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Salary to Buy a Home

What Salary Do You Need to Buy a Home in Virginia? (2026)

To buy the median Virginia home ($385,000) with 20% down at today's 6.52% rate, you need an annual income of $100,239 — $16,464 more than the typical household earns ($83,775). Your monthly PITI payment would be $2,339. With 10% down and PMI, you need $121,208/year and pay $2,828/month.

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Income needed (20% down)

$100,239

NAR Q1 2026 / Freddie Mac

Median home price

$385,000

NAR Q1 2026

Monthly PITI (20% down)

$2,339/mo

Freddie Mac June 2026

Income Required to Buy a Median Virginia Home

At 6.52% (30-year fixed, Freddie Mac June 2026) using the 28% front-end DTI rule

20% Down — $77,000 down

$100,239

annual income required

Monthly PITI$2,339
Loan amount$308,000
No PMI required

10% Down — $38,500 down

$121,208

annual income required

Monthly PITI + PMI$2,828
Loan amount$346,500
PMI (0.85%/yr)$245/mo

Monthly Payment Breakdown — $385,000 Median Home

PITI = Principal + Interest + Taxes + Insurance. PMI added for 10%-down scenario.

Component20% Down10% Down
Principal & Interest (20% down)$1,951$2,195
Property Tax (0.82%)$263$263
Homeowners Insurance$125$125
PMI (10% down only)$245
Total Monthly PITI$2,339$2,828
Annual income required (28% DTI)$100,239$121,208

Rate: 6.52% 30-year fixed (Freddie Mac June 2026). Property tax: 0.82% effective rate. Insurance: $1,500/yr statewide average. PMI: 0.85% of loan annually.

Virginia Affordability Gap

How far the median household income is from what's needed to buy the median home

Affordability gap

+$16,464

shortfall vs. income required

Gap %

+19.7%

Income required (20% down)$100,239
Virginia median household income$83,775

Median households need 19.7% more income to clear the 28% DTI threshold

Price that fits the median income

$318,195

The most expensive home a typical Virginia household can buy and stay within the 28% PITI rule — at $83,775/year income, 20% down, 6.52% rate. That's $66,805 below Virginia's median home price.

Most & Least Affordable Counties in Virginia

Home prices vary significantly by county — these counties anchor the affordability spectrum

Most affordable counties

  • 1Lee County
  • 2Buchanan County
  • 3Dickenson County

Least affordable counties

  • 1Arlington County
  • 2Falls Church City
  • 3Alexandria City

County affordability reflects relative home price levels. Use the mortgage calculator for an exact income analysis at your target county price point.

Mortgage Calculator — Virginia

Pre-loaded with Virginia's $385,000 median home price at 6.52%

Mortgage Estimator

Virginia rates pre-loaded

$
3%50%
%

Monthly Payment

$2,476

estimated all-in payment (PITI)

Loan amount$308,000
Principal & Interest$1,951/mo
Property Tax (1.07% rate)$343/mo
Home Insurance$182/mo
Total Monthly PITI$2,476
Total interest (30 yr)$394,296

Tax and insurance estimates use national averages. For Virginia-specific numbers, see the full breakdown below.

Excludes HOA fees. Rates and costs are estimates; actual costs vary.

Full Calculator →

How Much Home Can You Afford in Virginia?

The income required figures above are for the median home. Enter your actual income to see what home price you qualify for.

Mortgage Affordability Calculator

Enter your income, debts, and down payment to find your maximum home price — pre-loaded for Virginia

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Frequently Asked Questions

What salary do you need to buy a house in Virginia?
To buy Virginia's median-priced home ($385,000) with 20% down at 6.52% (30-year fixed), you need $100,239/year. That keeps your monthly PITI (principal, interest, taxes, insurance) of $2,339 within the 28% front-end DTI guideline. With 10% down and PMI, the required income rises to $121,208/year with a $2,828/month payment. Source: NAR Q1 2026, Freddie Mac June 2026.
Can the average Virginia household afford a home?
Not easily. The median Virginia household earns $83,775/year, but qualifying for the median home requires $100,239 — an affordability gap of $16,464 (+19.7%). On the median income, the most you can spend and stay within the 28% guideline is $318,195.
What home price can I afford on Virginia's median income?
At $83,775/year (Virginia's median), your maximum monthly housing budget is $1,955 under the 28% DTI rule. Working backwards at 6.52% with 20% down, that supports a home price of $318,195 — $66,805 below the $385,000 median.
What is the PITI payment on a median Virginia home?
On Virginia's median home price of $385,000: with 20% down ($77,000 down), your PITI is $2,339/month. With 10% down ($38,500 down plus PMI), PITI rises to $2,828/month. PITI includes principal & interest at 6.52%, property tax at 0.82%, and homeowners insurance (PMI added for 10%-down scenario at 0.85% of loan annually). Source: Freddie Mac June 2026 / NAR Q1 2026.
What is the 28% rule for buying a home?
The 28% rule (HUD front-end DTI standard) says your monthly housing payment — principal, interest, taxes, and insurance (PITI) — should not exceed 28% of your gross monthly income. To qualify for Virginia's median home at 20% down, your PITI would be $2,339/month. Divide by 0.28 to get the required monthly income ($8,353), then multiply by 12: $100,239/year. Lenders also check back-end DTI (all debts ≤ 43%), so existing debt reduces what you can borrow.
Which Virginia counties are most and least affordable?
Virginia's most affordable counties for homebuyers include Lee County, Buchanan County, Dickenson County, where home prices are significantly below the state median. The least affordable are typically Arlington County, Falls Church City, Alexandria City, where prices far exceed the statewide average. County-level data is updated quarterly — use the mortgage calculator below for your specific target area.

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