An £80,000 salary provides strong mortgage buying power, putting comfortable family homes within reach across most of the UK. Here’s the full picture.
How Much Can You Borrow?
| Lender Type | Income Multiple | Maximum Mortgage |
|---|---|---|
| Most high-street lenders | 4-4.5× | £320,000-£360,000 |
| Building societies | Up to 5× | £400,000 |
| Professional mortgages | 5.5× | £440,000 |
With a Deposit
| Deposit % | Deposit on £400k Property | Mortgage Needed | Total Budget |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5% | £20,000 | £380,000 | £337,000-£400,000 |
| 10% | £40,000 | £360,000 | £356,000-£400,000 |
| 15% | £60,000 | £340,000 | £400,000-£424,000 |
| 20% | £80,000 | £320,000 | £400,000-£450,000 |
Monthly Payments
| Mortgage Amount | Rate | Term | Monthly Payment | % of Take-Home (£4,748) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| £320,000 | 4.5% | 25 years | £1,779 | 37% |
| £320,000 | 4.5% | 30 years | £1,621 | 34% |
| £360,000 | 4.5% | 25 years | £2,001 | 42% |
| £360,000 | 4.5% | 30 years | £1,824 | 38% |
| £400,000 | 4.5% | 30 years | £2,027 | 43% |
What Can You Buy on £80k?
| Region | Budget (10% deposit) | What You Can Buy |
|---|---|---|
| North East | £360,000-£400,000 | Premium detached, best areas |
| North West | £360,000-£400,000 | 4-5 bed, Hale/Altrincham/Wilmslow |
| Yorkshire | £360,000-£400,000 | 4-5 bed, Harrogate/Ilkley level |
| Scotland | £360,000-£400,000 | 4 bed, central Edinburgh/Morningside |
| South West | £360,000-£400,000 | 3-4 bed, Bristol good areas |
| South East | £360,000-£400,000 | 2-3 bed, commuter towns |
| London | £360,000-£400,000 | 1-2 bed flat (zone 2-4) |
Tax and Take-Home at £80k
| Component | Annual | Monthly |
|---|---|---|
| Gross salary | £80,000 | £6,667 |
| Income tax | £15,432 | £1,286 |
| National Insurance | £5,822 | £485 |
| Take-home | £56,981 | £4,748 |
With Bonus/Variable Pay
If your £80k includes bonus, note that lenders treat guaranteed and variable pay differently:
- Base salary — counted in full
- Guaranteed bonus — usually 100% counted
- Discretionary bonus — typically 50-80% counted (average of 2-3 years)
- Overtime — usually 50-100% of regular overtime
Budget Breakdown
| Monthly Budget on £80k | Amount |
|---|---|
| Take-home pay | £4,748 |
| Mortgage (£360k, 30yr, 4.5%) | -£1,824 |
| Council tax | -£180 |
| Utilities | -£180 |
| Food | -£350 |
| Transport | -£160 |
| Insurance | -£120 |
| Phone / broadband | -£55 |
| Remaining | ~£1,879 |
Substantial remaining income for savings, lifestyle, and overpayments.
What Does £360,000 Buy in 2026?
Borrowing £360,000 (with a typical 10–20% deposit on top) opens up a very wide range of property across the UK. Here’s a regional breakdown:
| Region | What £360k–£400k buys | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| North East | 4–5 bed detached | Executive homes in good areas |
| Yorkshire / Humber | 4-bed detached | Comfortable family home in most towns |
| West Midlands | 3–4 bed semi-detached or small detached | Good suburbs |
| South West (rural/coastal) | 3-bed semi | Premium coastal areas fetch more |
| Edinburgh (outer suburbs) | 3–4 bed semi | Competitive market; solicitor conveyancing |
| Manchester / Leeds (outer) | 3–4 bed semi-detached | Good commuter areas |
| London Zone 3–4 | 2-bed flat | Very stretched for budget |
| South East commuter belt | 2–3 bed terraced | Significant London premium |
Monthly Repayment at £360,000
Here’s what a £360,000 repayment mortgage costs per month at different rates:
| Rate | 25-year term | 30-year term | 35-year term |
|---|---|---|---|
| 4.0% | £1,895/month | £1,718/month | £1,591/month |
| 4.5% | £1,998/month | £1,824/month | £1,697/month |
| 5.0% | £2,107/month | £1,932/month | £1,809/month |
| 5.5% | £2,216/month | £2,044/month | £1,922/month |
On £80,000 (£4,400/month approximate take-home before pension), a £2,000/month mortgage represents about 45% of net income — high for a single earner, but often feasible as part of a household with dual income or given strong income growth potential.
The Salary Sacrifice Consideration for Mortgage Applications
At £80,000, many people use salary sacrifice to reduce taxable income (particularly for pension contributions). This is generally sensible, but it has an important implication for mortgage applications:
Most lenders assess affordability based on gross salary before salary sacrifice deductions. However, some lenders may use your net contracted pay instead, which is lower. When applying for a large mortgage at this income level, check with your mortgage broker or lender whether salary sacrifice affects the income figure they’ll use. In most cases it won’t, but it’s worth confirming before applying.
Building Equity Quickly at £80,000
At this income level, overpaying your mortgage is one of the most powerful wealth-building tools:
| Overpayment | Term Reduction | Interest Saved (£360k, 4.5%) |
|---|---|---|
| £200/month | ~5 years | ~£55,000 |
| £400/month | ~8 years | ~£90,000 |
| £600/month | ~11 years | ~£115,000 |
| £1,000/month | ~14 years | ~£149,000 |
A £600/month overpayment on £80,000 is realistic after pension, ISA, and living costs. Clearing a 25-year mortgage in 14 years and saving £115,000 in interest is a substantial lifetime financial gain.
Tax-Efficient Strategies at £80k
Pension Salary Sacrifice
Reducing your gross salary toward £50,270 via pension contributions means:
- Income above £50,270 gets taxed at 20% instead of 40%
- You avoid 42% effective marginal rate on the sacrificed amount
- Your pension receives the full contribution tax-free
- Net cost to take-home: 58p per pound contributed
Overpayment Schedule
| Overpayment | Term Reduction | Interest Saved (£360k at 4.5%) |
|---|---|---|
| £200/month | ~5 years | ~£55,000 |
| £400/month | ~8 years | ~£90,000 |
| £600/month | ~11 years | ~£115,000 |