On a £50,000 salary, you can typically borrow up to ££225,000 and buy a home worth around ££250,000 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 £50,000?
| Income multiple | Maximum borrowing |
|---|---|
| 4x (cautious lenders) | £200,000 |
| 4.5x (standard) | £225,000 |
| 5x (some lenders) | £250,000 |
| 5.5x (specialist / professional lenders) | £275,000 |
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 £50,000 salary, borrowing ££225,000.
| Deposit | Property value you can reach | Monthly payment (4.5%, 25yr) |
|---|---|---|
| 5% deposit | £236,842 | £1,251 |
| 10% deposit | £250,000 | £1,251 |
| 15% deposit | £264,705 | £1,251 |
| 20% deposit | £281,250 | £1,251 |
| 25% deposit | £300,000 | £1,251 |
Note: deposit percentage changes the property value you can buy but not the loan amount (££225,000). A larger deposit reduces the LTV, which typically improves the interest rate you are offered.
Worked Example
Single buyer on £50,000: Takes home approximately ££3,293 per month after tax and NI. Borrowing ££225,000 at 4.5% over 25 years means a monthly payment of £1,251. This is 38% of take-home pay — manageable but leaving limited room for other large costs. With a 10% deposit of £25,000, they could buy a £250,000 property.
Is £50,000 Enough to Buy a Home Alone?
| Region | Typical house price (2026) | Affordable on £50,000? |
|---|---|---|
| North East England | £165,000 | ✅ Yes — well within reach |
| Yorkshire & Humber | £210,000 | ✅ Yes |
| East Midlands | £245,000 | ✅ Yes |
| 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 | ✅ Yes |
House prices are approximate regional averages (Land Registry, 2025 Q4). They vary significantly within regions.
Joint Mortgage on £50,000 + Partner Income
Adding a second income dramatically increases your purchasing power.
| Partner salary | Combined income | Max borrowing (4.5x) | Property value (10% dep) |
|---|---|---|---|
| £50,000 (same as you) | £100,000 | £450,000 | £500,000 |
| £37,500 | £87,500 | £393,750 | £437,500 |
| £62,500 | £112,500 | £506,250 | £562,500 |
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 £250,000 property) | Stamp duty | Solicitor fees | Total needed |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5% | £12,500 | £2,500 | ~£2,000 | ~£17,000 |
| 10% | £25,000 | £2,500 | ~£2,000 | ~£29,500 |
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.