30% Rent Rule
A budgeting guideline stating that housing costs should not exceed 30% of gross monthly income to maintain financial stability.
What You Need to Know
The 30% rule is the most widely cited housing affordability guideline: spend no more than 30% of your gross income on rent (or mortgage + housing costs). It originated from HUD policy in 1981 and remains the standard used by lenders, financial advisors, and landlords.
The Formula:
Maximum Rent = Gross Monthly Income Γ 30%
Real-World Examples:
$60,000/year salary:
- Gross monthly income: $5,000
- Max rent (30%): $1,500
- Comfortable rent (25%): $1,250
$80,000/year salary:
- Gross monthly income: $6,667
- Max rent (30%): $2,000
- Comfortable rent (25%): $1,667
$120,000/year salary:
- Gross monthly income: $10,000
- Max rent (30%): $3,000
- Comfortable rent (25%): $2,500
Why 30%?
Historical Context:
- Before 1981: No official standard
- 1981: HUD set 30% as "affordable housing" threshold
- Logic: Leave 70% for all other expenses (food, transport, savings, debt, entertainment)
When to Go Higher (30-40%):
- β No debt (no car loan, credit cards, student loans)
- β Stable, recession-proof job
- β High income (easier to save even at 35%)
- β Utilities included in rent
- β Walking distance to work (no car needed)
When to Go Lower (20-25%):
- β οΈ High debt-to-income ratio
- β οΈ Unstable income (freelance, seasonal)
- β οΈ Saving for major goal (house down payment)
- β οΈ Single income supporting family
The Bottom Line: The 30% rule is a guideline, not a law. In HCOL cities, 35-40% may be unavoidable temporarily. The real question: After housing, do you have enough left for debt, savings, and life?
Sources & References
This information is sourced from authoritative government and academic institutions:
- hud.gov
https://www.hud.gov/topics/rental_assistance
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