Mortgage & Property
Mortgage on a £30,000 Salary
On a £30,000 salary most UK lenders will offer between £120,000 and £135,000. Monthly repayments, deposit requirements and borrowing scenarios below.
Your results
Typical borrowing (4× salary)
£120,000
£667.00/month repayment · 4.5% rate · 25-year term
Breakdown
Borrowing capacity at different multiples
Assumes 4.5% interest rate, 25-year repayment mortgage
Conservative (3.5×)
£105,000 loan
£583.62/month
Typical (4×)
£120,000 loan
£667.00/month
Higher (4.5×)
£135,000 loan
£750.37/month
Maximum (5×)
£150,000 loan
£833.75/month
Property price by deposit size
Based on a £120,000 loan (4× salary)
| Deposit | Deposit amount | Property price |
|---|---|---|
| 5% | £6,316 | £126,316 |
| 10% | £13,333 | £133,333 |
| 15% | £21,176 | £141,176 |
| 20% | £30,000 | £150,000 |
| 25% | £40,000 | £160,000 |
How much mortgage can you get on £30,000?
Most high-street lenders use an income multiple to cap how much they'll lend. The standard range in 2026 is 4 to 4.5 times your annual income, though some lenders will go up to 5× for applicants with strong credit profiles, low outgoings, and a larger deposit. On a £30,000 salary this translates to a maximum of roughly £150,000.
Income multiples are a starting point, not a guarantee. Lenders also run an affordability assessment that looks at your monthly outgoings, existing loans, credit cards, car finance, childcare costs, and estimated living expenses. A high multiple is only possible if your disposable income comfortably covers the mortgage repayments after all other commitments.
How the deposit affects what you can buy
The deposit size matters for two reasons: it determines the loan-to-value (LTV) ratio (lower LTV = better rates) and it affects the total property price you can afford.
- 5% deposit, The minimum for most residential mortgages. Rates will be higher and lenders may be more restrictive on income multiples.
- 10–15%, Access to a much wider range of products with meaningfully lower rates compared to 95% LTV.
- 20%+, Near the best rates available. Each 5% step above 20% typically unlocks a slightly lower rate but with diminishing returns.
First-time buyers should consider the Lifetime ISA, you can save up to £4,000 per year and receive a 25% government bonus (up to £1,000/year) towards a deposit.
What affects lender decisions in 2026?
- Credit score, Missed payments, defaults or high utilisation will reduce both the multiple offered and the rates available.
- Employment type, Employed applicants are generally assessed more favourably than self-employed. Lenders typically require 2–3 years of self-employed accounts.
- Existing debt, Student loans, car finance and credit card balances all reduce what lenders will offer.
- Number of applicants, Applying jointly with a partner adds both incomes to the calculation. Two applicants on £30,000 could borrow £240,000–£270,000.
- Stress testing, Lenders check you could still afford the repayments if rates rose by 3%, in line with FCA guidance.
How stamp duty affects affordability
Don't forget stamp duty land tax (SDLT). From April 2025 the nil-rate threshold for non-first-time buyers returned to £250,000. First-time buyers pay no SDLT on the first £300,000 of a property costing up to £500,000. Use our Stamp Duty Calculator to see exactly what you'd owe on any property price.
Get an accurate monthly repayment figure
Use the Mortgage Calculator to enter your exact loan amount, deposit, interest rate and term. Or try the Affordability Calculator to see how your specific outgoings affect what you can borrow.