
How Much Income Do You Need to Buy a House in DFW in 2026?
How Much Income Do You Need to Buy a House in DFW in 2026?
By Steven J. Thomas
It is the first question almost every DeSoto and DFW buyer asks me: how much money do I need to make to actually buy a house here? The honest answer is that it depends on price, your down payment, and your debts, but you do not need a mystery number from a national headline. You need real DFW math. Let me break down what income buys a home in southwest Dallas in 2026, and how to qualify even if your number looks short today.
Direct Answer
To comfortably buy a median-priced DFW home around $385,000 in 2026, most buyers need a household income near $110,000 to $135,000, assuming a moderate down payment and manageable debt. In more affordable southwest DFW suburbs like DeSoto and Lancaster, homes in the $250,000 to $330,000 range can work on incomes closer to $75,000 to $95,000. The fastest way to know your real number is to get pre-approved here.
The Real Numbers: Income by DFW Price Point
Income requirements scale with home price, your down payment, and the rate you lock. Using the June 2026 average 30-year fixed of 6.48 percent (Freddie Mac PMMS, June 2026) and Texas property taxes that average close to 1.6 to 1.8 percent of value, here is a realistic picture with roughly 10 percent down.
- $250,000 home: estimated income around $70,000 to $80,000. This buys in parts of Lancaster, Glenn Heights, and select DeSoto pockets.
- $330,000 home: estimated income around $88,000 to $98,000. This is near the DeSoto average home value of about $315,000 (Redfin DeSoto, 2026).
- $385,000 home: estimated income around $110,000 to $125,000. This is the DFW metro median close price as of early 2026 (Norada Real Estate, March 2026).
- $500,000 home: estimated income around $140,000 to $160,000. This reaches newer construction in Midlothian, Waxahachie, and Mansfield.
These are planning estimates, not approvals. Your real qualifying income depends on your credit, your existing monthly debts, and how much you put down. A buyer with no car payment and strong credit can stretch further than these ranges suggest. For current pricing across the metro, check the DFW market statistics.
How Lenders Actually Decide What You Can Afford
Lenders do not look at your income alone. They look at the relationship between your income and your debts. That ratio decides your number more than any salary headline.
The key metric is your debt-to-income ratio, or DTI. Most loan programs want your total monthly debts, including the new mortgage, to stay roughly at or below 43 to 50 percent of your gross monthly income, depending on the loan type and your credit profile. The mortgage payment they count is not just principal and interest. It includes property taxes, homeowners insurance, and mortgage insurance if your down payment is under 20 percent.
That is why two people earning the same salary can qualify for very different homes. One has a $650 car payment and student loans. The other has none. As a dual-licensed broker and loan officer, I run both sides at once, so we know your true buying power before you fall in love with a house. Start with a real pre-approval, not an online guess.
"Your salary opens the door, but your debt and your down payment decide how far inside you get to walk. Fix the ratio and you change the house you qualify for." — Steven J. Thomas, Refind Realty DFW
Cost Breakdown: What You Actually Pay Each Month
Income is only half the equation. Knowing the full monthly cost on a DFW home keeps you from buying more house than you can carry. Here is what makes up the payment on a $330,000 home with 10 percent down at 6.48 percent.
- Principal and interest: roughly $1,870 a month.
- Property taxes: roughly $440 to $495 a month, based on Texas rates near 1.6 to 1.8 percent.
- Homeowners insurance: roughly $180 to $260 a month in DFW.
- Mortgage insurance: often $120 to $220 a month when you put less than 20 percent down.
That lands your all-in payment in the $2,600 to $2,850 range. Texas has no state income tax, which helps your take-home pay, but our property taxes run higher than the national average, so always include them in your math (RE/MAX, 2026). The good news in 2026 is that rates have eased from 6.85 percent a year ago, which trims that monthly number compared to last spring.
How to Qualify When Your Income Looks Short
If your salary lands below the range for the home you want, you have more levers than you think. This is where a plan beats a guess.
- Lower your DTI: Paying off a car loan or a credit card can free up enough monthly room to qualify for a larger loan, sometimes without earning another dollar.
- Raise your down payment: More money down means a smaller loan and a lower payment, which lowers the income you need to qualify.
- Use down payment assistance: Texas programs through TSAHC and similar sources can help eligible DFW buyers with down payment and closing costs. Eligibility depends on income limits and the program.
- Consider new construction incentives: Many DFW builders are offering rate buydowns and closing cost credits to move inventory, which can lower your effective rate and your monthly payment for the early years.
- Improve your credit: A stronger score can earn a lower rate, which directly reduces the income you need.
Each of these can move your qualifying number by tens of thousands in buying power. New to the process and want it explained simply? Grab the free New Construction Home Guide.
Why DFW Is Still a Smart Buy in 2026
Affordability is improving for buyers, and that is the headline most people miss. DFW inventory reached roughly 38,800 listings in early 2026, giving buyers more choices and more negotiating power than they have had in years (Homes.com DFW Market Report, 2026). Prices are flat to slightly down, days on market are longer, and sellers are more willing to offer concessions.
Add strong job growth and steady population inflow into North Texas, and you have a market where a prepared buyer can negotiate. The buyers who win in 2026 are the ones who walk in pre-approved, know their number, and move when the right home appears. Get your number locked, then watch live listings on the Lone Star Living App.
Conclusion
You do not need a six-figure salary to buy in southwest DFW, but you do need a plan that matches your income to the right price point. A median DFW home near $385,000 generally calls for $110,000 to $135,000 in household income, while affordable DeSoto and Lancaster homes can work on far less. The number that matters is not the headline figure. It is your number, built from your income, your debts, and your down payment. Get that locked first, and the house-hunting gets a lot less stressful.
Here is how to find your real number:
- Get pre-approved here to see exactly what you qualify for.
- Browse current DeSoto and DFW homes on the Lone Star Living App.
- Book an appointment today and we will build your buying plan together.
You're Always Home with Steven J. Thomas.
Key Takeaways
- A median-priced DFW home near $385,000 generally needs $110,000 to $135,000 in household income in 2026.
- Affordable southwest DFW suburbs like DeSoto and Lancaster can work on incomes closer to $75,000 to $95,000.
- Lenders decide affordability by your debt-to-income ratio, not your salary alone.
- Lowering debt, raising your down payment, and using assistance programs can stretch your buying power.
- Eased rates and high inventory make 2026 a strong year for a prepared, pre-approved buyer.
FAQ: Income Needed to Buy a House in DFW 2026
What income do I need to buy a median home in DFW in 2026?
For a median DFW home around $385,000, most buyers need a household income near $110,000 to $135,000, assuming a moderate down payment and limited other debt. Your exact number depends on your credit, debts, and how much you put down.
Can I buy a home in DeSoto on a lower income?
Yes. DeSoto and nearby Lancaster and Glenn Heights have homes in the $250,000 to $330,000 range, which can work on incomes closer to $75,000 to $95,000 with a reasonable down payment and manageable debt.
What if my debt-to-income ratio is too high to qualify?
You can lower it by paying down a car loan or credit cards, which often frees enough monthly room to qualify without earning more. Raising your down payment also reduces the income you need.
Are there down payment assistance programs in DFW?
Yes. Texas programs through TSAHC and similar sources can help eligible buyers with down payment and closing costs. Eligibility depends on income limits and the specific program, so confirm current terms before you rely on them.
How long does it take to get pre-approved and buy in DFW?
Pre-approval can often happen in a day or two once your documents are in. From there, with more inventory in 2026, motivated buyers can find and close on a home within a couple of months depending on the search.
Where can I see DFW homes I can actually afford?
Browse live, price-filtered listings on the Lone Star Living App, which pulls directly from the MLS so you see new homes the moment they list.
Payment and income figures are planning estimates based on conditions at the time of writing and are not loan approvals or guarantees of price, rate, or qualification. Steven J. Thomas, Refind Realty DFW and Envision Home Lenders, 128 S. Cockrell Hill Rd, DeSoto, TX 75115. Phone 972-846-9170. Equal Housing Opportunity. All services provided in accordance with TREC rules.