What a $1,500,000 family home budget means in Seattle
~55%/70% of take-home — top of comfort range. Reasonable if the home is a true 12-year fit (turnkey, right schools, right commute). Reserves drop to ~$100K post-close.
A $1,500,000 Seattle family home budget translates to $10,740 all-in (70% of salary-only take-home). This page surfaces the full affordability math from the sample report.
Walking-around budget
$1,500,000
$10,740
70%
$1,500,000 Seattle family neighborhoods in reach
Redmond SE / Education Hill
Best overall fit. Rank #4 WA middle school, lowest Eastside HS pressure, real in-budget comps, Microsoft-proximate, light-rail accessible. Why this fits you specifically: the parents-grew-up-in-moderate-suburbs framing maps almost exactly onto Education Hill's character — ranch homes on tree-lined streets, walking-distance schools, no urbanist intensity. The 12-year-hold school continuity question has the cleanest answer here: Rosa Parks/Baker → LWSD MS → RHS, all without a single boundary risk.
Pick 2Issaquah–Gilman (Olde Town)
Strong #2 — best lifestyle match if commute and HS-boundary work out. Why this fits you specifically: the moderate-suburb-with-trails-out-the-back-door brief is Olde Town Issaquah almost verbatim — walkable downtown, K-12 stability, hiking that doesn't require a weekend trip. The single thing to lock down before falling in love with a house: confirm Skyline HS attendance, not IHS.
Pick 3Wedgwood / Ravenna (Roosevelt boundary)
Strong #3 with two binary unlocks. Why this fits you specifically: this is the zone that lets the kids stay closest to the Capitol Hill life the family already knows — same library system, same grocery routines, same parks. But it requires (a) confirming Roosevelt HS attendance and (b) accepting the gray-sky tradeoff the family said they wanted to optimize against. If both check out, the elementary pipeline alone justifies serious consideration.
Seattle home prices and monthly cost at each tier
| Home price | Down payment | Mortgage P&I | Tax + ins + maint | Total monthly | % with bonus | % salary-only |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $1,300,000 | $260,000 (20%) | $6,925 | $2,400 | $9,325 | 48% | 61% |
| $1,400,000 | $280,000 (20%) | $7,455 | $2,575 | $10,030 | 51% | 65% |
| $1,500,000 ← | $300,000 (20%) | $7,990 | $2,750 | $10,740 | 55% | 70% |
| $1,600,000 | $320,000 (20%) | $8,520 | $2,925 | $11,445 | 58% | 74% |
| $1,700,000 | $340,000 (20%) | $9,055 | $3,100 | $12,155 | 62% | 79% |
Down payment sources for a $1,500,000 home
- Cash + brokerage (taxable): $400,000 (✅ Yes — primary down + reserves)
- Retirement (401k/IRA): Not disclosed (❌ Don't touch)
- Family gift: Not offered (➖ Not in plan)
- Unvested RSU / future bonus: Variable (❌ Treat as $0 for sizing)
Income to take-home for the sample family
- Gross HHI$420,000
- Federal tax (~30% effective at this HHI, no state income tax in WA)-$126,000
- WA state income tax$0 (none)
- FICA / Medicare-$13,000
- 401k contributions (2 × ~$23K)-$46,000
- Net take-home (with full RSU/bonus)~$235,000/yr ≈ $19,600/mo
- Stress-test take-home (base salary only, $420K → assume ~70% of that lands; RSU stripped)~$185,000/yr ≈ $15,400/mo
What a 50bp rate move does to a $1,400,000 comfort target (20% down → $1,120,000 loan) home
| Rate | Monthly P&I | Total monthly | Δ from base |
|---|---|---|---|
| 6.5% | $7,080 | $9,655 | -$375/mo |
| 7.0% | $7,455 | $10,030 | (base) |
| 7.5% | $7,830 | $10,405 | +$375/mo |
Washington property tax for a $1,500,000 home
Estimated annual tax: ~$13,000–15,000/yr at $1.4M (effective ~0.95–1.05% in King County).
- No state income tax in WA — but property tax is meaningful (~1% effective in King County) and budget should account for it.
- King County reassesses annually based on market value (no Prop-13-style cap). When prices rise, your bill rises.
- Levy lid: total levy growth limited to ~1%/yr without voter approval — but new levies (school bonds, parks) regularly add to the bill, especially on the Eastside.
- Issaquah, Bellevue, and LWSD have all passed school bonds in recent cycles — assume property tax grows ~3–5%/yr in practice, not the 1% lid number.
- No homestead exemption like CA/FL — your tax basis does NOT reset at sale, but it also doesn't get protected when values spike.
Budget rules for a $1,500,000 Seattle home
- Hard maximum offer: $1,700,000 on a unicorn; $1,500,000 on a great fit; $1,400,000 is the bullseye.
- Walk away from bidding wars with 5+ offers — Eastside markets are seller-favored and emotional escalation is the #1 first-time-buyer trap.
- Keep at least $100K liquid post-close. First-time buyers always under-budget repair surprises in year one.
- RSU and bonus are reserves, not budget. Size the mortgage on the $185K stress number, not the $235K bonus number.
- Verify HS attendance boundary in writing before any offer — especially in Wedgwood (Roosevelt vs Nathan Hale) and downtown Issaquah (Skyline vs IHS).
- Plan for the rate you lock at, not a hypothetical 2027 refinance. If the monthly is uncomfortable on day one, it stays uncomfortable.
- No split-levels, no steep driveways — the family already flagged this. Walk away on first viewing.
- 12-year horizon means turnkey > fixer. Don't buy a project unless the math works at $1.3M-and-renovate.
Other Seattle family home budgets
$1,400,000
~51% of household take-home with full RSU; ~65% on salary alone. Tight by national rule-of-thumb but realistic for HCOL Seattle metro and consistent with the family's stated 'tighter not stretched' preference. Down payment ~$280K still leaves ~$120K liquid reserve.
Hard ceiling$1,700,000
~62%/79% of take-home — explicitly stretch territory. Only justified for a unicorn (Roosevelt-boundary Wedgwood, walkable Olde Town Issaquah, top Education Hill block) AND only if RSU income is highly reliable. Reserves get thin (~$60K) — uncomfortable for a first home.
$1,500,000 Seattle family home budget questions
What's the total monthly cost of a $1,500,000 home in Seattle?
From the sample report's stress test: down payment $300,000 (20%), mortgage P&I $7,990, taxes/insurance/maintenance $2,750, total monthly $10,740. That's 70% of salary-only take-home and 55% including bonus.
Which Seattle neighborhoods fit a $1,500,000 budget?
Top picks at this budget from the sample report: Redmond SE / Education Hill, Issaquah–Gilman (Olde Town), Wedgwood / Ravenna (Roosevelt boundary). Each links to a full neighborhood guide with school pipeline, sold comps, and commute reality.
How does property tax affect a $1,500,000 home in Washington?
Washington property tax mechanics: estimated annual tax ~$13,000–15,000/yr at $1.4M (effective ~0.95–1.05% in King County). Key points: No state income tax in WA — but property tax is meaningful (~1% effective in King County) and budget should account for it. King County reassesses annually based on market value (no Prop-13-style cap). When prices rise, your bill rises. Levy lid: total levy growth limited to ~1%/yr without voter approval — but new levies (school bonds, parks) regularly add to the bill, especially on the Eastside. Issaquah, Bellevue, and LWSD have all passed school bonds in recent cycles — assume property tax grows ~3–5%/yr in practice, not the 1% lid number. No homestead exemption like CA/FL — your tax basis does NOT reset at sale, but it also doesn't get protected when values spike.
What discipline rules should we follow at this budget?
8 buying-discipline rules from the sample report, including: Hard maximum offer: $1,700,000 on a unicorn; $1,500,000 on a great fit; $1,400,000 is the bullseye. Walk away from bidding wars with 5+ offers — Eastside markets are seller-favored and emotional escalation is the #1 first-time-buyer trap. Keep at least $100K liquid post-close. First-time buyers always under-budget repair surprises in year one.
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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