What a $900,000 family home budget means in Denver
Family's stated comfort top. 42% with bonus. Above this, monthly burden conflicts with the 'low monthly burden' priority. The $1.05M stretch number puts you at 49%/56% — that's house-poor on salary alone. Walk away.
A $900,000 Denver family home budget translates to $6,718 all-in (48% of salary-only take-home). This page surfaces the full affordability math from the sample report.
Hard ceiling
$900,000
$6,718
48%
$900,000 Denver family neighborhoods in reach
Littleton (Littleton Public Schools)
The strongest school pipeline for this specific family — academically real, culturally calm, and aligned with your Midwest-roots, Colorado-upbringing instinct that schools should be excellent without being a battleground. Why this fits you specifically: your stated preference for school continuity over a bigger upgrade is exactly what LPS rewards — same district K-12, same friend group, same 12-year arc.
Pick 2Central Park / Stapleton
The most lifestyle-aligned zone — walkable schools, A-Line to DIA, parks everywhere, and a Blue Ribbon K-8 that solves the DPS middle-school problem. Why this fits you specifically: after 6 years in Highlands, you already know urban Denver living; Central Park gives you the same density and walkability with a school you can actually count on for 9 straight years.
Pick 3Centennial (Cherry Creek SD)
The smart-money K-8 zone — your bullseye budget actually works here, schools are excellent, and the lifestyle is calm and family-oriented. The honest caveat is the high school endpoint; treat the next 10 years as guaranteed and the HS years as a decision you'll re-make when your oldest is in 7th grade. Why this fits you specifically: cul-de-sacs, soccer fields, and a no-drama K-8 trajectory align directly with the 'Colorado upbringing without the East/West Coast intensity' instinct.
Denver home prices and monthly cost at each tier
| Home price | Down payment | Mortgage P&I | Tax + ins + maint | Total monthly | % with bonus | % salary-only |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $750,000 | $150,000 (20%) | $3,994 | $1,613 | $5,607 | 35% | 40% |
| $850,000 | $170,000 (20%) | $4,527 | $1,820 | $6,347 | 40% | 46% |
| $900,000 ← | $180,000 (20%) | $4,793 | $1,925 | $6,718 | 42% | 48% |
| $1,000,000 | $200,000 (20%) | $5,326 | $2,133 | $7,459 | 47% | 54% |
| $1,050,000 | $210,000 (20%) | $5,592 | $2,238 | $7,830 | 49% | 56% |
Down payment sources for a $900,000 home
- Cash + taxable for down payment & reserves: $250,000 (✅ Yes — split between down + reserves)
- Retirement (401k/IRA): Not disclosed (❌ Don't touch)
- Family gift: Not indicated (N/A)
- Home equity to roll: $0 (❌ Renting currently)
Income to take-home for the sample family
- Gross HHI (combined)$320,000
- Federal tax (~24% effective at this bracket)-$76,800
- CO state tax (~4.4%)-$14,080
- FICA / Medicare-$15,000
- 401k contributions (assumed ~$23K, one earner maxing)-$23,000
- Net take-home (with bonus)~$191,000/yr ≈ $15,900/mo
- Stress-test take-home (salary only, no bonus)~$167,000/yr ≈ $13,900/mo
What a 50bp rate move does to a $850,000 walking-around budget (20% down → $680K loan) home
| Rate | Monthly P&I | Total monthly | Δ from base |
|---|---|---|---|
| 6.0% | $4,077 | $5,897 | -$450/mo |
| 6.5% | $4,298 | $6,118 | -$229/mo |
| 7.0% | $4,527 | $6,347 | (base — current 30yr conforming) |
| 7.5% | $4,754 | $6,574 | +$227/mo |
Colorado property tax for a $900,000 home
Estimated annual tax: ~$4,500–$5,000/yr at $850K (effective rate ~0.55%, among the lowest in the country).
- Colorado uses an assessment rate (~6.7% for residential in 2024) applied to actual market value, then multiplied by local mill levy. Effective rate works out to ~0.5–0.6% — far below TX/NJ/IL.
- Gallagher Amendment was repealed in 2020; the residential assessment rate now floats year-to-year via legislature. Expect modest upward drift.
- Property is reassessed every 2 years (odd years) by the county assessor. A purchase does NOT automatically reset to sale price (unlike CA Prop 13 — and unlike CA, there's no cap on reassessment changes).
- School district mill levies dominate the bill — Cherry Creek SD and LPS have higher mills than DPS, but absolute dollars are still modest. Budget ~$5K/yr at the $850K target, ~$5,500 at $900K.
- No homestead exemption equivalent for general taxpayers (Senior Homestead Exemption exists for 65+, not relevant for this family).
Budget rules for a $900,000 Denver home
- Maximum offer: $900K on a perfect-fit unicorn, $850K is the family's walking-around budget, $750–800K is the bullseye for first-time-buyer discipline.
- Reserve at minimum $50K liquid post-close (about 8 months of housing) — do not drain the $250K liquid pool below that line.
- Don't put more than 25% down. The marginal return of going from 20% to 30% down is small; that liquidity is more valuable as a cushion in years 1–3.
- Walk away from bidding wars (5+ offers). In Centennial and Central Park 4bd 2,000sqft+ inventory is reasonable — patience wins.
- Don't stretch to $1.05M. The 'right home' framing is seductive but the monthly-burden delta is real and lasts 30 years.
- Plan for the rate you lock, not for hypothetical refinances. If rates fall later, that's a bonus, not a strategy.
- Bonus is variable — underwrite the mortgage to fit on base salary alone.
Other Denver family home budgets
$750,000
35% of take-home with bonus, 40% on salary alone — sleep-at-night number for a conservative first-time buyer
Walking-around budget$850,000
Family's stated target. ~40% of take-home with bonus. Comfortable when bonus pays; tight on salary alone (46%) — plan for a bonus-light year.
$900,000 Denver family home budget questions
What's the total monthly cost of a $900,000 home in Denver?
From the sample report's stress test: down payment $180,000 (20%), mortgage P&I $4,793, taxes/insurance/maintenance $1,925, total monthly $6,718. That's 48% of salary-only take-home and 42% including bonus.
Which Denver neighborhoods fit a $900,000 budget?
Top picks at this budget from the sample report: Littleton (Littleton Public Schools), Central Park / Stapleton, Centennial (Cherry Creek SD). Each links to a full neighborhood guide with school pipeline, sold comps, and commute reality.
How does property tax affect a $900,000 home in Colorado?
Colorado property tax mechanics: estimated annual tax ~$4,500–$5,000/yr at $850K (effective rate ~0.55%, among the lowest in the country). Key points: Colorado uses an assessment rate (~6.7% for residential in 2024) applied to actual market value, then multiplied by local mill levy. Effective rate works out to ~0.5–0.6% — far below TX/NJ/IL. Gallagher Amendment was repealed in 2020; the residential assessment rate now floats year-to-year via legislature. Expect modest upward drift. Property is reassessed every 2 years (odd years) by the county assessor. A purchase does NOT automatically reset to sale price (unlike CA Prop 13 — and unlike CA, there's no cap on reassessment changes). School district mill levies dominate the bill — Cherry Creek SD and LPS have higher mills than DPS, but absolute dollars are still modest. Budget ~$5K/yr at the $850K target, ~$5,500 at $900K. No homestead exemption equivalent for general taxpayers (Senior Homestead Exemption exists for 65+, not relevant for this family).
What discipline rules should we follow at this budget?
7 buying-discipline rules from the sample report, including: Maximum offer: $900K on a perfect-fit unicorn, $850K is the family's walking-around budget, $750–800K is the bullseye for first-time-buyer discipline. Reserve at minimum $50K liquid post-close (about 8 months of housing) — do not drain the $250K liquid pool below that line. Don't put more than 25% down. The marginal return of going from 20% to 30% down is small; that liquidity is more valuable as a cushion in years 1–3.
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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