A £40,000 UK salary in 2026 typically supports a mortgage between £160,000 (conservative 4× LTI) and £200,000 (stretched 5× LTI with strong affordability). Most first-time-buyer mortgages land in the 4-4.5× range. With a 10% deposit, the corresponding property purchase price is £177,777-£222,222. This guide shows the LTI maths, the monthly payment at current rates, the regional reality (London is materially different from the rest of the UK), and how to stretch the figure if needed.
Verified against 3 official sources · Last reviewed 14 June 2026
Stressed interest rate — typically 1-3% above the actual offered rate to ensure you'd cope with rises
Mortgage term — longer term = lower monthly = more borrowing (but more total interest)
Property type — flats with lease issues or unusual construction borrow less
Property purchase price at this salary
With a 10% deposit:
Borrowing
Property price (10% deposit)
Deposit cash needed
£160,000
£177,777
£17,777
£180,000
£200,000
£20,000
£200,000
£222,222
£22,222
With a 15% deposit:
Borrowing
Property price (15% deposit)
Deposit cash needed
£160,000
£188,235
£28,235
£180,000
£211,764
£31,764
Regional reality check
On £40,000 salary in 2026 with the 4.5× standard LTI (£180,000 borrowing) at 10% deposit (£200,000 property):
Region
Median house price 2026 (est.)
Affordable?
North East
~£170k
Yes - comfortable
Yorkshire
~£200k
Tight
North West
~£215k
Tight
Wales
~£220k
Tight
Scotland
~£200k
Tight
Midlands
~£250k
Difficult
South West
~£310k
Difficult
South East
~£395k
Difficult
London
~£540k
Difficult (joint application typically required)
How to stretch the figure
Practical levers:
Larger deposit — moves you into better LTV bands + cheaper rates
Joint application — combined incomes typically stretch borrowing 1.8-2× single
Longer term — 30-35 year terms reduce monthly payment + permit larger borrowing (but more total interest)
Pay down existing debt — removing a £200/month committed payment can unlock ~£20-30k extra borrowing
Specialist lenders for self-employed — different income assessment if Ltd company
What NOT to do
Don't max out at 5× LTI unless you have a clear plan for upcoming pay rises
Don't reduce pension contributions below auto-enrolment to fund a mortgage — loses tax relief + employer match
Don't ignore the stamp duty cost on top
Don't forget the buying costs (~2-3% of property price for legal + survey + lender fees)
In short
£40,000 UK salary 2026 = £160,000-£200,000 mortgage borrowing range, depending on LTI multiple. With 10% deposit, that's £177,777-£222,222 property price. Regional affordability varies dramatically — comfortable across the North, Midlands and Wales; stretched in the South East; difficult in London without a joint application.
Yes on a joint mortgage. Dual £{salary:,} earners on 4× LTI = £{salary*4*2:,} combined borrowing — substantially more than two single applications.
How much deposit do I need?
10% is the typical minimum for competitive rates; 5% deposit mortgages exist but at higher rates. 15-20% unlocks the best rates. On £{salary*4:,} borrowing, 10% deposit = £{salary*4//10:,}.
What's the monthly payment?
At 4.75% over 25 years on £160,000 mortgage: approximately £908/month. Rate changes shift this materially - 5.5% rate = £982/month; 4.0% = £844/month.
Does my student loan reduce my borrowing?
Yes — lenders treat student loan repayments as committed monthly outgoing. £{salary:,} earners on Plan 2 might lose 5-10% of borrowing capacity.
Money left after bills — UK households should target 20–35% of take-home pay as discretionary spend + savings after essential bills. The exact figure depends on salary band, region and household type. This guide gives benchmarks for £25k–£100k earners.
Average UK monthly bills — UK average monthly bills in 2026: ~£1,650 for a single adult, £2,400 for a couple, £3,200 for a family of four. Major lines: rent/mortgage (35–45%), food (10–15%), utilities (8–10%), transport (10–15%), insurance + tax + broadband (~10%).
UK monthly budget planner — A workable UK monthly budget planner: confirm your real net pay, list fixed essentials, list variable essentials, set a discretionary cap, set a savings target. Total must equal net pay. Use 50/30/20 as a starting guide, adapt for your housing situation.
What can £50k afford? — A £50,000 UK salary produces ~£3,293/month of take-home in 2026/27.
Mortgage on £100k — On £100,000 salary in the UK 2026, conservative lenders offer 4× (£400,000); standard 4.5× (£450,000); stretched 5× (£500,000). Monthly payment at 4.75% over 25 years on a £400,000 mortgage: roughly £2,272/month.
Mortgage on £30k — On £30,000 salary in the UK 2026, conservative lenders offer 4× (£120,000); standard 4.5× (£135,000); stretched 5× (£150,000). Monthly payment at 4.75% over 25 years on a £120,000 mortgage: roughly £681/month.
Mortgage on £50k — On £50,000 salary in the UK 2026, conservative lenders offer 4× (£200,000); standard 4.5× (£225,000); stretched 5× (£250,000). Monthly payment at 4.75% over 25 years on a £200,000 mortgage: roughly £1,136/month.
For the calculation methodology behind every figure on this page, see our
methodology. For our review and update process, see our
editorial standards.
Last reviewed: 14 June 2026.
Next review due 14 December 2026.
Disclaimer: This page provides general information based on published HMRC and gov.scot figures. It is not personal tax or financial advice. For your specific situation, please consult a qualified accountant or contact HMRC directly.