New Hampshire Rent Affordability
Median rent $1,465/mo. 30% rule needs $58,600/yr income. Rent = 18% of New Hampshire median household income.
Max affordable rent by income
| Gross income | Max rent (30%) | Max rent (25% conservative) | vs New Hampshire median |
|---|---|---|---|
| $30,000 | $750/mo | $625/mo | 51% of median |
| $40,000 | $1000/mo | $833/mo | 68% of median |
| $50,000 | $1250/mo | $1042/mo | 85% of median |
| $60,000 | $1500/mo | $1250/mo | 1.02× median |
| $75,000 | $1875/mo | $1563/mo | 1.28× median |
| $100,000 | $2500/mo | $2083/mo | 1.71× median |
| $125,000 | $3125/mo | $2604/mo | 2.13× median |
| $150,000 | $3750/mo | $3125/mo | 2.56× median |
| $200,000 | $5000/mo | $4167/mo | 3.41× median |
Rent vs buy break-even in New Hampshire
The annual rent-to-home-price ratio of 4.7% is below the 5% threshold, favoring renting over buying in New Hampshire. Home prices are expensive relative to rents — buying makes sense only with a long time horizon (8+ years) or strong appreciation expectations.
Price-to-rent ratio is a heuristic. Full break-even depends on mortgage rate, property tax, maintenance, HOA, transaction costs, and the buyer's expected hold period.
Rent in neighboring states
How New Hampshire rent compares to contiguous neighbors. Relocation, remote-work geography, or commute-belt decisions.
| State | Median rent | % of state HH median | Median home | vs NH |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| New Hampshire (current) | $1,465 | 18% | $372,500 | — |
| Maine | $1,156 | 19% | $286,100 | -$309 |
| Vermont | $1,190 | 18% | $296,400 | -$275 |
| Massachusetts | $1,814 | 22% | $532,700 | +$349 |
Other states
Common questions
- What is the median rent in New Hampshire?
- New Hampshire statewide median gross monthly rent is $1,465 (Census ACS 2023 B25064). Metro areas typically run 20-50% above the state median; rural areas 10-25% below. Numbers reflect all renters and bedroom counts combined.
- How much income do I need to afford the median rent in New Hampshire?
- Using the 30% rule (rent ≤ 30% of gross income), you need about $58,600/year. The 25% conservative rule pushes that to $70,320/year. New Hampshire median household income is $96,838 — rent eats 18% of typical earners' income.
- Is renting or buying a better deal in New Hampshire?
- Rule of thumb: if annual rent < 5% of home price, renting wins. New Hampshire ratio: annual rent $17,580 / median home $372,500 = 4.7%. Renting is favored here (homes are expensive relative to rents). Full break-even depends on time horizon, mortgage rate, property tax, and HOA.
- Why is rent so much higher in some New Hampshire metros than the statewide median?
- State median averages across rural and urban renters. A high-cost metro (LA, NYC, SF, Boston, Seattle, DC) drives metro rent 30-60% above the state number. Use the statewide median for relocation comparison, but expect to pay above-median in any large city.
Full data sources and formulas: /sources.
Estimate only — not financial advice. The 30% rule is a guideline, not a rule. State median hides large city-level variation. Calculate take-home pay in New Hampshire →
Sources
Last reviewed: · Beforeview Editorial · editorial policy