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🏠 Rent Affordability Guide
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How Much Rent Can You Afford on a $175,000 Salary?

At $175,000/year, the 30% rule puts your theoretical rent ceiling at $4,375/month β€” enough to rent premium units in virtually any US city. At this income, the rent question shifts from "can I afford it?" to "is renting strategically better than buying, and am I allocating the savings optimally?" Many high earners benefit from modeling rent vs. buy for their specific market before committing to either path long-term.

Monthly Gross

$14,583

pre-tax income

Max Rent (30%)

$4,375/mo

30% rule ceiling

Safe Rent (25%)

$3,646/mo

wealth-building zone

Take-Home Est.

$10,059/mo

~after taxes

Affordability Verdict β€” $175,000 Salary

Affordability isn't the constraint at this income. The decision is strategic: what does renting vs. buying look like in your specific market over your expected timeline?

Your Rent Targets: Three Thresholds

Maximum (30% of gross)Standard ceiling
$4,375/mo

The commonly cited maximum β€” landlords often use 3Γ— monthly rent for qualification

Smarter Target (28%)Practical target
$4,083/mo

Slightly tighter β€” allows more flexibility for unexpected costs

Optimal (25%)Wealth-building
$3,646/mo

Recommended if saving for a down payment or building net worth

30% of Take-HomeAfter-tax version
$3,018/mo

Some advisors prefer this β€” more conservative than gross-income rule

Take-home estimate uses 2026 federal brackets, FICA, and ~4% average state tax for a single filer with standard deduction. Actual take-home varies by state, filing status, and pre-tax contributions.

What Does $4,375/Month Get You?

Your 30% ceiling vs. median 2026 US rents by unit type and market.

US Median Studio

$1,250/mo

Within budget (350% of ceiling)

US Median 1BR

$1,650/mo

Within budget (265% of ceiling)

US Median 2BR

$2,050/mo

Within budget (213% of ceiling)

Expensive Metro (NYC/SF/BOS)

$3,100/mo 1BR median

Within budget β€” $1,275/mo headroom

Affordable Metro (MEM/OKC/CLE)

$990/mo 1BR median

Within budget β€” $3,385/mo headroom

Strategies for Your Income Level

1.

Model rent vs buy with your actual tax situation β€” mortgage interest deduction and capital appreciation may favor buying

2.

If renting strategically (investing the down payment), ensure you're actually executing the investment plan consistently

3.

Negotiate lease terms aggressively β€” landlords of premium units are often flexible on price for creditworthy long-term tenants

Frequently Asked Questions

How much rent is appropriate on $175,000?
The 30% rule gives $4,375/month β€” but at this income, the more relevant question is your strategic allocation. Optimal financial planning often suggests keeping housing below 20–25% of gross to maximize investment capacity. That's $2,917–$3,646/month, leaving $1,167/month more for wealth-building.
Should I rent or buy at this income level?
At this income, buying is financially viable in most markets. Whether renting makes sense depends on: your local price-to-rent ratio, how long you plan to stay, tax considerations (mortgage interest and SALT deductions), and whether you have a clear investment plan for the capital you'd otherwise put in a down payment. A fee-only financial planner can model both scenarios with your specific numbers.
How does renting affect wealth-building at high income?
Renting isn't inherently a wealth drag at high income β€” it depends on what you do with the capital. If you invest the equivalent of a down payment + principal paydown each month, renting can produce competitive wealth outcomes. The risk is spending rather than investing the 'savings.' Automating the investment is the key discipline.

Rent Affordability by Salary

See how the 30% ceiling shifts as income grows across every tier.

Can You Afford These Cities on $175,000?

Your rent ceiling is $4,375/month. Here's how that compares to what you actually need in specific metros.

Calculate Your Exact Rent Budget

Enter your income, current expenses, and savings goals to find your optimal monthly rent.

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