Home/Los Angeles/$2.05M+
Family home budget

What a $2.05M+ family home budget means in Los Angeles

83% of net leaves no oxygen for childcare, two kids, a single bad bonus year, or a single layoff. Walk away.

A $2.05M+ Los Angeles family home budget translates to a stress-tested monthly cost all-in (salary-only stress test included). This page surfaces the full affordability math from the sample report.

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Last updated Methodology
Budget posture

Hard NO

Target price

$2.05M+

Total monthly

See full affordability table

Salary-only stress

Covered in full sample report

Monthly cost stress test

Los Angeles home prices and monthly cost at each tier

Home priceDown paymentMortgage P&ITax + ins + maintTotal monthly% with bonus% salary-only
$1.65M$200k (12.1%)$8,994$3,650$12,64465%65%
$1.85M$200k (10.8%)$10,225$4,090$14,31574%74%
$2.05M$200k (9.8%)$11,455$4,540$15,99583%83%
Liquid pool

Down payment sources for a $2.05M+ home

  • Cash + taxable savings: $200,000 (Yes)
  • Retirement (401k/IRA): (No (don’t touch))
  • Family gift: $0 ()
  • Equity from current home: $0 (First-time buyers, renting)
Take-home math

Income to take-home for the sample family

  • Gross HHI$480,000
  • Federal tax (~30% eff.)-$144,000
  • CA state tax (~9.3% eff. at this band)-$44,000
  • FICA / Medicare (~3% combined post-cap)-$14,000
  • 401k contributions (both maxed)-$47,000
  • Net take-home≈$231,000/yr ($19.3k/mo)
Interest-rate sensitivity

What a 50bp rate move does to a $1.65M (bullseye) home

RateMonthly P&ITotal monthlyΔ from base
5.80% (50bp lower)$8,512$12,162-$482/mo
6.30% (today, Freddie 4/30/26)$8,994$12,644base
6.80% (50bp higher)$9,492$13,142+$498/mo
Property tax mechanics

California property tax for a $2.05M+ home

Estimated annual tax: ≈$20,600/yr at $1.65M; ≈$23,100/yr at $1.85M (1.25% effective, includes voter-approved local bonds on top of the 1% Prop 13 base).

  • Prop 13 base year: a sale RESETS the assessed value to your purchase price. The seller’s low tax bill does not transfer. Assume 1.0%-1.25% of purchase price in year one.
  • Annual cap: assessment can rise at most 2%/year after that, regardless of market. This is the true CA homeowner advantage — but only kicks in after you’ve set the new (high) baseline.
  • Supplemental tax: in your year of purchase you’ll get a one-time supplemental bill that trues up the difference between the seller’s old assessment and your new one, prorated. Budget ~$8-15k as a Year 1 cash bomb on top of escrow.
  • Mello-Roos / 1915 Act: rare in our target zones (mostly older neighborhoods, no special districts), but verify per-parcel.
  • Property tax is fully owed even if you’re paying PMI — they’re not interchangeable.
Buying discipline

Budget rules for a $2.05M+ Los Angeles home

  • Maximum offer: $1.85M, period. No “unicorn” exceptions on this down payment.
  • Keep at least $50k liquid post-close as a true reserve. Two kids, hybrid jobs, 10% down — the cushion is the safety.
  • Plan for the 6.30% rate we lock today, not a refinance. If rates fall, refi is upside, not the plan.
  • PMI applies under 20% down — bake it into the monthly. ~$200-300/mo on a $1.65M loan; gone once you cross 20% equity (likely 4-6 yrs at LA appreciation).
  • First-time buyer programs (CalHFA, MyHome) cap below this price band; don’t plan around them. Standard conforming-jumbo with a strong credit file is the path.
  • Walk away from any house in CALFIRE “Very High” FHSZ unless the seller can document reformed insurance — not FAIR Plan. Post-Eaton, that’s a $5-12K/yr line item that compounds your stretch.
Frequently asked

$2.05M+ Los Angeles family home budget questions

Which Los Angeles neighborhoods fit a $2.05M+ budget?

Top picks at this budget from the sample report: South Pasadena, Eagle Rock, Westchester. Each links to a full neighborhood guide with school pipeline, sold comps, and commute reality.

How does property tax affect a $2.05M+ home in California?

California property tax mechanics: estimated annual tax ≈$20,600/yr at $1.65M; ≈$23,100/yr at $1.85M (1.25% effective, includes voter-approved local bonds on top of the 1% Prop 13 base). Key points: Prop 13 base year: a sale RESETS the assessed value to your purchase price. The seller’s low tax bill does not transfer. Assume 1.0%-1.25% of purchase price in year one. Annual cap: assessment can rise at most 2%/year after that, regardless of market. This is the true CA homeowner advantage — but only kicks in after you’ve set the new (high) baseline. Supplemental tax: in your year of purchase you’ll get a one-time supplemental bill that trues up the difference between the seller’s old assessment and your new one, prorated. Budget ~$8-15k as a Year 1 cash bomb on top of escrow. Mello-Roos / 1915 Act: rare in our target zones (mostly older neighborhoods, no special districts), but verify per-parcel. Property tax is fully owed even if you’re paying PMI — they’re not interchangeable.

What discipline rules should we follow at this budget?

6 buying-discipline rules from the sample report, including: Maximum offer: $1.85M, period. No “unicorn” exceptions on this down payment. Keep at least $50k liquid post-close as a true reserve. Two kids, hybrid jobs, 10% down — the cushion is the safety. Plan for the 6.30% rate we lock today, not a refinance. If rates fall, refi is upside, not the plan.

Make the math personal

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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