San Francisco Rent Affordability Calculator

Check if a San Francisco rental fits your income using the 30% rule

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San Francisco rents are among the highest in the US, so checking affordability before you tour an apartment saves time and stress. This calculator applies the classic 30%-of-income rule against the city’s median 1-bedroom rent near $3,000 to tell you what you can afford and what a given rent demands.

How it works

The 30% rule sets a ceiling on rent as a share of gross income, and inverts to the income a rent requires:

monthly income  = annual income / 12   (or entered directly)
max rent         = monthly income × ratio          (ratio default 0.30)
income needed    = monthly rent × 12 / ratio
rent burden      = monthly rent / monthly income

A rent burden above 0.30 means you are rent-burdened; above 0.50 means severely rent-burdened, the threshold housing agencies use to flag financial stress.

Example and tips

On a $120,000 salary, the 30% rule caps rent at about $3,000 a month — exactly San Francisco’s median 1-bedroom — so a typical earner is right at the edge. A $3,500 listing pushes the burden to 35%, flagging it as unaffordable by the rule. Many landlords additionally require gross income of three times the rent, so check both gates before applying, and consider a roommate to halve the effective rent.

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