Real questions answered
December 11, 2025
Advice
I thought I would take real questions from other high volume subreddits and give my take on them. Hopefully this helps if you're in a similar situation.
Hi! I (21F) am aiming to buy a house in October ‘26 when my lease on my apartment is up. I make between 60-65k a year (depending on my overtime), I have a 761 credit score, and I have a car payment of ~450/month (I’m always ahead on it though lol) with 29k left to pay. I’m looking to buy a house in the 150-175k range.
With a year to prepare, this person should be able to get in a good spot to buy.
I recently did a post on Oklahoma City homes for sale, and I bet she could find a decent one that she could find, and it wouldn't wreck her budget.
Not loving that auto-loan though.
Gross income is $5k per month
A lender will approve up to a max of 49% debt to income ratio.
So take $5k x 0.49 = 2,450 and subtract out the $450 per month for the auto loan.
The absolute max a lender would approve would be $2,000 per month for a housing payment (principal and interest, homeowners insurance, property taxes, HOA fees, and mortgage insurance)
That lender max puts you in a tough spot though.
$1,500 would be 30% of the gross monthly income, and would probably put this borrower in a better spot.
Let's see if a house in OK around $150k would get something like that.
How much should I be saving for a down payment? I currently have about 3500 in my savings.
A minimum of 3% is needed for a down payment ($4,500 on a $150k property)
Don't forget closing costs which could run around $6k
Sellers could pay a portion of that (3% is the max a seller can contribute on a conventional loan when the down payment is less than 10%)
Depending on the type of market you're in (seller's or buyer's) you could need a max of $11k and a minimum of $6,000.
Is that a feasible timeline?
Yes! One year is more than enough time
Is my age going to make getting a loan more difficult?
The only way your age matters is if you're trying to get a reverse mortgage or not (age restrictions) or if you're under 18.
I’m going back to school and I will likely have to take out student loans, though I’m going to try my damndest to avoid that; will that affect my getting a loan?
Underwriting on conventional Fannie Mae loans will count 1% of your student loan balances against your debt to income ratio. So you'll need to factor that in.
Any and all advice is appreciated! Thanks!
P.S. I live in Oklahoma, if that helps with context for answers.
Here's a fun exercise. You can see if you qualify for better rates by checking out the "AMI lookup tool" from Fannie Mae
If you're at 80% or below of the income, you'll qualify for HomeReady, which offers lower mortgage insurance, and lower rates.
If she were buying in Oklahoma county, she'd qualify. 80% of the area median income is $78,640 and she's below that.
Real life scenario
Let's pretend she's going to buy this $150k house in Tulsa https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/5512-N-Hartford-Pl-Tulsa-OK-74126/22181554_zpid/
I have no clue if it's a nice area or not, but let's use it.
Sales price: $150k
Loan amount: $145,500
Interest rate: Today's average is 6.3% on mortgage news daily
Payment:
- $900 Principal and interest
- $30 mortgage insurance
- $200 homeowners insurance
- $40 property taxes
- $1,170 total monthly payment
Down Payment: $4,500
Closing costs: ~$6,000 (guessing here)
Total Cash: $10,500 if the seller doesn't pay anything.
If she wanted a house that's priced $10k more, it might raise her payment about $60 per month
What I'd suggest she do
Get in touch with a realtor, see how likely it would be for the seller to pay for closing costs.
(Use the agent finder in the community guide if you don't know where to find a good one.)
If it's unlikely that the seller will pay, see how long it would take to save up to $10,500
Or check local down payment assistance programs. Perhaps there's a grant or a forgivable loan she could qualify for.
(there's a guide for all 50 states in the subreddit community guide)
The $1,170 is 23% of her gross monthly income.