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How Much House Can You Afford in Nevada, Iowa?

Jul 15, 2026 · Jackson Krile

It's the first question almost every buyer asks me, and the honest answer is that it depends on more than your income. Here's a clear, no-jargon framework for figuring out your real number in Nevada, Iowa (the Story County town, pronounced neh-VAY-duh) — plus the one Iowa factor most online calculators quietly underestimate.

The quick math

Lenders look at two ratios. As a rule of thumb, your total housing payment should land around 28% of your gross monthly income, and all your debt payments together — housing plus car, student loans, and credit cards — around 36%. So a household earning $7,000 a month is roughly looking at a $1,960 housing payment as a starting point, though strong credit and low debts can push that higher. These are illustrative rules of thumb, not a promise of what you'll qualify for.

Your down payment then sets your price. Conventional loans can go as low as 3–5% down, FHA as low as 3.5%, and putting 20% down removes mortgage insurance. More down means a lower payment for the same price.

Don't forget Iowa property taxes and insurance

Here's what trips people up: your monthly payment isn't just principal and interest. Property taxes and homeowners insurance ride along in most payments, and Iowa's property taxes run higher than the national average. On a Nevada home, that can add a few hundred dollars a month over what a bare mortgage calculator shows. Build it in from the start so your "affordable" number is actually affordable.

What that means in Nevada

Here's the good news for Nevada buyers: with typical home values running in the mid-$230Ks to around $250K — noticeably below Ames just 10 minutes west — the same income stretches further here. That Ames-commuter discount is a real part of the affordability picture, but you still want to budget honestly for taxes and insurance so the payment fits your life.

Get your exact number

Rules of thumb get you in the ballpark; a lender gets you the real figure. Two steps I'd take: run the scenarios on my free mortgage calculator, then get fully pre-approved so you know your exact budget and can move quickly when the right home appears. I'm not a lender and this isn't financial advice — a licensed local lender will confirm your specific numbers.

Bottom line

Affordability in Nevada comes down to four things: income, debt, down payment, and honest budgeting for Iowa's taxes and insurance. Nail those and you'll shop with confidence instead of guesswork. Want help mapping your budget to real Nevada homes? Reach out — no pressure, just a straight read.

Jackson Krile is a REALTOR® on the Flanders Team at RE/MAX Real Estate Center, serving Nevada and Central Iowa. This is general education, not financial or lending advice; consult a licensed lender for figures specific to you. Market data reflects mid-2026 and changes monthly.

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Jackson Krile
Flanders Team at RE/MAX Real Estate Center · Central Iowa REALTOR®

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