What this means
A house-poor risk check compares total housing cost against income and then looks at leftover cash after debt and living expenses.
The calculator is not a lender decision. It is a personal cash-flow stress test for buyers who want a more conservative answer.
Key takeaways
- Use the all-in monthly cost, not only principal and interest.
- Check leftover cash after debts and living expenses.
- Verify lender, tax, insurance, and HOA numbers before purchase.
Formula or planning rule
Common mistakes
- Ignoring utility increases after moving.
- Using lender approval as the same thing as comfort.
- Spending cash-to-close without preserving reserves.
- Forgetting HOA, PMI, or reassessment risk.
How to use this site
Run the calculator with your expected purchase price, down payment, rate, taxes, insurance, utilities, maintenance reserve, debts, and living expenses. Save the scenario link and compare multiple purchase prices before making an offer.
Practical example
A household can become house poor even if the lender approves the loan. For example, a mortgage payment may fit a standard DTI guideline, but the buyer may also have vehicle loans, student loans, childcare, high utilities, maintenance needs, and a thin emergency fund. When those costs are combined, the household may have very little room for savings or unexpected repairs.
The house-poor risk check is designed to make that tension visible. It does not tell a buyer whether they are allowed to buy. It asks whether the purchase leaves enough flexibility to live comfortably after the home is purchased.
Signals that risk is rising
- Leftover monthly cash is low after housing, debts, and living expenses.
- Maintenance reserve is excluded to make the numbers work.
- Cash-to-close uses most of the emergency fund.
- The budget only works if taxes, insurance, or utilities stay unusually low.
- The buyer is depending on future raises or bonuses to make the payment comfortable.
How to reduce house-poor risk
Run a lower purchase price, a larger down payment, a lower debt scenario, and a higher tax or insurance scenario. If a modestly lower home price substantially improves leftover cash, the safer move may be to preserve flexibility rather than stretch to the top of the approval range.
FAQ
Is house-poor risk included in the calculator?
Yes. The calculator is designed to include house-poor risk as part of a more realistic mortgage affordability estimate.
Does this replace a lender estimate?
No. It is an educational planning tool. Confirm loan, tax, insurance, and legal details with qualified professionals.
Why use leftover cash?
Leftover cash helps show whether the payment is workable after the mortgage, ownership costs, debts, and normal monthly expenses.