Mortgage Affordability UK 2026 — How Much Can I Borrow?

What House Can I Buy on a £30,000 Salary? UK 2026 Guide

On a £30,000 salary you could borrow up to ££135,000 and buy a property worth around ££150,000 with a 10% deposit. Full affordability breakdown inside.

Mortgage information is general guidance only. Mortgages are regulated by the FCA. YOUR HOME MAY BE REPOSSESSED IF YOU DO NOT KEEP UP REPAYMENTS ON YOUR MORTGAGE. Consult an FCA-regulated mortgage adviser before making decisions.

On a £30,000 salary, you can typically borrow up to ££135,000 and buy a home worth around ££150,000 with a 10% deposit. This uses the standard 4.5x income multiple that most high street lenders apply. Some lenders go higher, and a joint mortgage with a partner significantly increases your purchasing power.

What Can You Borrow on £30,000?

Income multiple Maximum borrowing
4x (cautious lenders) £120,000
4.5x (standard) £135,000
5x (some lenders) £150,000
5.5x (specialist / professional lenders) £165,000

The income multiple is the starting point. Lenders also conduct affordability stress tests — checking you could still afford repayments if interest rates rose to 6–7%. Your outgoings (loans, credit cards, childcare) reduce your borrowing capacity pound for pound.

What Property Can You Afford?

These figures assume you are the sole buyer on a £30,000 salary, borrowing ££135,000.

Deposit Property value you can reach Monthly payment (4.5%, 25yr)
5% deposit £142,105 £750
10% deposit £150,000 £750
15% deposit £158,823 £750
20% deposit £168,750 £750
25% deposit £180,000 £750

Note: deposit percentage changes the property value you can buy but not the loan amount (££135,000). A larger deposit reduces the LTV, which typically improves the interest rate you are offered.

Worked Example

Single buyer on £30,000: Takes home approximately ££2,093 per month after tax and NI. Borrowing ££135,000 at 4.5% over 25 years means a monthly payment of £750. This is 36% of take-home pay — manageable but leaving limited room for other large costs. With a 10% deposit of £15,000, they could buy a £150,000 property.

Is £30,000 Enough to Buy a Home Alone?

Region Typical house price (2026) Affordable on £30,000?
North East England £165,000 ⚠️ Possible with good deposit
Yorkshire & Humber £210,000 ⚠️ Stretched
East Midlands £245,000 ⚠️ Stretched
West Midlands £260,000 ⚠️ At the limit
East of England £335,000 ❌ Likely out of reach alone
South West £310,000 ❌ Out of reach alone
London £530,000 ❌ Out of reach alone — joint income or significant deposit needed
South East £390,000 ❌ Out of reach alone
Scotland £190,000 ⚠️ Possible with deposit

House prices are approximate regional averages (Land Registry, 2025 Q4). They vary significantly within regions.

Joint Mortgage on £30,000 + Partner Income

Adding a second income dramatically increases your purchasing power.

Partner salary Combined income Max borrowing (4.5x) Property value (10% dep)
£30,000 (same as you) £60,000 £270,000 £300,000
£22,500 £52,500 £236,250 £262,500
£37,500 £67,500 £303,750 £337,500

Government Schemes That Can Help

  • Mortgage Guarantee Scheme — enables 95% LTV mortgages; reduces the deposit needed
  • Shared Ownership — buy 25–75% of a property, pay rent on the remainder; lower mortgage needed
  • First Homes scheme — first-time buyers can buy new-build homes at 30–50% discount in some areas
  • Lifetime ISA — save up to £4,000/year, government adds 25% (max £1,000/year) toward your first home

What You Need to Save

Deposit % Deposit amount (on £150,000 property) Stamp duty Solicitor fees Total needed
5% £7,500 £0 ~£2,000 ~£9,500
10% £15,000 £0 ~£2,000 ~£17,000

Stamp duty shown is for a standard buyer. First-time buyers pay less — see the stamp duty guide UK.

For more on the buying process, see the first-time buyer guide UK, how much deposit you need, and mortgage on your salary explained.

Sources

  1. Bank of England — Mortgage lender statistics
  2. Money and Pensions Service — How much can I borrow?
  3. FCA — Mortgage affordability rules