How Much House Can You Afford on $90,000 in New York?
Based on realistic take-home calculations and DTI ratios â not just what banks say you can borrow.
Your Affordability Summary
Affordable Home Price by DTI Scenario
Conservative (25% DTI)
Recommended for most people
Recommended (28% DTI)
Bank standard
Aggressive (33% DTI)
Maximum stretch
Monthly Payment Breakdown (Recommended Scenario)
Down Payment Scenarios
How different down payments affect your cash needed upfront and monthly payment for a $215,870 home.
3% Down
5% Down
10% Down
20% Down
Key Insights for New York
Tax Impact
New York has a 10.9% state income tax rate (graduated structure). This means roughly 11 cents of every dollar goes to state taxes, which reduces your take-home pay compared to zero-tax states like Texas or Florida.
DTI vs. Take-Home Reality
The "28% of gross income" rule banks use translates to roughly 19% of your gross income here. But in terms of actual take-home pay, it's 28% â a much more realistic measure of affordability.
Hidden Housing Costs
Your monthly payment is just the start. Budget an additional 1-2% of the home's value annually for maintenance, 1.1% for property taxes, and HOA fees if applicable. These often add 30-50% to your mortgage payment alone.
Related Affordability Pages
Explore Related Data for $90,000 in New York
Dig into every angle of a $90,000 salary in New York — take-home pay, taxes, mortgage, retirement, emergency fund, and debt-to-income ratio.
Take-home pay on $90,000 in New York
Federal tax, state tax, Social Security, and Medicare breakdown.
Tax brackets on $90,000 in New York
Exactly which brackets your income crosses and the effective rate.
$350,000 mortgage in New York
Monthly payment, property tax, and total interest at typical rates.
Retirement at 30 earning $90,000
Savings benchmarks and projections for someone at your income.
Emergency fund target for $80,000
3, 6, 9, and 12-month targets for someone single at this income.
DTI ratio on $100,000 with $2K/mo debt
See how monthly debt obligations affect your borrowing power.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why is the recommended DTI different from the bank's 28% rule?
Banks use 28% of your gross income, but that's before taxes. After federal, state, and FICA taxes, your actual take-home is much less. The 28% DTI can easily become 40%+ of your take-home pay, leaving little room for savings, retirement, or emergencies.
Should I aim for the conservative or recommended scenario?
The conservative 25% DTI is ideal if you have student loans, other debt, or want to aggressively save for retirement. The recommended 28% works if housing is your only major expense. The aggressive 33% should only be considered if you have very stable income and minimal other debt.
What about property taxes and HOA fees?
This calculator includes a standard property tax estimate of 1.1% of home value annually. However, some areas are much higher or lower. HOA fees vary widely and should be researched for your specific neighborhood. Both significantly impact your total housing cost.
Is PMI worth it to put down less than 20%?
PMI (mortgage insurance) costs 0.55% of your loan annually and drops off at 20% equity. If you could earn 8-10% investing the difference, a 5% down payment might be smarter than waiting for 20%. But consider your comfort level with leverage and interest rate environment.
Want to explore more scenarios?
Use the interactive mortgage calculator to model different interest rates, loan terms, and down payments.
Open Mortgage Calculator