What a $1.5M family home budget means in New York metro
$11.3k/mo all-in — defensible on salary alone, leaves $200k+ reserve, doesn't depend on bonus to sleep at night.
Get a custom reportComfort bullseye
$1.5M
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Covered in full sample report
The best short-list neighborhoods at this budget.
Maplewood (Tuscan section)
The cleanest fit on the things we said matter most: yard, schools-that-aren't-pressure-cookers, walkable village, K-12 horizon. Priya pays the commute tax. We make peace with that.
Pick 2South Orange (Upper Wyoming / Montrose)
If Priya's commute matters more than yard size, this swaps to #1. The Upper Wyoming blocks specifically deliver the same school pipeline plus 5-7 minutes back on every commute, plus a slightly tighter village center. Tour day decides.
Pick 3Pelham (Pelhamville / Pelham Manor)
If Priya's daily commute is the binding constraint, Pelham wins. If Alex's three-day commute is, Pelham loses. The school-pressure flag is real but not disqualifying. This is the 'Priya optimization' choice.
Budget rules from the sample report.
- Maximum offer: $1.9M unicorn ceiling. $1.7M on a great fit. $1.5M is the bullseye.
- Hold $200k liquid post-close. Three kids, two W-2s, one mortgage — non-negotiable.
- Underwrite to salary alone (no bonus) at every price point. If the salary-only line goes red, walk.
- NJ property tax is the silent killer. A $1.6M Maplewood house carries ~$32-36k/yr in tax — that's $2,800/mo forever, regardless of rate.
- Skip houses on FEMA-mapped flood blocks. Insurance will get worse, not better, over a 13-year hold.
A budget only matters when it is tied to your income, down payment, commute, and school priorities.
This page uses one sample family profile. A custom report recalculates affordability and neighborhood fit around your actual numbers.
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