---
title: How Much House Can You Afford on BAH? A 2026 Guide
slug: how-much-house-can-you-afford-on-bah
description: >-
  How much house can you afford on BAH? Turn your housing allowance into a home
  price with this 2026 guide, then get a real number from a VeteranPCS lender.
publishedAt: '2026-07-09T09:00:00.000Z'
updatedAt: '2026-07-10T00:00:00.000Z'
author: VeteranPCS
categories:
  - VA Loan Help
  - Financial Guidance
canonical: 'https://www.veteranpcs.com/blog/how-much-house-can-you-afford-on-bah'
componentSlug: va-loan-help
---
# How Much House Can You Afford on BAH? A 2026 Guide

When you get PCS orders, one question comes up fast: how much house can I afford on BAH? Your BAH (Basic Allowance for Housing, the tax-free monthly amount the military pays you toward rent or a mortgage) is the natural starting point for a home budget, because it is money set aside for exactly this. This guide gives you a simple, four-step way to turn your allowance into a realistic home price, then explains the VA (Department of Veterans Affairs) loan rules that decide how much a lender will actually approve in 2026.

## Start With Your BAH, Not a Guess

Civilians often use the "28 percent rule," which says housing should cost no more than 28 percent of your gross monthly income. For military families, there is a cleaner anchor: your BAH is already your housing budget. Because it is tax-free, a $2,100 allowance is worth more than $2,100 of taxable pay. That makes BAH a strong, honest baseline for what you can spend on a monthly payment.

Not sure what your rate is this year? Confirm it with the [Department of Defense BAH rate lookup](https://www.travel.dod.mil/Allowances/Basic-Allowance-for-Housing/BAH-Rate-Lookup/), and read our [2026 BAH rates explainer](/blog/2026-bah-rates-what-changed-and-how-to-check-yours) for what changed this year.

## Four Steps to Turn BAH Into a Home Price

Here is the quick math. Every payment number below assumes a $0 down VA loan at about 6.6 percent, the conservative national average for a 30-year fixed VA purchase loan in early July 2026, per [Bankrate's VA loan rates page](https://www.bankrate.com/mortgages/va-loan-rates/). Rates vary by lender, and the VA does not set them.

1. Start with your monthly BAH. That is your target payment ceiling.
2. Subtract taxes and insurance. Set aside roughly $300 to $400 a month for property taxes and homeowner's insurance. What is left is your budget for principal and interest.
3. Convert principal and interest into a loan amount. At about 6.6 percent, every $1,000 of loan costs roughly $6.39 a month. So divide your principal-and-interest budget by 6.39 and multiply by 1,000.
4. That loan amount is close to your home price, because a VA loan needs $0 down.

For example, an E-6 with a $2,100 allowance might reserve $350 for taxes and insurance, leaving about $1,750 for principal and interest. Divide $1,750 by 6.39 and multiply by 1,000, and you get roughly a $274,000 loan, or about a $275,000 home with no money down.

![Bar chart estimating the home price four BAH levels can support at a 6.6 percent VA rate with $0 down: $1,800 supports about $225,000, $2,100 about $275,000, $2,400 about $320,000, and $2,700 about $370,000.](/images/blog/how-much-house-can-you-afford-on-bah/bah-to-home-price.png)

*Estimated home price by BAH level at a 6.6 percent VA rate with $0 down and about $350 a month for taxes and insurance. Illustrative only; your rate and costs will differ.*

The table below shows the same idea in numbers. Treat these as illustrations, not a quote.

| Monthly BAH | Left for principal & interest | Estimated home price ($0 down) |
|---|---|---|
| $1,800 | ~$1,450 | ~$225,000 |
| $2,100 | ~$1,750 | ~$275,000 |
| $2,400 | ~$2,050 | ~$320,000 |
| $2,700 | ~$2,350 | ~$370,000 |

*Assumes a 6.6 percent VA rate, $0 down, and about $350 a month for taxes and insurance. A lower rate raises these numbers; a higher rate lowers them.*

## Why the VA Loan Stretches Your BAH

Two VA loan features make your allowance go further than it would with a conventional loan. First, eligible buyers put $0 down, so your BAH goes toward the loan instead of a down payment. Second, VA loans carry no private mortgage insurance, the extra monthly charge conventional lenders add when you put down less than 20 percent. Skipping it frees up more of your BAH for the actual loan. Our explainer on [how a $0 down VA loan works](/blog/how-does-a-0-down-va-loan-work) walks through both benefits.

There is one one-time cost to plan for: the VA funding fee. For most first-time users with no down payment, it is 2.15 percent of the loan in 2026, and it can be financed into the loan rather than paid up front. Members who receive compensation for a service-connected disability are exempt. See our [VA funding fee guide](/blog/understanding-the-va-funding-fee-a-complete-guide-for-military-families) for the full picture.

## What a Lender Actually Checks

Your BAH math gives you a target, but the lender has the final say. VA underwriting uses two tests.

The first is your DTI (debt-to-income ratio), which compares your monthly debt payments to your gross income. The VA treats 41 percent as a preferred benchmark rather than a hard ceiling, so a higher ratio can still work with a strong overall file, per [Veterans United's VA loan DTI guidelines](https://www.veteransunited.com/futurehomeowners/va-loan-debt-to-income-guidelines/).

The second, and often more important, test is residual income: the money left over each month after taxes, housing, and major debts are paid. The VA sets a minimum cushion based on your region and family size, and if your DTI is 41 percent or higher, that required cushion rises by 20 percent. Residual income is the VA's way of making sure you have real breathing room, and it is a big reason VA loans perform so well.

Because your credit shapes the rate you are offered, review our guide to [VA loan credit score requirements](/blog/va-loan-credit-score-requirements) before you apply. And before your lender can start, you will need your Certificate of Eligibility; our guide to the [VA loan Certificate of Eligibility](/blog/va-loan-certificate-of-eligibility) shows how to get it.

## Common Questions

**Should my whole BAH go to a mortgage?**
It can, but it does not have to. Some families buy below their BAH ceiling and pocket the difference. Others use the full allowance to buy more home. Both are fine; the point is to choose on purpose.

**Does a higher rank always mean a bigger house?**
Not exactly. Your home budget follows your BAH, which depends on rank, dependency status, and location. A mid-rank member in a high-cost area can afford more home than a senior member in a low-cost one.

**What if my dream home costs more than my BAH supports?**
You can put money down to lower the loan, choose a less expensive area, or wait for rates to ease. A local agent and lender can show you what your number buys in your specific market.

## The Bottom Line

To answer "how much house can I afford on BAH," start with your allowance, set aside a few hundred dollars for taxes and insurance, and convert the rest into a loan amount at today's rate. That gives you a solid target. From there, a VA-experienced lender confirms the real number using your income, credit, DTI, and residual income. The smartest move is to run your own quick estimate, then let a professional turn it into a firm pre-approval.

[Connect with a VeteranPCS lender](https://www.veteranpcs.com/contact-lender) to turn your BAH into a real budget, or [find a military-experienced agent](https://www.veteranpcs.com/contact-agent) to see what that budget buys near your next base.

Know a fellow service member starting their home search? Share this guide with your military network so they can budget with confidence.

*This content is for informational purposes. Consult a professional for personal financial decisions.*
