HomeRent → £70,000

How Much Rent on £70,000?

What you can comfortably afford after tax.

Recommended Max Rent
£1,279/mo
30% of your £4,263 take home pay
Take Home
£4,263/mo
30% (Comfortable)
£1,279
35% (Stretching)
£1,492
40% (Maximum)
£1,705

What's Left After Rent?

Rent %Monthly RentLeft OverComfort Level
25%£1,066£3,197Very comfortable
30%£1,279£2,984Comfortable
35%£1,492£2,771Manageable
40%£1,705£2,558Tight
50%£2,132£2,132Not recommended

Most financial advisers recommend keeping rent below 30% of your take home pay. In expensive cities like London, 35-40% is common but means less money for savings and other goals.

Renting on a £70,000 Salary

With monthly take home of approximately £4263, financial advisers recommend spending no more than 30-35% of net income on rent, giving a budget of £1278-£1492/month. This covers one-bedroom flats in most UK cities including parts of London. In the North and Midlands, two-bedroom properties are achievable.

Renting vs Buying on £70,000

On £70,000, your maximum mortgage would be approximately £315,000 (4.5x salary). If monthly mortgage payments would be similar to rent, buying may build equity over time. However, buying requires a deposit and you bear maintenance costs. Consider your job stability and location flexibility. See mortgage affordability on £70,000 for property options.

Reducing Housing Costs

If rent exceeds 35% of your take home pay, consider: sharing with housemates (can halve costs), negotiating rent at renewal, moving to a cheaper area with good transport links, or looking at council/housing association waiting lists. Building a deposit towards buying may be more cost-effective long-term in areas where mortgage payments are lower than rent. See £70,000 salary after tax for your full take home breakdown.