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CalcWolf Finance Car Affordability Calculator
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How Much Car Can You Afford?

Calculate the maximum vehicle price you can afford based on your income, expenses, and desired payment.

📅 Updated April 2026 Formula verified 📖 4 min read 🆓 Free · No sign-up

How Much Car Can You Really Afford?

The conservative rule: spend no more than 10-15% of gross monthly income on your car payment. On a $60,000 salary ($5,000/month), that is $500-750/month. Add insurance ($150-250/month) and fuel ($100-200/month), and total transportation should stay under 20% of gross income. Most financial advisors consider anything above 15% for the payment alone to be overextended.

The Real Cost of Overspending on a Car

The average new car payment of $730/month on a $60K salary consumes 14.6% of gross income — at the upper edge of affordability. Factor in $200/month insurance and $150/month gas, and total transportation hits 21.6%. That extra 5-10% of income diverted to a car instead of investing costs $200,000-500,000 in lost retirement savings over 30 years.

⚡ CalcWolf Insight

The IRS standard mileage rate for 2026 is 70 cents per mile, which represents the average total cost of vehicle ownership including depreciation, insurance, fuel, maintenance, and financing. At 12,000 miles per year, that is $8,400 — the true annual cost most people underestimate.

Frequently asked questions
Should I buy new or used?
A 2-3 year old certified pre-owned (CPO) vehicle is the best value. New cars depreciate 20-30% in the first two years. A $40,000 new car is worth $28,000-32,000 at 2 years old — you save $8,000-12,000 while getting a nearly-new car with remaining factory warranty.
How much should I put down on a car?
At least 20% to avoid being underwater on the loan. On a $30,000 car, put $6,000 down. If you cannot afford 20% down, you are likely buying too much car. The exception: 0% financing promotions — take the 0% and invest your down payment instead.
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Kevin Glover
Founder, CalcWolf · GLVTS · Blickr
All formulas sourced from primary references — IRS publications, peer-reviewed research, and official standards. Results are tested against independent reference calculators before publishing. Rates and brackets updated when official sources change. Editorial policy →
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