A £40,000 salary opens up serious homebuying options across most of the UK. Here’s what you can borrow, what you can afford, and how to get the best deal.
How Much Can You Borrow?
Income Multiples
| Lender Type | Multiple | Maximum Borrowing on £40k |
|---|---|---|
| Most high-street lenders | 4–4.5× | £160,000–£180,000 |
| Some building societies | 5× | £200,000 |
| Professional mortgages | 5.5× | £220,000 |
Professional mortgages (for doctors, lawyers, accountants, etc.) sometimes offer higher multiples because these careers have strong earnings growth.
Affordability Adjustments
Your actual borrowing depends on outgoings:
| Monthly Commitment | Approximate Borrowing Reduction |
|---|---|
| £300 car finance | £45,000–£60,000 less |
| £150 credit card minimum | £22,000–£30,000 less |
| £200 personal loan | £30,000–£40,000 less |
| £100 student loan | £15,000–£20,000 less |
| £500 childcare | £30,000–£50,000 less |
Your Total Budget
| Deposit | Mortgage (4.5×) | Total Budget |
|---|---|---|
| £10,000 (5%) | £180,000 | £190,000 |
| £20,000 (10%) | £180,000 | £200,000 |
| £30,000 (15%) | £180,000 | £210,000 |
| £40,000 (20%) | £180,000 | £220,000 |
Where Can You Buy on £40k?
| Region | Average First-Time Buyer Price | Within Budget? |
|---|---|---|
| North East | ~£130,000 | Comfortably |
| Yorkshire | ~£150,000 | Yes |
| North West | ~£155,000 | Yes |
| Scotland | ~£140,000 | Yes |
| Wales | ~£145,000 | Yes |
| East Midlands | ~£170,000 | Yes |
| West Midlands | ~£185,000 | Yes, with 10%+ deposit |
| South West | ~£210,000 | Possible with good deposit |
| East of England | ~£240,000 | Stretch — joint income helps |
| South East | ~£275,000 | Difficult solo |
| London | ~£400,000+ | Joint income or shared ownership needed |
Monthly Payment Examples
Based on a repayment mortgage at 5% interest:
| Mortgage Amount | 25-Year Term | 30-Year Term | 35-Year Term |
|---|---|---|---|
| £140,000 | £819 | £752 | £707 |
| £160,000 | £935 | £859 | £808 |
| £180,000 | £1,052 | £966 | £909 |
| £200,000 | £1,169 | £1,074 | £1,010 |
Your take-home on £40k is approximately £2,630/month (before student loan). Most lenders cap mortgage costs at 35–40% of gross monthly income, giving a ceiling of roughly £1,167–£1,333/month.
Buying With a Partner
Joint applications significantly extend your reach:
| Combined Income | Borrowing (4.5×) | With £30k Deposit |
|---|---|---|
| £40k + £25k = £65k | £292,500 | £322,500 |
| £40k + £30k = £70k | £315,000 | £345,000 |
| £40k + £40k = £80k | £360,000 | £390,000 |
A joint income of £70k+ with a decent deposit makes much of the South East and parts of outer London accessible.
How to Maximise Your Borrowing
Reduce Debts Before Applying
Clearing debts has a multiplied effect on borrowing. Paying off a £200/month car finance payment could increase your mortgage by £30,000–£40,000.
Include All Income
Tell your broker about:
- Regular overtime or shift allowances — lenders may count 50–100%
- Annual bonus — typically counted at 50–60%
- Commission — usually averaged over 1–2 years
- Rental income — if you plan to let a room
- Investment income — dividends, interest
Choose the Right Mortgage Term
A longer term means lower monthly payments, letting you pass the affordability test for a larger amount:
| Term | Monthly Payment (£180k at 5%) | Total Cost |
|---|---|---|
| 25 years | £1,052 | £315,644 |
| 30 years | £966 | £347,715 |
| 35 years | £909 | £381,455 |
You can always overpay later to reduce the term. Most lenders allow overpayments of 10% per year without penalty.
Consider a Larger Deposit
A bigger deposit improves your position in two ways:
- Bigger budget — every extra £1 of deposit is £1 more you can spend
- Better interest rates — rates drop significantly at 10%, 15%, 20%, 25% LTV bands
| LTV Band | Typical Rate Difference vs 95% LTV |
|---|---|
| 90% | 0.3–0.5% lower |
| 85% | 0.5–0.8% lower |
| 80% | 0.7–1.0% lower |
| 75% | 0.8–1.2% lower |
Additional Buying Costs
| Cost | Typical Amount |
|---|---|
| Solicitor | £800–£1,500 |
| Survey | £250–£700 |
| Mortgage arrangement fee | £0–£2,000 |
| Stamp Duty (first-time buyer) | £0 up to £425,000 |
| Moving costs | £300–£1,500 |