Some of the biggest price bumps right now have nothing to do with square footage. They come from how a home feels the moment a buyer sees it. Zillow found that features tied to a relaxed, getaway-style lifestyle are pulling in higher offers: Homes with a dock sell...

4 Outside-the-Box Ways to Become a Homeowner This Year

  Struggling with affordability? Here are four creative ways today’s buyers are making homeownership work in 2025, from co-buying to house hacking and more. Overwhelmed by high home prices, interest rates, or the feeling that you’re “just not ready” to be a homeowner yet? You’re not alone. According to the  2025 NextGen Homebuyer Report , nearly 60% of Gen Z and Millennial buyers believe homeownership is attainable, but only 19% think now is a good time to buy. So what are they doing instead? They’re getting creative. Here are the four most popular alternative buying strategies young buyers are using to make homeownership work in 2025, plus how to know if one might be right for you. 1. Buying a Fixer-Upper Used by:  42% of buyers surveyed Good for:  Handy buyers who want more space for less money Not great for:  Those who need move-in-ready or have limited renovation budgets Buying a home that needs a little love can be one of the smartest ways to get into a nei...