🏠 Rent Affordability Calculator for £6,000 Income with £500 Costs

How much rent can you actually afford? The honest answer.

Quick answer

On £6,000 net a month, the 30%-of-income rule suggests a max rent of around £1,300 after accounting for £500 of other fixed costs.

  • Cautious (25%): £1,000
  • Standard (30%): £1,300
  • Stretched (35%): £1,600
  • Remaining for bills & life: £4,200

In detail: Rent Affordability Calculator for £6,000 Income with £500 Costs

On £6,000 net a month, the 30% rule suggests keeping rent below £1,800 gross (£1,300 after your £500 of other fixed costs). This is a guideline, not a hard rule — in high-cost cities like London the real median is closer to 40%, while in lower-cost regions 25% is more common.

At this income level, the bigger constraint is often deposit (usually 5 weeks' rent now, capped by the Tenant Fees Act) and the fact that agents typically look for 2.5× rent in gross annual income.

Remember the 30% rule is for rent alone. Council tax, utilities, broadband, contents insurance, and commuting typically add another £200–£500/month. Budgeting £1,300 max leaves £4,200 for everything else — food, transport, savings, and discretionary spending.

What this tool helps with

Maximum affordable rent based on income rules

What you can enter

  • Monthly take-home pay (£): 6000
  • Other monthly commitments (£): 500

Why this page is useful

How much rent can you actually afford? The honest answer. This page loads fast, gives a direct answer, and then expands with useful context instead of burying the result under filler.

Frequently Asked Questions

On £6,000 net a month, the 30%-of-income rule suggests a max rent of around £1,300 after accounting for £500 of other fixed costs.
Cautious (25%): £1,000 • Standard (30%): £1,300 • Stretched (35%): £1,600 • Remaining for bills & life: £4,200
On £6,000 net a month, the 30% rule suggests keeping rent below £1,800 gross (£1,300 after your £500 of other fixed costs). This is a guideline, not a hard rule — in high-cost cities like London the real median is closer to 40%, while in lower-cost regions 25% is more common.
At this income level, the bigger constraint is often deposit (usually 5 weeks' rent now, capped by the Tenant Fees Act) and the fact that agents typically look for 2.5× rent in gross annual income.
The general rule is no more than 30% of take-home pay. In London, 35-40% is common but stressful.
No — this is rent only. Budget separately for council tax, energy and broadband.