Mortgage on a $150,000 home (2026)
Monthly payment with 20% down: $794/mo P&I, or about $1,007/mo all-in with taxes and insurance. At 6.95% (national average, 30-year fixed).
Monthly payment by down payment
| Scenario | Down payment | P&I (30yr) | PMI | All-in/mo |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 20% down (no PMI) | $30,000 | $794 | — | $1,007 |
| 10% down | $15,000 | $894 | $96 | $1,203 |
| 5% down (FHA) | $7,500 | $943 | $101 | $1,257 |
Taxes estimated at 1.1% annually · Insurance at 0.6% · Rate: 6.95%
Income needed to afford a $150,000 home
Can you afford a $150,000 house?
A $150,000 home at today’s 6.95% average rate requires $794/month in principal and interest with 20% down ($30,000). That translates to needing roughly $43K in gross annual income to stay within the conventional 28% housing expense ratio.
The difference between 5% and 20% down on a $150,000 home is significant: a 5% down payment ($7,500) adds PMI of about $101/month until you reach 20% equity, and adds $31,140 in total interest over the life of the loan. If you can afford the larger down payment, the math strongly favors it.
On a 15-year loan, the monthly P&I payment jumps to $1,075 — $281 more per month than the 30-year option — but you save $92,340 in total interest and own the home outright in half the time.
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