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Buying a home is the biggest financial decision
most people make. But before you speak to a
mortgage broker, you need to understand two
things: how much lenders will offer you, and
what you actually take home each month after
tax.
Most mortgage calculators tell you the first
part. Payslp tells you the second.
How Much Will Lenders Offer You?
Most UK mortgage lenders use an income multiple
to calculate how much they will lend. The
standard multiple is 4.5 times your gross annual
salary, though some specialist lenders will go
up to 5.5 times for higher earners or certain
professions.
Here is what that looks like at common salary
levels:
£25,000 salary → maximum mortgage £112,500
£30,000 salary → maximum mortgage £135,000
£35,000 salary → maximum mortgage £157,500
£40,000 salary → maximum mortgage £180,000
£45,000 salary → maximum mortgage £202,500
£50,000 salary → maximum mortgage £225,000
£60,000 salary → maximum mortgage £270,000
£75,000 salary → maximum mortgage £337,500
£100,000 salary → maximum mortgage £450,000
If you are buying with a partner, lenders
typically combine both salaries. Two people
each earning £35,000 could borrow up to
£315,000.
Average UK House Prices by Region (2026)
The salary you need to buy a home varies
enormously depending on where you live. Here
are the approximate average house prices and
the single salary you would need to afford
them on a standard 4.5x multiple:
London: Average £500,000 → salary needed £111,000
South East: Average £380,000 → salary needed £84,000
East of England: Average £320,000 → salary needed £71,000
South West: Average £290,000 → salary needed £64,000
East Midlands: Average £230,000 → salary needed £51,000
West Midlands: Average £225,000 → salary needed £50,000
Yorkshire: Average £200,000 → salary needed £44,000
North West: Average £210,000 → salary needed £47,000
North East: Average £155,000 → salary needed £34,000
Wales: Average £195,000 → salary needed £43,000
Scotland: Average £185,000 → salary needed £41,000
These figures assume a 10% deposit. A larger
deposit reduces the amount you need to borrow
and therefore the salary required.
The Part Most People Miss — Your Real
Take-Home Pay
Knowing your maximum mortgage is only half
the picture. Lenders will also stress-test
your affordability — checking that your
monthly repayments are manageable given your
actual take-home pay after tax, National
Insurance, pension contributions and any
other deductions.
This is where most people get a nasty surprise.
A £40,000 salary sounds comfortable. But after
income tax, National Insurance and a 5% pension
contribution, your actual monthly take-home is
closer to £2,560 — not the £3,333 your gross
salary might suggest.
Use the Payslp calculator to find your exact
take-home before you start viewing properties.
Enter your salary, pension contribution and
student loan plan — and see the real number
that will appear in your bank account each month.
Monthly Repayments vs Take-Home Pay
Here is a realistic picture of what buying
looks like at different salary levels, assuming
a 25-year mortgage at 4.5% interest and a 10%
deposit:
£30,000 salary:
Take-home: ~£1,950/month
Max mortgage: £135,000
Monthly repayment: ~£730
Repayment as % of take-home: 37%
£40,000 salary:
Take-home: ~£2,560/month
Max mortgage: £180,000
Monthly repayment: ~£970
Repayment as % of take-home: 38%
£50,000 salary:
Take-home: ~£3,090/month
Max mortgage: £225,000
Monthly repayment: ~£1,215
Repayment as % of take-home: 39%
£60,000 salary:
Take-home: ~£3,580/month
Max mortgage: £270,000
Monthly repayment: ~£1,460
Repayment as % of take-home: 41%
Most financial advisers recommend keeping
your mortgage repayment below 35% of your
net monthly income. As you can see, at
standard multiples this is tight for most
buyers — which is why understanding your
real take-home matters so much.
How to Improve Your Mortgage Chances
If the numbers above are not quite working
for you, there are several ways to improve
your position:
Save a larger deposit. Every additional
percentage point of deposit reduces your
loan-to-value ratio and typically unlocks
better interest rates. Moving from a 10%
to a 15% deposit can meaningfully reduce
your monthly repayments.
Use salary sacrifice. If your employer
offers salary sacrifice for pension
contributions, this reduces your taxable
income — which actually increases your
monthly take-home pay compared to a
standard pension contribution of the same
amount. Use the Payslp calculator to see
the difference.
Consider shared ownership. Available
in England for properties up to £300,000
(£500,000 in London), shared ownership
allows you to buy a share of a property
and pay rent on the rest — significantly
reducing the deposit and mortgage required.
Look at First Homes. A government scheme
offering new-build homes at a minimum 30%
discount to first-time buyers in England.
Buy with a partner or friend. Combining
two incomes dramatically increases what
you can borrow and reduces the deposit
burden.
The Bottom Line
The salary you need to buy a house in 2026
depends entirely on where you want to live.
In the North East you can buy on a single
income of £34,000. In London you would
need to earn over £100,000 — or buy jointly.
Before you do anything else, calculate your
real take-home pay. A mortgage is affordable
only if the monthly repayments fit comfortably
within what actually lands in your bank account
— not your gross salary.
Use the free Payslp salary calculator to get
your exact monthly take-home before you start
your property search.